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Power electronics with wide bandgap materials: Toward greener, more efficient technologies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2015

Francesca Iacopi
Affiliation:
Queensland Micro- and Nanotechnology Centre, Griffith University, Australia; f.iacopi@griffith.edu.au
Marleen Van Hove
Affiliation:
Interuniversity Microelectronics Center, Belgium; marleen.vanhove@imec.be
Matthew Charles
Affiliation:
Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives, Minatec Campus, France; matthew.charles@cea.fr
Kazuhiro Endo
Affiliation:
Kanazawa Institute of Technology, Japan; kendo@neptune.kanazawa-it.ac.jp

Abstract

Greener technologies for more efficient power generation, distribution, and delivery in sectors ranging from transportation and generic energy supply to telecommunications are quickly expanding in response to the challenge of climate change. Power electronics is at the center of this fast development. As the efficiency and resiliency requirements for such technologies can no longer be met by silicon, the research, development, and industrial implementation of wide bandgap semiconductors such as gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC) are progressing at an unprecedented pace. This issue of MRS Bulletin, although certainly not exhaustive, provides an overview of the pace and quality of research revolving around GaN and SiC power electronics, from the choice of substrates, film growth, devices, and circuits to examples of applications.

Information

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2015 
Figure 0

Figure 1. World’s anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from 1970 to 2004, expressed in gigatons CO2 equivalent.20

Figure 1

Table I. Overview of the material properties of Si, GaAs, GaN, and 4H-SiC.14

Figure 2

Figure 2. Cross-sections of typical wide bandgap power devices: (a) Vertical double metal oxide semiconductor SiC metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor, and (b) lateral GaN high-electron-mobility transistors.