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DOE Advances $32 Million in Funding for Advanced Technologies

June 30, 2017
Sixteen projects are being funded as part of two new ARPA-E programs.

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has thrown its support behind two new Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) programs:

  • ENergy-efficient Light-wave Integrated Technology Enabling Networks that Enhance Datacenters (ENLITENED)
  • Power Nitride Doping Innovation Offers Devices Enabling SWITCHES (PNDIODES)

The nine projects of ENLITENED seek to double datacenter efficiency by using light instead of metal to transmit and receive information between components in a computer chip. Datacenters currently consume about 2.5% of U.S. electricity—a figure that is expected to double in just eight years. As we come to rely increasingly on cloud computing services and storage, the challenge of handling all this information without wasting energy will become critically important.

For the seven PNDIODES projects, researchers will focus on a process called selective area doping to build semiconductors that can handle far more current and higher temperatures. P-n junctions consist of an “n-type” region with negatively charged free electrons participating in current flow and “p-type” regions with positively charged free “holes” carrying the current, separated by a carrier neutral (no electrons or holes to carry current) region. This allows electricity to flow in just one direction and block electric current flow in the opposite direction. Both the n- and p-type regions are formed by doping a semiconductor material, which adds a specific impurity to the semiconductor to change its electrical properties.

Here are more details about the specific PNDIODES projects:

Adroit Materials, Inc., Cary, N.C.
Selective area doping  for nitride power devices: $700,000
This project will establish selective area p-type doping of GaN by using ion implantation of magnesium and an innovative annealing (or heat treatment) process to remove implantation damage and control performance-reducing defects. By developing an in-depth understanding of the ion implantation doping process, the team will be able to demonstrate usable and reliable p-n junctions that meet or exceed PNDIODES program targets and enable a new generation of high-performance electronic semiconductor devices.
 
Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz.
Effective selective area doping for GaN vertical power transistors enabled by innovative materials engineering: $1,500,000
This project will advance fundamental knowledge in the selective area growth of GaN materials in order to achieve selective area doping, leading to the development of high-performance GaN vertical power transistors. The team will develop a new fabrication process and determine the opportunities to solve the challenges of selective area growth for doping in GaN materials. The team will also conduct a materials study and investigate several issues related to GaN selective area epitaxial growth. If successful, the project will demonstrate generally usable p-n junctions for vertical GaN power devices that meet PNDIODES program targets.
 
JR2J, LLC, Ithaca, N.Y.
Laser Spike annealing for the activation of implanted dopants in GaN: $647,750
This project will use a fast, high-temperature technique called laser spike annealing (LSA) to activate implanted p-type dopants in GaN. This technique allows for the high temperatures necessary to activate the dopants, as well as to repair damage done during the implantation process. By keeping the laser spike duration very short (0.1-100 milliseconds), the technique also hopes to avoid damage to the GaN lattice itself. The team will experiment with various LSA annealing conditions, exploring temperatures and time scales of the technique.
 
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, N.M.
High voltage re-grown GaN P-N diodes enabled by defect and doping control: $1,894,700
This project will achieve selective area doping using patterned regrowth of GaN p-n diodes with electronic performance equivalent to as-grown state-of-the-art GaN p-n diodes. The team will work to obtain a deep understanding of the growth process, including the relationship among crystal growth conditions, etching methods and post-etch treatments, impurity control, and electronic performance. The team also seeks to address challenges presented by the regrowth technique using physics-based approaches.
 
State University of New York Polytechnic Institute, Albany, N.Y.
Demonstration of PN-junctions by ion implantation techniques for GaN (DOPING-GaN): $720,000
This project will focus on ion implantation. Using new annealing techniques, the team will develop processes to activate implanted silicon or magnesium in GaN to build p-n junctions. P-type ion implantation and annealing will be performed using an innovative gyrotron beam (a high-power vacuum tube that generates millimeter-wave electromagnetic waves) technique and an aluminum nitride cap. Central to the SUNY Poly proposal is understanding the impact of implantation on the microstructural properties of the GaN material and effects on p-n diode performance.
 
University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.
High-quality doping of GaN through transmutation processing:  $250,000
This project will focus on the development of neutron transmutation doping—exposing GaN wafers to neutron radiation to create a stable network of dopants within—to fabricate an extremely uniform n-type GaN wafer. Specific innovations in this proposal concern an in-depth study of neutron transmission doping and a characterization of the resulting wafer, including analyzing electrical resistance, dopant concentration, unwanted impurities, and damage to the GaN lattice.
 
Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Regrowth and selective area growth of GaN for vertical power electronics: $1,150,000
This project will conduct a comprehensive investigation into overcoming the barriers in selective area doping of GaN through the regrowth process for high-performance, reliable GaN vertical transistors. The team will demonstrate vertical GaN diodes through regrowth and selective area growth processes with performance similar to those made using current in-situ techniques, which are non-selective and therefore less flexible. Key innovations in this project will address the regrowth process at the nano scale, control of the crystal growth process to control impurities, electronic defects in the regrowth and selective area growth processes, and customizing the electronic characteristics of the selective area growth active region.

About the Author

Sam Davis

Sam Davis was the editor-in-chief of Power Electronics Technology magazine and website that is now part of Electronic Design. He has 18 years experience in electronic engineering design and management, six years in public relations and 25 years as a trade press editor. He holds a BSEE from Case-Western Reserve University, and did graduate work at the same school and UCLA. Sam was the editor for PCIM, the predecessor to Power Electronics Technology, from 1984 to 2004. His engineering experience includes circuit and system design for Litton Systems, Bunker-Ramo, Rocketdyne, and Clevite Corporation.. Design tasks included analog circuits, display systems, power supplies, underwater ordnance systems, and test systems. He also served as a program manager for a Litton Systems Navy program.

Sam is the author of Computer Data Displays, a book published by Prentice-Hall in the U.S. and Japan in 1969. He is also a recipient of the Jesse Neal Award for trade press editorial excellence, and has one patent for naval ship construction that simplifies electronic system integration.

You can also check out his Power Electronics blog

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