1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0925-9635(98)00419-1
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Progress towards high power thin film diamond transistors

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This work presents initial results of the behavior of metal contacts on conductive UNCD, including the influence of acid treatments, work function, and electronegativity of various metals, and a thin interfacial oxide layer.Contacts to conductive diamond films have been fabricated with a wide range of metals. [8][9][10][11] The behavior of these contacts is complex, and seems to depend on a wide range of factors: Type of doping ͑bulk boron doping versus ''p-type surface layer'' on intrinsic diamond͒; morphology ͑homoepitaxial vs. microcrystalline͒; surface termination ͑as-grown vs. oxidizing acid treated͒; and the work function (W) or electronegativity (E n ) of the contact metal. The following cases seem to be typical.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This work presents initial results of the behavior of metal contacts on conductive UNCD, including the influence of acid treatments, work function, and electronegativity of various metals, and a thin interfacial oxide layer.Contacts to conductive diamond films have been fabricated with a wide range of metals. [8][9][10][11] The behavior of these contacts is complex, and seems to depend on a wide range of factors: Type of doping ͑bulk boron doping versus ''p-type surface layer'' on intrinsic diamond͒; morphology ͑homoepitaxial vs. microcrystalline͒; surface termination ͑as-grown vs. oxidizing acid treated͒; and the work function (W) or electronegativity (E n ) of the contact metal. The following cases seem to be typical.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For ''p-type surface'' conductive diamond films, which rely on a H-terminated surface, Au forms ohmic contacts and Al near-ideal Schottky contacts. 8 For as-grown boron-doped diamond films, no contacts are ohmic without the formation of a carbide or other graphitic interface layer produced via the high-temperature annealing of a carbide-forming metal ͑e.g., Ti or Mo͒; 9,10 with an oxidizing acid cleaning step, contacts become even more rectifying, perhaps due to the removal of any residual ''p-type surface'' conductive layer. Initial work with bulk phosphorous-doped diamond films indicate that ohmic contacts are impossible without the use of an ion bombardment damage step that produces a surface layer of graphite.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another important issue for characterizing CVD diamond films comes with forming ohmic and Schottky contacts. Investigations of contact behaviour of various metals on ntype nitrogen doped ultra nanocrystalline diamond (UNCD) thin films [181] and characterization of diamond ohmic and Schottky contacts is performed in [159,182]. It was shown that near-ideal ohmic contacts are formed in every case, while Schottky barrier contacts prove more elusive.…”
Section: Diamondmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The maximal transconductance of 100 mS mm −1 , cutoff frequency of 11 GHz and maximal frequency of oscillations of 18 GHz were obtained in the 0.7 µm gate-length diamond MESFETs fabricated on the H-terminated diamond surface [182,191]. A small-signal equivalent circuit for this device was developed, by matching the measured S-parameters with the calculated ones.…”
Section: Diamond Bjt and Fetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Polycrystalline diamond is one of the best candidates for high power-high temperature electronic devices [1] especially Schottky diodes, field emitters and field effect transistors. Some published works show also a potential application in photodiodes [2] in near UV-visible spectrum region [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%