The radiation tolerance of isotopic enriched and natural silicon carbide junction barrier Schottky diodes are compared under heavy ion irradiation. Both types of devices experience leakage current degradation as well as single event burnout events. The results were comparable, although the data may indicate a marginally lower thresholds for the isotopic enriched devices at lower LET. Slightly higher reverse bias threshold values for leakage current degradation was also observed compared to previously published work Index Terms-Schottky diodes, silicon carbide, monoisotopic, heavy ion irradiation, single event effects, single event burnout, leakage current degradation
I. INTRODUCTIONS ILICON carbide (SiC) is a wide bandgap semiconductor with favorable material properties for use in power electronics applications. In comparison to silicon, the higher breakdown electric field and thermal conductivity allows SiC devices to operate with higher blocking voltages and at higher temperatures [1], [2]. For SiC power devices such as high voltage Schottky diodes and metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs), the build-up of heat can nevertheless lead to reduced material integrity and decreased device performance. The ability to transport heat is therefore an important factor to consider for further development of SiC devices. Studies have shown that isotopic enriched silicon