Co-reporter:Takeyasu Saito, Yoshihisa Hirata, Mariko Oyanagi, Naoki Okamoto, Kazuo Kondo
Materials Letters 2011 Volume 65(17–18) pp:2826-2828
Publication Date(Web):September 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.matlet.2011.05.113
Co-reporter:Takeyasu Saito;Kyung-ho Park;Kazuyuki Hirama
Journal of Electronic Materials 2011 Volume 40( Issue 3) pp:247-252
Publication Date(Web):2011 March
DOI:10.1007/s11664-010-1500-1
A H-terminated surface conductive layer of B-doped diamond on a (111) surface was used to fabricate a metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) using an electron beam evaporated SiO2 or Al2O3 gate insulator and a Cu-metal stacked gate. When the bulk carrier concentration was approximately 1015/cm3 and the B-doped diamond layer was 1.5 μm thick, the surface carrier mobility of the H-terminated surface on the (111) diamond before FET processing was 35 cm2/Vs and the surface carrier concentration was 1.5 × 1013/cm2. For the SiO2 gate (0.76 μm long and 50 μm wide), the maximum measured drain current at a gate voltage of −3.0 V was −75 mA/mm and the maximum transconductance was 24 mS/mm, and for the Al2O3 gate (0.64 μm long and 50 μm wide), these features were −86 mA/mm and 15 mS/mm, respectively. These values are among the highest reported direct-current (DC) characteristics for a diamond homoepitaxial (111) MOSFET.