My watch list
my.chemeurope.com  
Login  

MESFET



MESFET stands for Metal-Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor. It is quite similar to a JFET in construction and terminology. The difference is that instead of a using a p-n junction for a gate, a Schottky (metal-semiconductor) junction is used. MESFETs are usually constructed in compound semiconductor technologies lacking high quality surface passivation such as GaAs, InP, or SiC, and are faster but more expensive than silicon-based JFETs or MOSFETs. Production MESFETs are operated up to approximately 30 GHz, and are commonly used for microwave frequency communications and radar. From a digital circuit design perspective, it is increasingly difficult to use MESFETs as the basis for digital integrated circuits as the scale of integration goes up, compared to CMOS silicon based fabrication.

Contents

Functional Architecture

  The MESFET differs from the common insulated gate FET in that there is no insulator under the gate over the active switching region. This implies that the MESFET gate should, in transistor mode, be biased such that one does not have a forward conducting metal semiconductor diode instead of a reversed biased depletion zone controlling the underlying channel. While this restriction inhibits certain circuit possibilities, MESFET analog and digital devices work reasonably well if kept within the confines of design limits. The most critical aspect of the design is the gate metal extent over the switching region. Generally the narrower the gate modulated carrier channel the better the frequency handling abilities, overall. Spacing of the source and drain with respect to the gate, and the lateral extent of the gate are important though somewhat less critical design parameters. MESFET current handling ability improves as the gate is elongated laterally, keeping the active region constant, however is limited by phase shift along the gate due to the transmission line effect. As a result most production MESFETs use a built up top layer of low resistance metal on the gate, often producing a mushroom-like profile in cross section.

Application

Numerous MESFET fabrication possibilites have been explored for a wide variety of semiconductor systems. Some of the main application areas are:

  • military communications
  • military radar devices
  • commercial optoelectronics
  • satellite communications

References

  • I.M. Abdel-Motaleb, W.C. Rutherford and L. Young: GaAs inverted common drain logic (ICDL) and its performance compared with other GaAs logic families. In: Solid-State Electronics, Volume 30, Issue 4 , April 1987, Pages 403-414 [1]

See also

  • Field effect transistor
  • HEMT
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "MESFET". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 does not support some functions on Chemie.DE