Materials Science Forum, Vol.338-3, 1161-1166, 2000
Electrical impact of SiC structural crystal defects on high electric field devices
Commercial epilayers are known to contain a variety of crystallographic imperfections, including micropipes, closed core screw dislocations, low-angle boundaries, basal plane dislocations, heteropolytypic inclusions, and non-ideal surface features like step bunching and pits. This paper reviews the limited present understanding of the operational impact of various crystal defects on SiC electrical devices. Aside from micropipes and triangular inclusions whose densities have been shrinking towards manageably small values in recent years, many of these defects appear to have little adverse operational and/or yield impact on SiC-based sensors, high-frequency RF, and signal conditioning electronics. However high-power switching devices used in power management and distribution circuits have historically (in silicon experience) demanded the highest material quality for prolonged safe operation, and are thus more susceptible to operational reliability problems that arise from electrical property nonuniformities likely to occur at extended crystal defects. A particular emphasis is placed on the impact of closed-core screw dislocations on high-power switching devices, because these difficult to observe defects are present in densities of thousands per cm(2) in commercial SiC epilayers, and their reduction to acceptable levels seems the most problematic at the present time.
Keywords:avalanche breakdown;crystal defect;diode;epilayer growth pits;micropipe;microplasmas;pn junction;rectifiers;reliability;safe operating area;Schottky diodes;screw dislocation