Today silicon carbide (SiC) Schottky diodes are mainly used in the power factor control
(PFC) unit of high end switched mode power supplies, due to their outstanding switching
performance compared to Si pn diodes. In the case of the PFC it is required that the diodes are
capable of handling surge currents up to several times the current of normal operation. The paper
shows the surge current capability of a merged pn Schottky diode where the p-areas are optimized
as efficient emitters. During normal operation the diode is behaving like a normal Schottky diode
whereas during surge current condition the diode is behaving like a pn diode. For a sine half wave
of 10 ms we achieved a non repetitive peak forward current capability of about 3700 A/cm2 which is
about ten times rated current (for comparison: destructive current density of a standard Schottky
diode ~ 1650 A/cm²). Additionally the device shows a stable avalanche and is able to withstand a
single shot avalanche of 9.5 3s and 12.5 mJ.
Today a main focus in high efficiency power electronics based on silicon carbide (SiC)
lies on the development of an unipolar SiC switch. This paper comments on the advantages of SiC
switching devices in comparison to silicon (Si) switches, the decision for the SiC JFET against the
SiC MOSFET, and will show new experimental results on SiC JFETs with focus on the production
related topics like process window and parameter homogeneity which can be achieved with the
presented device concept.
Due to material properties unipolar SiC switches have, other than their Si high voltage counterparts,
very low gate charge, good body diode performance, and reduced switching losses because of the
potential of lower in- and output capacitances. The most common unipolar switch is the MOSFET.
However, the big challenge in the case of a SiC MOSFET is the gate oxide. A gate oxide on SiC
that provides adequate performance and reliability is missing until now. An alternative unipolar
switching device is a normally-on JFET. The normally-on behavior is a benefit for current driven
applications. If a normally-off behavior is necessary the JFET can be used together with a low
voltage Si MOSFET in a cascode arrangement. Recently manufactured SiC JFETs show results in
very good accordance to device simulation and demonstrate the possibility to fabricate a SiC JFET
within a mass production. A growing market opportunity for such a SiC switch becomes visible.
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