Development of Diamond Devices for High Power, RF and Harsh Environments
Description
Diamond as a wide-bandgap (WBG) semiconductor material has distinct advantages for power electronics applications over Si and other WBG materials due to its high critical electric field (> 10 MV/cm), high electron and hole mobility (??=4500 cm2/V-s, ??=3800 cm2/V-s), high thermal conductivity (~22 W/cm-K) and large bandgap (5.47 eV). Owing to its remarkable properties, the application space of WBG materials has widened into areas requiring very high current, operating voltage and temperature. Remarkable progress has been made in demonstrating high breakdown voltage (>10 kV), ultra-high current density (> 100 kA/cm2) and ultra-high temperature (~1000oC) diamond devices, giving further evidence of diamond’s huge potential. However, despite the great success, fabricated diamond devices have not yet delivered diamond’s true potential. Some of the main reasons are high dopant activation energies, substantial bulk defect and trap densities, high contact resistance, and high leakage currents. A lack of complete understanding of the diamond specific device physics also impedes the progress in correct design approaches. The main three research focuses of this work are high power, high frequency and high temperature. Through the design, fabrication, testing, analysis and modeling of diamond p-i-n and Schottky diodes a milestone in diamond research is achieved and gain important theoretical understanding. In particular, a record highest current density in diamond diodes of ~116 kA/cm2 is demonstrated, RF characterization of diamond diodes is performed from 0.1 GHz to 25 GHz and diamond diodes are successfully tested in extreme environments of 500oC and ~93 bar of CO2 pressure. Theoretical models are constructed analytically and inii
Silvaco ATLAS including incomplete ionization and hopping mobility to explain space charge limited current phenomenon, effects of traps and Mott-Gurney dominated diode ???. A new interpretation of the Baliga figure of merit for WBG materials is also formulated and a new cubic relationship between ??? and breakdown voltage is established. Through Silvaco ATLAS modeling, predictions on the power limitation of diamond diodes in receiver-protector circuits is made and a range of self-heating effects is established. Poole-Frenkel emission and hopping conduction models are also utilized to analyze high temperature (500oC) leakage behavior of diamond diodes. Finally, diamond JFET simulations are performed and designs are proposed for high temperature – extreme environment applications.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022
Agent
- Author (aut): Surdi, Harshad
- Thesis advisor (ths): Goodnick, Stephen M
- Committee member: Nemanich, Robert J
- Committee member: Thornton, Trevor J
- Committee member: Lyons, James R
- Publisher (pbl): Arizona State University