4.4 Article

Device-Level Thermal Management of Gallium Oxide Field-Effect Transistors

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCPMT.2019.2923356

Keywords

beta-Ga2O3; electronics cooling; flip-chip devices; gallium oxide; infrared imaging; thermal management; thermoreflectance

Funding

  1. AFOSR Young Investigator Program [FA9550-17-1-0141]
  2. NSF [ECCS 1607833]
  3. UB ReNEW Program
  4. SUNY MAM Program
  5. U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003525]

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The ultrawide bandgap (UWBG) (similar to 4.8 eV) and melt-grown substrate availability of beta-Ga2O3 give promise to the development of next-generation power electronic devices with dramatically improved size, weight, power, and efficiency over current state-of-the-art WBG devices based on 4H-SiC and GaN. Also, with recent advancements made in gigahertz frequency radio frequency (RF) applications, the potential for monolithic or heterogenous integration of RF and power switches has attracted researchers' attention. However, it is expected that Ga2O3 devices will suffer from self-heating due to the poor thermal conductivity of the material. Thermoreflectance thermal imaging and infrared thermography were used to understand the thermal characteristics of a MOSFET fabricated via homoepitaxy. A 3-D coupled electrothermal model was constructed based on the electrical and thermal characterization results. The device model shows that a homoepitaxial device suffers from an unacceptable junction temperature rise of similar to 1500 degrees C under a targeted power density of 10 W/mm, indicating the importance of employing device-level thermal managements to individual Ga2O3 transistors. The effectiveness of various active and passive cooling solutions was tested to achieve a goal of reducing the device operating temperature below 200 degrees C at a power density of 10 W/mm. Results show that flip-chip heterointegration is a viable option to enhance both the steady-state and transient thermal characteristics of Ga2O3 devices without sacrificing the intrinsic advantage of high-quality native substrates. Also, it is not an active thermal management solution that entails peripherals requiring additional size and cost implications.

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