Ohmic Contacts to Gallium Aluminum Arsenide for High Temperature Applications


Book Description

A new approach for fabricating nonalloyed ohmic contacts to gallium arsenide was developed. The approach uses ultrathin layers of heavily doped germanium or silicon in contact with gallium arsenide to alter the Schottky barrier height(phi B) at the gallium arsenide interface. For n-type gallium arsenide phi B could be varied from about 0.3 to 1.0 eV. The low barriers are useful for tunneling ohmic contacts to n-gallium arsenide while the high barriers should be useful for p-gallium arsenide ohmic contacts and for Field Effect Transistor (FET) gate applications. In some instances it was necessary to interpose a thin nonmetallic electrically conducting barrier between the contact metal and the thin germanium or silicon layer to preserve optimum contact properties. Specific contact resistivity measurements indicated that contact resistivity




Microelectronic Materials


Book Description

This practical book shows how an understanding of structure, thermodynamics, and electrical properties can explain some of the choices of materials used in microelectronics, and can assist in the design of new materials for specific applications. It emphasizes the importance of the phase chemistry of semiconductor and metal systems for ensuring the long-term stability of new devices. The book discusses single-crystal and polycrystalline silicon, aluminium- and gold-based metallisation schemes, packaging semiconductor devices, failure analysis, and the suitability of various materials for optoelectronic devices and solar cells. It has been designed for senior undergraduates, graduates, and researchers in physics, electronic engineering, and materials science.




Contact Resistance of Nickel/Germanium/Gold, Palladium/Germanium/Titanium/Platinum, and Titanium/Palladium Ohmic Contacts to Gallium Arsenide and Its Temperature Dependence from 4.2 to 350K.


Book Description

The specific contact resistance, r sub c, and contact resistance, Rc, of NiGeAu and PdGeTiPt Ohmic contacts to n-GaAs and TiPd and PdGeTiPt Ohmic contacts to p+-GaAs were determined as a function of temperature between 4.2 and 350K The low r sub c obtained for some of the contacts at 4.2K implies that much of the total contact resistance measured at 4.2K in 2DEG structures lies across the n-n heterojunction(s) in series with the metal semiconductor junction. Although NiGeAu contacts have a lower contact resistance to n-GaAs, PdGeTiPt contacts, which have much better edge definition, can be substituted for the NiGeAu when they are properly annealed. Also, low resistance contacts can be made to heavily p-doped GaAs at 4.2K using either TiPd or properly annealed PdGeTiPt contacts, r sub c for the TiPd contacts annealed at 350 deg C for 15 s and at 395 deg C for 90s, and the 350 deg C/15s p-PdGeTiPt contact fit the field emission model, and the 395 deg C/90s NiGeAu, 350 deg C/15s n-PdGeTiPt, and 395 deg C/90s p-PdGeTiPt contacts can be described by the thermal field emission mode. However, the 350 deg C/15s NiGeAu and 395 deg C/90s n PdGeTiPt contacts have a much larger temperature dependence that can best be described by tunneling to deep states near the metal-semiconductor interface. p4.