MICROWAVE TRANSMITTER WITH IMPROVED INFORMATION THROUGHPUT
20200044608 ยท 2020-02-06
Inventors
- Felix Ejeckam (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Tyrone D. Mitchell, Jr. (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Paul Saunier (San Francisco, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/291
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/778
ELECTRICITY
H01L2223/6683
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/15793
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/15793
ELECTRICITY
H01L2223/6627
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/32225
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/7786
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/291
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48137
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H03F1/02
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/778
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An RF amplifier module comprises a package having a package base, at least one RF amplifier chip attached to the package base, and an RF power combiner chip attached to the package base. The RF amplifier chip comprises a substrate and at least one transistor disposed on an epilayer overlying the substrate. The substrate comprises a first layer of synthetic diamond characterized by an average value of thermal conductivity.
An RF amplifier module comprises a package having a package base, at least one RF amplifier chip attached to the package base, and an RF power combiner chip attached to the package base. The RF amplifier chip comprises a substrate and at least one transistor disposed on an epilayer overlying the substrate. A first layer of synthetic diamond is at least partially disposed on top of the electronic device
Claims
1-23. (canceled)
24. A radiofrequency (RF) device, comprising: a housing; and at least one RF amplifier module within said housing, wherein said RF amplifier module comprises: an RF power combiner operatively coupled to a port, at least one RF amplifier chip operatively coupled to said RF power combiner, wherein said at least one RF amplifier chip comprises a transistor that comprises a material layer overlying a substrate, wherein said substrate comprises carbon, and a heat conductor in thermal communication with said at least one RF amplifier chip.
25. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said substrate has a thickness up to about 600 micrometers.
26. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said substrate has an average value of thermal conductivity greater than about 1000 W/mK.
27. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said material layer comprises a semiconductor material.
28. The RF device of claim 27, wherein said semiconductor material comprises a Group III-V material.
29. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said RF power combiner comprises an electromagnetic waveguide.
30. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said transistor is a high-electron mobility transistor.
31. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said RF amplifier module further comprises a plurality of transistor gates operatively coupled to said RF power combiner, wherein said plurality of transistor gates has a pitch of up to 60 micrometers.
32. The RF device of claim 24, wherein said material layer comprises a two-dimensional electron gas layer.
33. A radiofrequency (RF) device comprising: a package; at least one RF amplifier chip within said package, said RF amplifier chip comprising a substrate and a transistor comprising a material layer overlying said substrate, wherein said substrate comprises carbon and is characterized by an average value of thermal conductivity; a port; and an RF power combiner operatively coupled to said port.
34. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said substrate has a thickness up to about 600 micrometers.
35. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said average value of thermal conductivity is greater than about 1000 W/mK.
36. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said material layer comprises a semiconductor material.
37. The device of claim 36, wherein said semiconductor material comprises a Group III-V material.
38. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said RF power combiner comprises an electromagnetic waveguide.
39. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said transistor is a high-electron mobility transistor.
40. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said at least one RF amplifier chip further comprises a plurality of transistor gates operatively coupled to said RF power combiner, wherein said plurality of transistor gates has a pitch of up to 60 micrometers.
41. The RF device of claim 33, wherein said material layer comprises a two-dimensional electron gas layer.
42. A method comprising generating a radiofrequency (RF) device, the RF device comprising a housing and at least one RF amplifier module within said housing, wherein said RF amplifier module comprises: a port, an RF power combiner operatively coupled to said port, at least one RF amplifier chip operatively coupled to said RF power combiner, wherein said at least one RF amplifier chip comprises a transistor that comprises a material layer overlying a substrate, wherein said substrate comprises carbon, and a heat conducting element in thermal communication with said at least one RF amplifier chip.
43. The method of claim 42, wherein said substrate has an average value of thermal conductivity greater than about 1000 W/mK.
44. The method of claim 42, wherein said material layer comprises a semiconductor material.
45. The method of claim 42, wherein said transistor is a high-electron mobility transistor.
46. A method comprising generating a radiofrequency (RF) device, the RF device comprising a package, a port, and an RF power combiner operatively coupled to said port, wherein said package comprises at least one RF amplifier chip comprising a substrate and a transistor comprising a material layer overlying said substrate, wherein said substrate comprises carbon and is characterized by an average value of thermal conductivity.
47. The method of claim 46, wherein said material layer comprises a semiconductor material.
48. The method of claim 46, wherein said average value of thermal conductivity is greater than about 1000 W/mK.
49. The method of claim 46, wherein said transistor is a high-electron mobility transistor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0025] One aspect of the present invention is directed to the design and manufacturing of an efficient high power RF power amplifier. This application discloses an improvement in the performance of RF amplifier modules and equipment for communications between land, space and airborne entities by using monolithically integrated microwave circuits based on Gallium-Nitride-on-Diamond (GaND) technology. Microwave amplifiers based on GaND technology comprise active regions (AlGaN/GaN field-effect transistors) and passive components disposed on top of synthetic diamond substrates. Diamond provides thermal conductance surpassed by no other material known to man: depending on the manufacturing conditions, the thermal conductivity ranges between 800 and 2200 W/km. Using diamond in place of sapphire, silicon or SiC as the substrate material in high-power AlGaN/GaN field-effect transistors has been shown to reduce the device thermal resistance two-to-three times relative to GaN/SiC. Diamond provides this large reduction in overall device thermal resistance by spreading the amplifier-generated heat below the device. The heat spreading is most pronounced in small electronic devices in which the device lateral dimensions are of the order of the substrate thickness or greater. For example, high-electron mobility AlGaN/GaN transistors operating in the X-band and above are designed with unit gate widths of 100 m and shorter because of microwave performance. In such devices, the improvement in the thermal performance by using diamond substrates rather than conventional substrates is very significant. Reported improvements in thermal conductivity and output power from GaND chips relative to GaN/SiC are 2 to 3.
[0026] One objective of this application is to disclose high-power amplifiers with size and weight reduced relative to present technology. This is particularly important for mobile and portable communications equipment.
[0027] Another objective of this application is to disclose high-power amplifiers that have longer communication reach for the same weight and size in comparison with present day technology, namely, that for a high power amplifier of given size and weight, the disclosed chips result in an amplifier data transmission rate that is higher than it would be for amplifiers using existing technology.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0028] In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth by way of examples in order to provide a thorough understanding of the relevant teachings. However, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present teachings may be practiced without such details. In other instances, well known methods, procedures, components, and/or circuitry have been described at a relatively high-level, without detail, in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring aspects of the present teachings.
[0029] In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth by way of examples in order to provide a thorough understanding of the relevant teachings. However, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present teachings may be practiced without such details. In other instances, well known methods, procedures, components, and/or circuitry have been described at a relatively high-level, without detail, in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring aspects of the present teachings.
[0030] For a given technology, the overall output power of an MIMIC or a FET depends on the periphery of the output transistor. The periphery is the product of the unit gate width W and the number of fingers F. However, it is well known that for a given frequency the unit gate length has to be kept constant, hence the only way the periphery can increase is by increasing the number of fingers F. Increasing the number of fingers increases the width of the output transistor, which in turn means increasing the width of the MMIC chip (if the output transistor is a part of the MMIC chip) or increasing the width transistor-bar chip. Increasing the width of the output transistor reduces the chip thermal resistance. As the transistors are elongated along the direction perpendicular to the RF signal propagation (the width of the chip). The thermal resistance of the chip is approximately inversely proportional to the width of the output transistor. Hence, as increasing the periphery by increasing the number of fingers F, increases the transistor-bar chip or MMIC width, it thus reduces the thermal resistance according to an inverse relationship. As the output power varies directly with the periphery, the product of the output power and the thermal resistance is approximately constant. This is in line with the fact that the peak temperature of the transistor is equal to the product of the thermal resistance and the output power and the peak temperature has to remain bound for reliability purposes.
[0031] A system thermal budget is an assessment of temperature drops on each component between the heat source (for example, the active channels of output-stage power transistor), and the environment around the system, where ultimately we wish to dissipate the heat generated by the source. The active layers of a semiconductor device, such as a bipolar transistor or a field-effect transistor, are typically only several micrometers thick, and are built on top of thick mechanical carriers, which are generally referred to as substrates in the industry. The crystalline semiconductor layers grown by epitaxial growth methods such as metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) or molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) are generally referred to as epilayers. For the purposes of this application, a substrate is a carrier on which one or more semiconductor devices are made. A substrate may have functional utility in addition to said mechanical use. The substrate may be of the same family of materials as the active layers of the electronic device, such as it is when active layers (or epilayers) are epitaxially grown on single-crystal substrates. This is the case with GaAs microwave devices on GaAs substrates, AlGaN/GaN devices on sapphire, silicon and SiC substrates.
[0032] Electronic devices may be realized by attaching the active layers to substrates made out of materials with crystalline structures and chemical compositions that are very different from those of the active layer. In such cases, the active layers are not grown epitaxially on the final substrate, but rather transferred from their original growth substrate to the final or new substrate of interest. In the industry, the process of attachment is referred to as bonding or direct-bonding. Examples include direct-bonded InP lasers on silicon and AlGaN/GaN high-electron mobility transistors attached to synthetic diamond substrates.
[0033] Alternatively, synthetic diamond may be grown on the back of a stack of active layers, thereby forming a substrate on the back of the active layer stack. In this case, the stack of active layers are grown on a first substrate, then the first substrate is removed , and finally synthetic diamond in grown on the stack, replacing the removed first substrate. What is generally known in the industry as a chip is a structure that comprises an electronic device active layer structure (epilayers) disposed on a substrate which is the primary mechanical support for the device. The electronic devices are generally built on top of the active epilayers. The substrate generally has functions including but not limited to mechanical support. Three substrate attributes used in the industry are (i) electrical conductivity which is needed to connect the active layers to the bottom of the chip, (ii) electrical isolation with low dielectric losses needed in high-frequency devices and surface waveguides where electric fields penetrate into the substrate, and finally (iii) high thermal conductivity, with or without associated electrical conductivity.
[0034] In this disclosure, a chip is defined as comprising an active electronic or optical device disposed in or on the active epilayers that are disposed on a substrate. It is therefore not possible to obtain a chip having electronic-device active layers without also having an accompanying, attached substrate. A chip may contain one transistor or it may contain an entire microwave monolithically integrated circuit (MMIC).
[0035] Diamond heat-sinks, diamond heat-spreaders, and other diamond plates intended to spread heat below semiconductor chips for thermal management are well known in the industry; they are sold commercially by companies such as Element Six in Santa Clara, Calif., and Applied Diamond, Inc. from Wilmington, Del. The difference between a diamond substrate and a diamond heat-sink (or heat-spreader or plate) as currently understood in the industry is that a diamond substrate on which active electronic device layers are attached forms a chip, while a diamond heat-sink is simply a thermal component that may be attached to a chip to help spread the heat generated by that chip. In other words, in the present invention, a diamond substrate becomes an integral part of its corresponding chip, essential to the chip's structure and function, while a diamond substrate is simply an external component, that may be physically attached to a chip to improve aspects of the chip's performance. In one embodiment of the present invention, a chip comprising an AlGaN/GaN active device disposed on a synthetic diamond substrate is mechanically attached to a diamond heat-sink thereby creating a structure that has two diamond layers separated by an adhesive layer (generally, a solder).
[0036] Thermal Design of AlGaN/GaN Transistors
[0037] A cross-sectional view of an attached monolithically integrated microwave or millimeter-wave circuit (MMIC) 400 employing GaND technology is illustrated in
[0038] The MIMIC chip 412 comprises an epilayer 405 which in turn comprises passive and active electrical devices 416 and 401 respectively, positioned in or on top of the epilayer 405. Aspects of the thermal improvements possible with GaND technology may be appreciated with reference to electrical contacts 402, 403 and 410, associated with output transistor 401, in the case where active circuit 401 is an output transistor. A high-electron mobility transistor (HEMT) 401 or heterostructure field-effect transistor (HFET), as such devices are also known, comprises source 402, gate 403, and drain 410 terminals disposed on an epilayer 405 containing a two-dimensional electron gas source (2DEG) 411 embedded within the epilayer 405 disposed on substrate 404. Transistor 401 operates by using the voltage applied between the gate 403 and the source 402 to control the current flowing along the 2DEG 411 between the source 402 and the drain 410. The region of the 2DEG where the gate voltage controls the current is below the gate 403 terminal. The crystalline layers above and below the 2DEG 411 are generally referred to as the barrier layer 415 and the buffer layer 414 respectively. Epilayer 405 includes each of these two crystalline layers and the 2DEG 411. It is well known in the art that the buffer layer 414 may comprise more than one layer of different materials.
[0039] Active regions of conventional gallium nitride high-electron mobility transistors comprise GaN and AlGaN alloys, but improvements in the performance of the transistors can be accomplished by including InGaN and InGaAlN alloys to improve electron confinement, transconductance, and/or performance over temperature. All of the mentioned materials may be implemented in AlGaN/GaN high-electron mobility transistors.
[0040] During the operation of this transistor, the majority of the heat dissipates in region 409 of epilayer 405. The challenge of realizing a highly thermally efficient transistor lies with the ability of the structure to conduct dissipated heat away from region 409 to the external world via substrate 404 and package base 406. The majority of the heat flows from the location of generation 409 through buffer layer 414 and substrate 404 to package base 406 and then through package base 406 and through surface 413 into a heat conducting element or heat dissipating element (not shown in
[0041] The physical factors that determine the thermal resistance of the structure shown in
[0042] In gallium nitride on diamond transistors, the buffer layer is not grown on the substrate, but bonded to the diamond substrate. Prior to this bonding process step, the original growth substrate (for the GaN epilayers) and the corresponding interfacial layer are removed, exposing the back surface of the buffer layer (surface facing the substrate in
[0043] In one embodiment, epilayer stacks with fully completed or partially completed electronic or optical devices are attached to substrates with high thermal conductivity. In another embodiment, the substrate is made out of synthetic diamond and in yet another embodiment, the electronic device is an AlGaN/GaN high-electron mobility transistor (HEMT), also known in the industry as a heterostructure field-effect transistor (HFET).
[0044] In one embodiment, synthetic diamond is grown on the back of blank epilayers that were prepared for manufacturing electronic or optical devices. In yet another embodiment, the electronic device is an AlGaN/GaN high-electron mobility transistor (HEMT), also known in the industry as a heterostructure field-effect transistor (HFET).
[0045] In another embodiment, a layer of synthetic diamond is applied as a top coating for a completed or partially completed transistor structure on top of an epilayer stack. The purpose of the diamond layer is to extract the heat from the device upwards and then to spread the heat laterally over the device to be absorbed by substrate regions that are not directly under the transistor. In another embodiment, the substrate is made out of synthetic diamond.
[0046] One embodiment of an attached monolithically integrated microwave or millimeter-wave circuit (MMIC) 700 employing synthetic diamond technology is illustrated by the cross-sectional view shown in
[0047] Similarly to
[0048] During the operation of this transistor, the majority of the heat dissipates in the region 709. The challenge of realizing a highly thermally efficient transistor lies with the ability of the structure to conduct dissipated heat away from the region 709 to the external world via the substrate 704 and the package base 706. The majority of the heat flows from the location of generation 709 through the buffer layer 714 and the substrate 704 to the package base 706 and across the package base 706 across the surface 713 into a heat conducting element or heat dissipating element (not shown in
[0049] A packaged module or device of the present invention, containing an RF amplifier chip is always mounted onto a heat conducting element which is an object with high thermal conductivity in thermal contact with the ambient and is efficient in transferring the dissipated power to the ambient. The heat conducting element may include heat pipes or other fluid cooling mechanism. In one embodiment, the package base comprises a layer of synthetic diamond.
[0050] Design Consideration in High Power RF Amplifiers
[0051] Refer back to
where it is clear that the amplifier is affected by the losses in the output couplers.
[0052] The improvement in total output power for the same number of amplifier chips which is made possible by employing GaN on diamond transistors is illustrated with a simple computation, results of which are shown in
[0053] In an alternative embodiment of GaND amplifier technology, the amplifier can be made to operate cooler; since the efficiency and the gain of microwave amplifiers are temperature dependent, they both improve as temperature is reduced. For a given output power, increasing temperature has a twofold effect on the total dissipated power: through the loss of efficiency and loss of gain. The dissipated power can be easily expressed relative to the total output power as:
[0054] The first term depends on the efficiency and is present regardless of the coupler loss. The second term depends on the coupler loss. The total dissipated power determines the cooling requirements of the amplifier module and hence the size of the amplifier.
[0055]
[0056] Lowered thermal resistance of the chips based on GaN-on-diamond technology, will reveal that the package base is one of the heat flow limitations and for this reason, the package base will have to be manufactured with higher thermal conductivity materials. In one embodiment, the package base is made in part of synthetic diamond.
[0057] In yet another embodiment, the amplifier system is situated within a housing which comprises a multiplicity of RF amplifier modules, each of which comprises a package, at least one input port, at least one output port, at least one RF amplifier chip attached to said package, said RF amplifier chip comprising at least one electronic device disposed on an epilayer overlying a substrate, an RF power combiner coupled to said output port, and a heat conducting element, wherein said substrate comprises a first layer of synthetic diamond characterized by an average value of thermal conductivity. In yet another embodiment, the average thermal conductivity of synthetic diamond is 1000 W/mK.
[0058] While the foregoing has described what are considered to be the best mode and/or other examples, it is understood that various modifications may be made therein and that the subject matter disclosed herein may be implemented in various forms and examples, and that the teachings may be applied in numerous applications, only some of which have been described herein. It is intended by the following claims to claim any and all applications, modifications and variations that fall within the true scope of the present teachings.