Band gaps measure the energy required for electrons and holes to move from their respective valence bands into conduction bands, or conduction bands. Semiconductors with wider band gaps such as Gallium Nitride (GaN) or Silicon Carbide (SiC) possess significantly larger band gaps than standard silicon, making these materials suitable for high voltage/frequency applications.
1. Wide band gap
Silicon carbide combines the best features of both semiconductors and insulators to form an extremely versatile building block for various electronic devices. One of its hallmark characteristics is its wide band gap, enabling much higher voltages and temperatures than traditional semiconductor materials like silicon. Wide-bandgap semiconductors may transform both electronics and power supply industries significantly in coming years.
A semiconductor’s band gap refers to the energy difference between its valence and conduction bands. As its energy differences increase, electrons can more readily move between these bands to conduct electricity more readily. Traditional semiconductors such as silicon have band gaps between 1 and 1.5 eV while wide bandgap semiconductors such as gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC) exhibit band gaps of between 2.3-3.3eV.
Wide-bandgap semiconductors boast several advantages over their silicon counterparts, including their ability to withstand higher operating temperatures and breakdown voltages, making them suitable for use in power supplies where they can reduce energy losses while increasing efficiency and reducing efficiency losses. Furthermore, wide bandgap semiconductors boast high thermal conductivity which allows heat generated from devices more quickly to dissipate.
Wide-bandgap semiconductors offer excellent optoelectronic properties and can be easily tuned, making them suitable for use in light-emitting diodes (LEDs) which produce a broad spectrum of visible wavelengths, producing more light per watt and decreasing energy usage and the environmental impact.
2. High breakdown field
Silicon carbide’s wide band gap provides ample energy for electrons to travel across its semiconductor structure, enabling it to operate at higher temperatures, voltages and frequencies than devices fabricated using other semiconductor materials such as gallium arsenide or standard silicon. Furthermore, its high breakdown electric field strength permits for smaller device sizes and faster switching speed.
Silicon carbide stands out among its peers due to its strong bandgap and breakdown strength, but also for its high saturated electron velocity peak velocity which reduces device leakage current while simultaneously improving efficiency of electronic devices.
Silicon carbide offers significant resistance advantages over other semiconductor materials, enabling devices to be assembled on smaller substrates to save both space and weight. Furthermore, its excellent thermal conductivity enables heat dissipation quickly from its semiconductor and this feature makes silicon carbide particularly suitable for high power applications.
Silicon carbide’s high breakdown field is due to its wider band gap requiring a larger electric field to generate carriers by impact, leading to higher saturation electron velocity and thus greater saturation electron velocity; as a result, silicon carbide withstand voltage is approximately five times higher than standard silicon.
2D silicon carbide (commonly referred to as SixCy) offers many tunable properties, including its direct bandgap and optical absorption properties. To tune its band structure, simply alter its composition based on Si/C composition, mechanical strain and defects present within its material composition.
Silicon carbide stands out among high-temperature materials due to its superior thermal and electrical properties, making it an excellent material choice. Operating between 1700degC and 1800degC temperatures, silicon carbide has excellent durability against radiation exposure and chemical corrosion as well as offering a high power density and switching rate, supporting multiple circuit elements within one package.
3. High thermal conductivity
Silicon is widely considered to be the premier semiconductor material for electronics applications, yet its limitations are beginning to show, particularly in high-power applications. Due to its low band gap of only 1.2eV, silicon requires more energy for conductance compared with other materials; on the other hand, silicon carbide has a much larger band gap of 3.26eV that enables it to handle nearly ten times as many electric fields than its silicon counterpart can handle.
Silicon carbide boasts excellent thermal conductivity due to its unique atomic structure: while bulk silicon has tetragonal sp3 bonding, monolayer SiC layers feature planar sp2 bonds and therefore have shorter interlayer distances than bulk silicon, making electron migration from valence band to conduction band easier.
Silicon carbide’s large band gap and temperature and voltage tolerance makes it an excellent material for power semiconductor devices.
SiC’s thermal conductivity also increases with layer count due to transitioning from direct band gap to indirect band gap structure, similarly to MoS2 and other TMDs; however, until recently only monolayer 3C-SiC had been reported with high thermal conductivities at theoretical levels.
Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Engineering researchers have made history by successfully creating freestanding 3C-SiC crystals and SiC thin films on Si substrates with high thermal conductivity at theoretical level. Utilizing various atomic-level analysis techniques, they identified hidden connections among factors which affect LPS-SiC thermal conductivity.
4. High temperature stability
Silicon carbide (SiC) is an exceptionally durable material at ambient conditions. As a refractory semi-conductor composed of Si4C tetrahedra stacked into cubic, hexagonal or rhombohedral crystal structures depending on stacking sequence. SiC ranks as one of the most thermodynamically stable crystal materials known, only significantly deformed under extreme high-pressure due to carbon atoms maintaining their p-conjugate orbitals and maintaining an sp2 bonding structure within its crystal structures.
SiC is still one of the more difficult materials to synthesize and many studies have been conducted on its mechanical properties in different conditions. Atomic stacking determines strength; monolayer SiC being its strongest form. Unfortunately, its brittleness makes it one of the more difficult two-dimensional materials to exfoliate.
2D SiC boasts remarkable nonlinear optical properties due to its unique atomic structure. Studies have demonstrated a robust second harmonic generation spectrum – essential in nanoscale nonlinear frequency conversion devices – likely caused by excitonic interactions between silicon and carbon atoms within its molecules.
2D SiC stands out as an attractive material for optoelectronic applications such as LEDs and lasers due to its unique properties. It has a tunable band gap that can be controlled through altering composition of Si/C stack and mechanical strain, enabling manufacturers to produce light emitting devices covering the full visible spectrum. Furthermore, its low thermal expansion coefficient, hardness, and rigidity also make it suitable material for mirrors of astronomical telescopes.
5. Excellent electrical conductivity
Silicon carbide substrates can withstand electrical fields ten times higher than silicon and boast lower resistance – meaning smaller control circuitry is possible for high-power applications, providing power converters with less energy loss and higher efficiency. This makes the switch worthwhile for any high-power application!
Silicon carbide offers great electrical conductivity due to its wider band gap than that found in silicon, giving electrons more energy for transition from the valence band into conduction band, which results in lower electrical resistance and faster switching speeds.
Silicon carbide’s lower temperature tolerance compared to many other semiconductor materials is also another advantage that helps enhance performance, and its quick reverse recovery time makes it especially suitable for applications requiring fast response times.
Silicon carbide offers an impressive spectrum of nonlinear optical properties that can help improve frequency conversion devices. Their precise characteristics depend on factors like the atomic ratio between Si and C in each layer as well as structure and defect distributions within the material.
Silicon carbide shares many characteristics with other two-dimensional materials like graphene and h-BN; however, monolayer silicon carbide stands out with some unique properties that cannot be found elsewhere. Notably, it features a stable planar structure as a direct-band-gap material, while having superior electron mobility over h-BN or black phosphorus to make it an appealing candidate for future electronic applications.