In joint development work, IMEC and AIXTRON have said that they have
successfully deposited crack-free AlGaN/GaN structures onto 200mm
Si(111) wafers. This is the first such demonstration, according to the
development team. The aim is to reach full fabrication of low-cost GaN
power devices for high-efficiency/high-power systems beyond the silicon
limits.
"The demonstration of GaN growth on 200mm Si wafers is an important
step towards processing GaN devices on large Si wafers", said Marianne
Germain, Program Manager of IMEC's Efficient Power program. "There is a
strong demand for GaN-based solid-state switching devices in the field
of power conversion. However, bringing GaN devices to a level
acceptable for most applications requires a drastic reduction in the
cost of this technology. And that is only possible by processing on
large-diameter Si wafers. 150mm, and then 200mm are the minimum wafer
sizes we need to fully leverage today's silicon processing
capabilities."
Further work is required such as wafer bow,
which is in the range of 100µm; but IMEC believes that an optimized
buffer can reduce this bow drastically, enabling further processing.
The
AlGaN/GaN heterostructures were created using a standard layer stack,
that had previously worked on 100 and 150mm Si(111) substrates.
Firstly, an AlN layer was deposited onto the Si substrate, followed by
an AlGaN buffer that creates a compressive stress in the 1-micron-thick
GaN top layer. The stack was finished with a 20nm thin AlGaN (26% Al)
layer and capped with a 2nm GaN layer. Thickness uniformity of the
different layers was found to be well below 1% over the full 200mm
wafers (5mm EE).
The AlGaN and GaN layers were grown in
AIXTRON’s application laboratory on the 300mm CRIUS metal-organic
chemical-vapor-phase epitaxy (MOVPE) reactor. The 200mm wafers were
said to be custom-made by MEMC Electronic Materials, using the
Czochralski growth (CZ) method.
"We aim to further develop the growth process and to qualify the wafers to be compatible with Si-CMOS process," noted Germain.
Caption: Thickness uniformity map of a 1µm GaN layer deposited on 200mm Si(111) using an AlN/AlGaN buffer. The average thickness measured in-situ is 1008nm (? = 0.5%) for the full wafer excluding a 5mm edge.