Gallium Oxide has undergone rapid technological maturation over the last decade, pushing it to the forefront of ultra-wide band gap semiconductor technologies. Maximizing the potential for a new semiconductor system requires a concerted effort by the community to address technical barriers which limit performance. Due to the favorable intrinsic material properties of gallium oxide, namely, critical field strength, widely tunable conductivity, mobility, and melt-based bulk growth, the major targeted application space is power electronics where high performance is expected at low cost. This Roadmap presents the current state-of-the-art and future challenges in 15 different topics identified by a large number of people active within the gallium oxide research community. Addressing these challenges will enhance the state-of-the-art device performance and allow us to design efficient, high-power, commercially scalable microelectronic systems using the newest semiconductor platform.
We demonstrated 500 °C operation of field-effect transistors made using ultra-wide bandgap semiconductor β-Ga2O3. Metal–semiconductor field-effect transistors were fabricated using epitaxial conductive films grown on an insulating β-Ga2O3 substrate, TiW refractory metal gates, and Si-implanted source/drain contacts. Devices were characterized in DC mode at different temperatures up to 500 °C in vacuum. These variable-temperature measurements showed a reduction in gate modulation of the drain current due to an increase in gate leakage across the gate/semiconductor Schottky barrier. Devices exhibited a reduction in transconductance with increasing temperature; despite this, drain current increased with temperature due to a reduction in threshold voltage caused by the de-trapping of electrons from deep-level traps. Devices also showed negligible change in semiconductor epitaxy and source/drain contacts, hence demonstrated recovery to their room-temperature electrical properties after the devices were tested intermittently at different high temperatures in vacuum. The mechanism of gate leakage was also explored, which implicated the presence of different conduction mechanisms at different temperatures and gate electric fields.
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