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GaN-based HEMTs have the potential to be widely used in high-power and high-frequency electronics while their maximum output powers are limited by high channel temperature induced by near-junction Joule-heating, which degrades device performance and reliability. Increasing the TBC between GaN and SiC will aid in the heat dissipation of GaN-on-SiC power devices, taking advantage of the high thermal conductivity of the SiC substrate. However, a good understanding of the TBC of this technically important interface is still lacking due to the complicated nature of interfacial heat transport. In this work, a lattice-mismatch-insensitive surface activated bonding method is used to bond GaN directly to SiC and thus eliminating the AlN layer altogether. This allows for the direct integration of high quality GaN layers with SiC to create a high thermal boundary conductance interface. TDTR is used to measure the thermal properties of the GaN thermal conductivity and GaN-SiC TBC. The measured GaN thermal conductivity is larger than that of GaN grown by MBE on SiC, showing the impact of reducing the dislocations in the GaN near the interface. High GaN-SiC TBC is observed for the bonded GaN-SiC interfaces, especially for the annealed interface whose TBC (230 MW/m2-K) is close to the highest values ever reported. To understand the structure-thermal property relation, STEM and EELS are used to characterize the interface structure. The results show that, for the as-bonded sample, there exists an amorphous layer near the interface for the as bonded samples. This amorphous layer is crystallized upon annealing, leading to the high TBC found in our work. Our work paves the way for thermal transport across bonded interfaces, which will impact real-world applications of semiconductor integration and packaging.
The wide bandgap, high-breakdown electric field, and high carrier mobility makes GaN an ideal material for high-power and high-frequency electronics applications such as wireless communication and radar systems. However, the performance and reliabili
To achieve high device performance and high reliability for the gallium nitride (GaN)-based high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs), efficient heat dissipation is important but remains challenging. Enormous efforts have been made to transfer a GaN
We point out that the effective channel for the interfacial thermal conductance, the inverse of Kapitza resistance, of metal-insulator/semiconductor interfaces is governed by the electron-phonon interaction mediated by the surface states allowed in a
A unified understanding of interfacial thermal transport is missing due to the complicated nature of interfaces which involves complex factors such as interfacial bonding, interfacial mixing, surface chemistry, crystal orientation, roughness, contami
We present experimental measurements of the thermal boundary conductance (TBC) from $77 - 500$ K across isolated heteroepitaxially grown ZnO films on GaN substrates. These data provide an assessment of the assumptions that drive the phonon gas model-