Gallium nitride (GaN) based devices are attractive for harsh environment
electronics because of their high chemical and the mechanical stability
of GaN itself that has a higher atomic displacement energy than other
semiconductor materials.
However, degradation mechanisms of GaN device under radiation
environments is not clear mainly because devices consist of many
different types of semiconductors, such as p-type and n-type layers in
light emitting diode (LED), and each layer has different hardness to
radiation.
Now, researchers at the Electronics-Inspired Interdisciplinary
Research Institute (EIIRIS) and Department of Electrical and Electronic
Information Engineering at Toyohashi University of Technology, and the
Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) describe the physical mechanism of an
observed increase in the resistance of p-type GaN irradiated with 380
keV protons compared with n-type GaN.
The GaN-based LED structure was irradiated with protons and the
resulting electrical properties measured. Notably, the electrodes to
measure the resistance of the p-type and n-type layers were produced
independently using the clean room facilities at EIIRIS and the ion
implanter in JAEA.
The two terminal resistance of the n-type GaN did not vary from its
initial value after 1x1014 cm-2 proton irradiation, and remained of the
same order after 1x1015 cm-2 protons. However, a clear increase of the
resistance was found in the p-type GaN after 1x1014 cm-2 irradiation.
The resistance increased further by six orders of magnitude after 1x1015
cm-2.
The observed increase of the resistance in p-type GaN is explained as
being due to the lower initial carrier density than in n-type GaN due
to a lack of efficient p-type doping technology for GaN, which is a key
for the realization of novel devices operable in harsh environments.
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