Theses and Dissertations
Issuing Body
Mississippi State University
Advisor
Koshka, Yaroslav
Committee Member
Mazzola, Michael
Committee Member
Winton, Raymond
Date of Degree
5-3-2008
Original embargo terms
MSU Only Indefinitely
Document Type
Graduate Thesis - Campus Access Only
Major
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Degree Name
Master of Science
College
James Worth Bagley College of Engineering
Department
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Abstract
Silicon Carbide (SiC) is a wide bandgap semiconductor that is currently of major interest for power electronics applications. SiC-based semiconductor devices and circuits are presently being developed for use in high-temperature, high-power, and/or high-radiation conditions under which conventional semiconductors lose their efficiency. However, the blocking capabilities of SiC power rectifiers and transistors are yet to approach their impressive theoretical limit due to so called edge effects at the device periphery. Surface passivation, which addresses many issues related to surface electric fields, is an extremely important fabrication step for high performance semiconductor electronic devices. Surface passivation can influence the surface recombination velocity, surface charge, interface trap density, and other surface characteristics. In this work, two-dimensional device simulations are used to establish the trends and the extent of the influence of charges, present in surface passivation dielectrics, on the reverse bias characteristics of SiC devices. Actual charges and charge instability are experimentally evaluated in a few common types of passivation dielectrics used in SiC device technologies. Device simulations are used to predict the corresponding improvement (or degradation) of the breakdown conditions at the device periphery, associated with the experimentally measured dielectric charges.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11668/16268
Recommended Citation
Mohan, Meera S., "Investigation of the influence of dielectric charges on passivation efficiency in SiC devices" (2008). Theses and Dissertations. 2860.
https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/td/2860
Comments
Oxide||device simulation||passivation efficiency||Corona