Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT)

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT)"— Presentation transcript:

1 High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT)
BY: Aaron Buehler & Jason Vanderlinde

2 Outline Brief History What are they? How they Work Different Types
Band Structure and Diagrams Applications Key Points References

3 Brief History Developed by Takashi Mimura and colleagues at Fujitsu in Japan in Faced several issues along the way Early Applications: Low noise amplifiers Installed in radio telescope Other space and military applications Commercialization began in 1987 for satellite broadcasting receivers Commercial production took off in the 90’s Faced multiple device failure(GaAs MESFET, depletion type MOSFET) until final product was produced by controlling the electrons in the superlattice by introducing a Schottky barrier over the single heterojunction HEMT’s replaced GaAs MESFET’s because of the shrink in necessary size of the antenna by .5 or more In the 90’s these entered into the satellite receivers and mobile phone applications, improvements in cost and processes

4 What are they? Referred to as heterojunction field-effect transistor (FET) Abrupt discontinuities Two layers of different semiconductor with two different band gap energies Separating majority carriers and ionized impurities minimizes the degradation in mobility and peak velocity The 2-D electron gas = less electron collisions = less noise

5 Different Types Material: AlGaAs-GaAs Pseudomorphic HEMT (pHEMT)
Metamorphic HEMT (mHEMT) Indium Phosphide (InP) Galium Nitride (GaN)

6 HEMT structure

7 pHEMT GaAs pHEMT < .5 µm gate length Low noise: 1dB at 12GHz
High gain: 10 dB at 12GHz Range up to 26GHz Thin layer so the crystal lattice stretches to fit the other material. Larger bandgap differences = better performance Fit together like a two combs. Used in wireless communications and satellite applications because of high power and extremely low noise capabilities.

8 mHEMT .15 µm gate length Low noise High gain Range up to 100GHz
Large lattice mismatch between the channel and substrate is accommodated by formation of dislocations within a metamorphic buffer. Modern day can get up to 1THz

9 Band Structure On the left is a band structure of two different semiconducting materials and on the right is them forming a heterojunction when they come into close contact.

10 AlGaAs-GaAs HEMT band diagrams

11 InP HEMT Cross section using a scanning electron micrograph

12 GaN HEMT Based on GaN/AlGaN heterojunctions
Uses a Sapphire (Al3O2)/Silicon Carbonide(SiC) substrate because of the wide energy gap of 3.4 eV and 3.3 eV Applicable to high power supply voltages because of the wide energy gaps Can withstand high operating temperatures In comparison to InP with only a band gap of 1.9 eV

13 Applications Originally for high speed applications
High power/ high temperature microwave applications Power amplifiers Oscillators Cell Phones Radar Most MMIC’s radio frequency applications MMIC = Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit RF applications with combination of low noise and very high frequency

14 Key Points Its two main features are low noise and high frequency capability A heterojunction is two layers different semiconductors with different band gap energies The 2-D electron gas is essential to the low noise feature AlGaAs and GaAs are the most common materials for heterojunction Used in MMIC’s and radio frequency applications for high performance

15 Sources "GaAs Pseudomorphic HEMT Transistor." Mimix Broadband, Inc. N.p., 19 July Web. 30 Apr < pdf>. Grunenputt, Erik. "Pseudomorphic and Metamorphic HEMT-technologies for Industrial W-band Low-noise and Power Applications.” Youscribe. N.p., Dec Web. 30 Apr < metamorphic-hemt-technologies-for-industrial-w-band >. Poole, Ian. "HEMT, High Electron Mobility Transistor." Radio-Electronics.com. Adrio Communications, June Web. 30 Apr < electronics.com/info/data/semicond/fet-field-effect-transistor/hemt-phemt- transistor.php>.

16 Sources continued "0.15-um LN MHEMT 3MI." TriQuint.com. N.p., 29 Nov Web. < Göran, Andersson, ed. "High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT)." Laboratory for Millimeter-Wave Electronics. ETH Zurich, 2 Mar Web. 30 Apr < mwe-group/research/vision-and-aim/high-electron-mobility-transistors-hemt.html>. Neamen, Donald. Semiconductor Physics and Devices Basic Principles. 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, Print. Mimura, Takashi. "The Early History of the High Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT)." Early History of the High Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT) (2002): Web. 30 Apr < 1&tag=1>.


Download ppt "High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT)"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google