4.7 Article

Adhesion and electronic properties of 4H-SiC/α-Al2O3 interfaces with different terminations calculated via first-principles methods

Journal

SURFACES AND INTERFACES
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surfin.2023.103201

Keywords

SiC/Al2O3 interface; Adhesion properties; Electronic properties; Band alignment: First-principles calculation

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The microscopic properties of the 4H-SiC/alpha-Al2O3 interface were comprehensively studied using the first-principles method. The results showed that the O-terminated interfaces had significantly higher interface separation work and bonding strength compared to the Al1- and Al2-terminated interfaces. Additionally, the O-terminated interfaces exhibited larger charge transfer, more interfacial bonds, and larger conduction band offsets, which could effectively prevent leakage current and improve the reliability of SiC/Al2O3 devices.
To comprehensively reveal the microscopic properties of the 4H-SiC/alpha-Al2O3 interface, not only the properties of 4H-SiC and alpha-Al2O3 surfaces, but also the interface separation work, interface energies, band offsets, charge transfer, interfacial bonding, and partial density of states for different types of 4H-SiC/alpha-Al2O3 interfaces were studied using the first-principles method. Considering the two distinct crystal faces of 4H-SiC (Si-terminated and C-terminated surfaces) and the three distinct terminal configurations on the alpha-Al2O3 side (single Al (Al1terminated), double Al (Al2-terminated), and O-terminated surface), we built six different types SiC/Al2O3 interfaces (Si-Al1, Si-Al2, Si-O, C-Al1, C-Al2, and C-O interfaces). The results of the interface separation work for the O-terminated interfaces (Si-O and C-O interfaces) revealed that the O-terminated interfaces were significantly greater compared to Al1- and Al2-terminated interfaces, indicating the pronounced dominance of O-terminated interfaces in terms of bonding strength across the six interfacial structures. Moreover, the charge transfer, interfacial bonding, and electronic properties for the interfaces showed that the O-terminated interfaces had larger charge transfer and more interfacial bonds. Additionally, the larger charge transfer at the O-terminated (especially Si-O interface) interfaces caused the larger conduction band offsets (CBOs), which could effectively prevent leakage current and improve the reliability of SiC/Al2O3 devices.

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