Electrical transport in the copper germanide- n - Ga N system: Experiment and numerical model
Ultraviolet photoemission measurements of the copper germanide work function and numerical modeling of measured current-voltage data show that the Fermi level at the interface of Cu-Ge films on non-plasma-treated n - Ga N cleaned by wet chemicals is pinned near 0.5 eV below the conduction band edge,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physics 2007-06, Vol.101 (11), p.113702-113702-6 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Ultraviolet photoemission measurements of the copper germanide work function and numerical modeling of measured current-voltage data show that the Fermi level at the interface of Cu-Ge films on non-plasma-treated
n
-
Ga
N
cleaned by wet chemicals is pinned near
0.5
eV
below the conduction band edge, and that
300
°
C
annealing lessens this pinning. Annealing Schottky diode structures at
400
-
600
°
C
decreases the
Cu
-
Ge
∕
n
-
Ga
N
Schottky barrier height and increases electron tunneling through the barrier. Leakage currents are not dominated by edge effects, and are independent of measurement temperature, collectively indicating a tunneling transport mechanism for non-plasma-treated Schottky diodes. A plasma treatment of the GaN surface induces
∼
0.5
eV
of downward near-surface band bending and increases surface oxidation, and these effects are responsible for low-resistance Ohmic behavior. Increased surface doping associated with plasma-treated material, when compared with non-plasma-treated
n
-
Ga
N
, causes greater tunneling due to a thinned depletion layer and reduces the Schottky barrier height through image-force barrier lowering and band gap narrowing. The combination of these two effects causes the
I
-
V
behavior of these Cu-Ge contacts to shift from rectifying to Ohmic. |
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ISSN: | 0021-8979 1089-7550 |
DOI: | 10.1063/1.2740350 |