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GaN-on-diamond semiconductor material that can take the heat - 1,000℃ to be exact

Published on Sep 09, 2021

Research

For the first time ever, researchers direct bond gallium nitride and diamond, paving the way for the next generation of highly conductive semiconductors and high-power devices

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Summary

Researchers succeed in the direct bonding of diamond and gallium nitride (GaN) at room temperature and demonstrate that the bond can withstand heat treatments of 1,000℃, making it ideal for the high temperature fabrication process of GaN-based devices. GaN-on-diamond semiconductor material will allow for the next generation of high power, high frequency devices.

Research outline

The need for more powerful electronic devices in today’s society is curtailed by our ability to produce highly conductive semiconductors that can withstand the harsh, high temperature fabrication processes of high-powered devices.

Gallium nitride (GaN)-on-diamond shows promise as a next-generation semiconductor material due to the wide band gap of both materials, allowing for high conductivity, and diamond’s high thermal conductivity, positioning it as a superior heat-spreading substrate. There have been attempts at creating a GaN-on-diamond structure by combining the two components with some form of transition or adhesion layer, but in both cases the additional layer significantly interfered with diamond’s thermal conductivity – defeating a key advantage of the GaN-diamond combination. ?

“There is thus a need for a technology that can directly integrate diamond and GaN,” states Jianbo Liang, Associate Professor of the Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka City University (OCU), and first author of the study, “However, due to large differences in their crystal structures and lattice constants, direct diamond growth on GaN and vice versa is impossible.”

GaN1Fusing the two elements together without any intermediate layers, known as Wafer direct bonding, is one way of getting around this mismatch. However, to create a sufficiently high bonding strength many direct bonding methods, the structure needs to be heated to extremely high degrees (typically 500) in something called a post-annealing process. This generally causes cracks in a bonded sample of dissimilar materials due to a thermal expansion mismatch – this time defeating any chance of the GaN-diamond structure surviving the extremely high temperatures that high-power devices go through during fabrication.

“In previous work, we used surface activated bonding (SAB) to successfully fabricate various interfaces with diamond at room temperature, all exhibiting a high thermal stability and an excellent practicality,” says research lead Professor Naoteru Shigekawa.

As reported this week in the journal ADVANCED MATERIALS, Liang, Shigekawa and their colleagues from Tohoku University, Saga University, and Adamant Namiki Precision Jewel. Co., Ltd, use the SAB method to successfully bond GaN and diamond, and demonstrate that the bonding is stable even when heated to 1,000.

SAB creates highly strong bonds between different materials at room temperature by atomically cleaning and activating the bonding surfaces to react when brought into contact with each other.

As the chemical properties of GaN is completely different from materials the research team has used in the past, after they used SAB to create the GaN-on-diamond material, they used a variety of techniques to test the stability the bonding site – or heterointerface. To characterize the residual stress in the GaN of the heterointerface they used micro-Raman spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy shed light on the nanostructure and the atomic behavior of the heterointerface, electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) showed the chemical bonding states of the carbon atoms at the heterointerface, and the thermal stability of the heterointerface was tested at 700in N2 gas ambient pressure, “which is required for GaN-based power device fabrication processes”, states Liang.?

Results showed that at the heterointerface an intermediate layer of approximately 5.3 nm formed that was a mixture of amorphous carbon and diamond in which Ga and N atoms were distributed. As the team increased annealing temperatures, they noticed a decrease in the layer thickness, “due to a direct conversion of amorphous carbon into diamond,” as Shigekawa puts it.

GaN2After annealing at 1,000, the layer decreased to 1.5nm, “suggesting the intermediate layer can be completely removed by optimizing the annealing process,” continues the professor. Although numbers for compressive strength of the heterointerface improved as annealing temperatures increased, they did not match those of GaN-on-diamond structures formed by crystal growth.

However, “as no peeling was observed at the heterointerface after annealing at 1000,” states Liang, “these results indicate that the GaN/diamond heterointerface can withstand?harsh fabrications processes, with temperature rise in gallium nitride transistors being suppressed by a factor of four.”

Funding

?“Research and development of high thermal stability interface by direct bonding of diamond” project in the Feasibility Study Program of New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) (contract number: 19101242-0)

?JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP20K04581

?Osaka City University (OCU) Strategic Research Grant 2020 for top basic research

?The fabrication of the TEM samples was performed at The Oarai Center and at the Laboratory of Alpha-Ray Emitters in IMR under the Inter-University Cooperative Research in IMR of Tohoku University (NO. 18M0045 and 19M0037).

?A part of this work was supported by Kyoto University Nano Technology Hub in the "Nanotechnology Platform Project" sponsored by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan. GaN single-crystal substrate grown by HVPE used for the stress-free GaN was provided by Sciocs Co. Ltd., Japan.

Publication Information

Date of Publication:??9 September 2021

Journal name:?Advanced Materials

Paper Title:?Fabrication of GaN/Diamond Heterointerface and Interfacial Chemical Bonding State for Highly Efficient Device Design

Authors:?Jianbo Liang, Ayaka Kobayashi, Yasuo Shimizu, Yutaka Ohno, Seong-Woo Kim, Koji Koyama, Makoto Kasu, Yasuyoshi Nagai, and Naoteru Shigekawa

URL:?https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202104564

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