Hundreds of current-voltage (I-V) measurements of Ni, Pt and Ti Schottky diodes on 4H-SiC were conducted at low applied voltages. The SiC substrates contained homoepitaxial layers grown by either chemical vapor deposition or sublimation. While near-ideal contacts were fabricated on all samples, a significant percentage of diodes (∼7%-50% depending on the epitaxial growth method and the diode size) displayed a non-ideal, or inhomogeneous, barrier height. These 'non-ideal' diodes occurred regardless of growth technique, pre-deposition cleaning method, or contact metal. In concurrence with our earlier reports in which the non-ideal diodes were modeled as two Schottky barriers in parallel, the lower of the two Schottky barriers, when present, was predominantly centered at one of the three values: ∼0.60, 0.85 or 1.05 eV. The sources of these non-idealities were investigated using electron-beam- induced current (EBIC) and deep-level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) to determine the nature and energy levels of the defects. DLTS revealed a defect level that corresponds with the low- (non-ideal) barrier height, at ∼0.60 eV. It was also observed that the I-V characteristics tended to degrade with increasing deep-level concentration and that inhomogeneous diodes tended to contain defect clusters. Based on the results, it is proposed that inhomogeneities, in the form of one or more low-barrier height regions within a high-barrier height diode, are caused by defect clusters that locally pin the Fermi level. © 2007 IOP Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Ewing, D. J., Wahab, Q., Ciechonski, R. R., Syväjärvi, M., Yakimova, R., & Porter, L. M. (2007). Inhomogeneous electrical characteristics in 4H-SiC Schottky diodes. Semiconductor Science and Technology, 22(12), 1287–1291. https://doi.org/10.1088/0268-1242/22/12/008
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.