Abstract: The development of high performance wide-bandgap AlGaN channel transistors with high current densities and reduced Ohmic losses necessitates extremely highly doped, high Al content AlGaN epilayers for regrown source/drain contact regions. In this work, we demonstrate the achievement of semi-metallic conductivity in silicon (Si) doped N-polar Al0.6Ga0.4N grown on C-face 4H-SiC substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. Under optimized conditions, the AlGaN epilayer shows smooth surface morphology and a narrow photoluminescence spectral linewidth, without the presence of any secondary peaks. A favorable growth window is identified wherein the free electron concentration reaches as high as ∼1.8 × 1020 cm−3 as obtained from Hall measurements, with a high mobility of 34 cm2/V·s, leading to a room temperature resistivity of only 1 mΩ·cm. Temperature-dependent Hall measurements show that the electron concentration, mobility, and sheet resistance do not depend on temperature, clearly indicating dopant Mott transition to a semi-metallic state, wherein the activation energy (Ea) falls to 0 meV at this high value of Si doping for the AlGaN films. This achievement of semi-metallic conductivity in Si doped N-polar high Al content AlGaN is instrumental for advancing ultrawide bandgap electronic and optoelectronic devices.
Full text available from Applied Physics Letters