1 / 25

Characterization of Contact Resistivity on InAs/GaSb Interface

Characterization of Contact Resistivity on InAs/GaSb Interface. Y. Dong , D. Scott, A.C. Gossard and M.J. Rodwell. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara.

jesuswilson
Download Presentation

Characterization of Contact Resistivity on InAs/GaSb Interface

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Characterization of Contact Resistivity on InAs/GaSb Interface Y. Dong, D. Scott, A.C. Gossard and M.J. Rodwell. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara yingda@ece.ucsb.edu 1-805-893-3812 2003 Electronic Materials Conference

  2. E B C Sub-collector Substrate Motivations Base resistance (RB) is a key factors limiting HBT’s high frequency performance. fmax  RB

  3. Ec Ef + Metal Ev Tunneling Base Resistance A large contribution to base resistance: Contact resistance between metal and p-type base E B C Sub-collector Substrate Contact resistivity on p-type material is usually much higher than on n-type material. Reason: holes have larger effective mass than electrons.

  4. Emitter contact metal Emitter Base metal Base metal N+ N+ P+ P+ SiO2 P+ base SiO2 N- collector Collector Metal Collector Metal N+ subcollector S.I. substrate High ft , fmax , ECL logic speed… Base contact on n-type material Is it possible to make the base contact on n-type material? • Base metal contact on n-type extrinsic base  RB could be reduced • Metal to base contact over field oxide  CBC can be reduced • Large emitter contact area  RE can be reduced

  5. Polycrystalline Base Contact in InP HBTs 1) Epitaxial growth 2) Collector pedestal etch, SiO2 planarization P+ base SiO2 P+ base SiO2 N- collector subcollector N+ subcollector N+ subcollector S.I. substrate S.I. substrate

  6. Polycrystalline Base Contact in InP HBTs 4) Deposit base metal, encapsulate with SiN, pattern base and form SiN sidewalls 3) Extrinsic-base regrowth Base metal Base metal N+ extrinsic base N+ N+ P+ extrinsic base P+ P+ SiO2 P+ base SiO2 SiO2 P+ base SiO2 subcollector subcollector N+ subcollector N+ subcollector S.I. substrate S.I. substrate

  7. Emitter contact metal Emitter Base metal Base metal N+ N+ P+ P+ SiO2 P+ base SiO2 N- collector Collector Metal Collector Metal N+ subcollector S.I. substrate Polycrystalline Base Contact in InP HBTs 5) Regrow emitter • n+/p+ interface • Is it rectifying or ohmic? • If ohmic, is the interfacial contact resistivity low enough?

  8. EC P+ GaSb EV Ef EC N+ InAs EV P+ GaSb / N+ InAs Heterostructure We propose to use p+ GaSb capped with n+ InAs as the extrinsic base. • InAs-GaSb heterostructure forms a broken-gap band lineup • Mobile charge carriers tunnel between the p-type GaSb’s valence band and the neighboring n-type InAs’s conduction band  ohmic p-n junction

  9. Early Interests in InAs(n)/GaSb(p) Material System InAs(n)/GaSb(p) heterostructure has been studied in 1990s with focuses on: 1x105 A/cm2 • Negative differential resistance (NDR) • Application in high frequency tunneling diodes Current Density Applied Bias

  10. Focus of This Work • The contact resistivity across the InAs(n)/GaSb(p) interface at relatively low current density (<104 A/cm2). (No NDR at low current density) • The dependence of contact resistivity on the doping concentration in InAs and GaSb layers.

  11. 1000Å n+ InAs Silicon doped 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 Carbon doped 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP MBE Growth of Test Structures • Samples grown in a Gen II system • Sb source valved and cracked • CBr4 delivered through high vacuum leak valve • Layer structure designed for InP HBT’s extrinsic base  for processing reasons, total thickness constrained

  12. Transmission line patterns defined, • Ti/Pt/Au contact metal deposited and lifted-off. 1000Å n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity

  13. 1000Å n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity 2) Mesa defined to limit the current flow. S.I. InP

  14. Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity 3) Contact resistivity between metal and n+ InAs layer measured. 1000Å n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP

  15. Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity Y Axis intercept = Contact resistance between metal and InAs 1000Å n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP

  16. n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity 4) Top InGaAs layer selectively etched

  17. n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP Measurement of Interfacial Contact Resistivity Y Axis intercept = Contact resistance between metal and InAs + contact resistance between InAs and GaSb

  18. n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP Contact Resistivity’s dependence on p-type GaSb layer’s doping • Silicon doping in n-type InAs layer fixed at 1x1017cm-3 • Carbon doping in p-type GaSb varied

  19. n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs n+ InAs 100Å p+ GaSb 500Å p+ Grading from GaAs0.51As0.49 400Å p+ GaAs0.51Sb0.49 S.I. InP Contact Resistivity’s dependence on n-type InAs layer’s doping • Carbon doping in p-type GaSb layer fixed at 4x1019cm-3 and 7x1019cm-3. • Silicon doping in p-type GaSb varied.

  20. Resonant Enhancement of Current Density InAs/GaSb EC For the single InAs/GaSb interface, reflection occurs due to imperfect coupling of InAs conduction-band states and GaSb valence-band states EV EC EV InAs/GaSb/AlSb/GaSb EC Formation of a quantum well layer between the InAs/GaSb interface and an AlSb barrier  resonant enhancement of the current density EV EC EV

  21. Experiment Result InAs/GaSb EC C: 7x1019 cm-3 Contact resistivity: 6.0x10-7 -cm2 Si: 1x1017 cm-3 EV EC EV 12Å AlSb InAs/GaSb/AlSb/GaSb EC C: 7x1019 cm-3 Si: 1x1017 cm-3 Contact resistivity: 5.4x10-7 -cm2 EV EC EV

  22. Comparison with metal on p+ InGaAs Lowest interfacial contact resistivity obtained: ~ 4x10-7-cm2 Contact resistivity of metal on p+ InGaAs: ~1x10-6-cm2

  23. Emitter contact metal Emitter Base metal Base metal N+ N+ P+ P+ SiO2 P+ base SiO2 N- collector Collector Metal Collector Metal N+ subcollector S.I. substrate Questions Answered • n+/p+ interface • Is it rectifying or ohmic? -- YES • If ohmic, is the interfacial contact resistivity low enough? -- YES

  24. Conclusions • Propose to use InAs(n)/GaSb(P) as extrinsic base of InP HBT • Investigate the contact resistivity between InAs(n)/GaSb(p) interface and its dependence on doping densities on both sides of the heterojunction. • Compare the InAs(n)/GaSb(p) interfacial contact resistivity with that of metal on p+ InGaAs.

  25. Acknowledgement This work was supported by the DARPA—TFAST program

More Related