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Interaction between monolithic, junction-isolated lateral insulated-gate bipolar transistors
28
Citations
6
References
1991
Year
Electrical EngineeringElectronic DevicesEngineeringNanoelectronicsElectronic EngineeringSeparate ChipApplied PhysicsBias Temperature InstabilitySingle Event EffectsJunction IsolationEmitter AreasIntegrated CircuitsPower SemiconductorsMicroelectronicsSemiconductor Device
The static and dynamic interaction between monolithically integrated n- and p-channel, high-voltage lateral insulated-gate bipolar transistors (LGBTs) are studied. In the chosen system partition, three common-source, n-channel LIBGTs are monolithically integrated on one chip using junction isolation, while the p-channel counterparts are on a separate chip. Devices on lightly doped substrates, despite their higher forward drop and longer turn-off time than those on heavily doped substrates, exhibited a lesser degree of interaction with adjacent devices, and thus are preferable for power ICs. Even though the steady-state current that flows into the emitters of adjacent devices in the ON-state is small (<5%), there are substantial (as much as 40%) current surges during the turn-on and turn-off transients. Also, the emitter areas also act as minority-carrier injectors during the last phase of the turn-off process. Similar observations are made on LIGBTs with collector shorts and hybrid Schottky injection field-effect transistors (HSINFETs), despite their faster turn-off times.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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