Effects of Downstream Plasma Exposure on β-Ga2O3 Rectifiers

Abstract

The effects of downstream plasma exposure with O2, N2 or CF4 discharges on Si-doped Ga2O3 Schottky diode forward and reverse current-voltage characteristics were investigated. The samples were exposed to discharges with rf power of 50 W plasma at a pressure of 400 mTorr and a fixed treatment time of 1 min to simulate dielectric layer removal, photoresist ashing or surface cleaning steps. Schottky contacts were deposited through a shadow mask after exposure to avoid any changes to the surface. A Schottky barrier height of 1.1 eV was obtained for the reference sample without plasma treatment, with an ideality factor of 1.0. The diodes exposed to CF4 showed a 0.25 V shift from the I–V of the reference sample due to a Schottky barrier height lowering around 14%. The diodes showed a decrease of Schottky barrier height of 2.5 and 6.5% with O2 or N2 treatments, respectively. The effect of plasma exposure on the ideality factor of diodes treated with these plasmas was minimal; 0.2% for O2 and N2, 0.3% for CF4, respectively. The reverse leakage currents were 1.2, 2.2 and 4.8 μA cm−2 for the diodes treated with O2, and CF4, and N2 respectively. The effect of downstream plasma treatment on diode on-resistance and on-off ratio were also minimal. The changes observed are much less than caused by exposure to hydrogen-containing plasmas and indicate that downstream plasma stripping of films from Ga2O3 during device processing is a relatively benign approach.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2021
Source ID
10.1149/2162-8777/ac0500

Entities

People

  • Chaker Fares
  • Fan Ren
  • Jihyun Kim
  • Junghun Kim
  • Marko J. Tadjer
  • Minghan Xian
  • Stephen Pearton
  • Xinyi Xia

Organizations

  • Defense Threat Reduction Agency
  • Division of Materials Research
  • National Research Foundation of Korea

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

  • Nuclear and Radiation Engineering.
  • Plasma Physics.
  • Semiconductor Device Technology