Title
Silicon Compatible GaN Power Electronics

CoPED ID
bd3576c8-47b9-423f-8253-fa5c8cead1ce

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
£12,393,434

Start Date
March 1, 2013

End Date
Aug. 30, 2018

Description

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Power electronics are seldom seen, yet our daily lives would be very different without them. Power electronics are crucial to improving the battery life of a mobile phone & to maximising the efficiency of high-voltage transmission lines. They are found in railways & hybrid cars, in TVs & energy efficient lighting. Although not perhaps obvious, power electronics are vital to meeting the CO2 reduction targets set by Government. The use of these technologies in the control of electrical machines in factories is predicted to save up to 9% of total electrical energy consumption in the UK. In addition, power electronics are going to be key to controlling the renewable energy sources of the future low carbon economy, which will be producing 30% of our energy by 2020.
With a predicted 50% improvement in energy efficiency over current silicon devices, transistors produced from gallium nitride (the same semiconductor material used in low energy LEDs) have the potential to revolutionise power electronics. By working together, research teams from the Universities of Glasgow, Cambridge, Nottingham, Liverpool, Bristol, Sheffield & Manchester will develop & prototype highly efficient, gallium nitride power electronics devices with world-leading performance. Critically, routes to manufacture in a silicon wafer fabrication facility will be developed. Making these step changes is an outstanding opportunity for the 19 silicon manufacturing facilities in the UK, as the global power electronics market is currently worth £135 billion, & growing at a rate of 10% per annum. The outcomes will also underpin next generation applications in high-value manufacturing sectors including traditional UK strengths such as the automotive, aerospace, consumer electronics, lighting, healthcare & energy industries. .
Not surprisingly, global competition in the area of gallium nitride power electronics is fierce, & a number of high profile research projects have recently been established in Europe, the US & the Far East. This flagship UK project is a consortium of world-leading University research groups who together have the skill, expertise & critical mass to compete successfully against the rest of the world. To achieve our challenging goals, Cambridge, Nottingham & Sheffield will together focus on the growth & evaluation of gallium nitride materials on silicon substrates to produce the starting semiconductor wafers required for manufacture. Bristol & Nottingham will perform detailed simulations of device performance to inform the choice of gallium nitride materials & also the specific transistor structures for the various applications. Glasgow & Liverpool will combine expertise to develop procedures for the manufacture of gallium nitride transistors using "silicon friendly" approaches & then combine these processes to produce world-leading devices. Manchester, Nottingham & Bristol will evaluate the transistors in measurement systems which mimic the various real world applications for which power electronics are required. Throughout the project, there will be continual feedback between the teams to ensure that optimsied devices are produced.
For scientific, technical & economic reasons, a number of UK based companies spanning semiconductor wafer growth, silicon based power electronics device manufacture, & systems suppliers using power electronics components have aligned themselves with the project, keen to exploit the outcomes of the research.
By developing world-leading gallium nitride power electronics components using silicon manufacturing approaches, this project, which is directly aligned with the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council energy efficiency & manufacturing the future strategies , will deliver internationally leading scientific outputs & next generation technologies which UK companies will be in a position to quickly take forward thereby maximising both academic impact & economic benefit.


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Potential Impact:
Power electronics underpins the high-value manufacturing sectors of the UK including electrical drives, automotive, aerospace, industrial drives, healthcare and ICT. The GaN on Si research in this proposal is aimed at supporting the UK power semiconductor industry which is 6.5% of the world manufacturing base of £135 Bn pa by delivering technology that could provide savings of up to 9% of the annual electricity generated in the UK (i.e. 5 AGR nuclear reactors) and £1 trillion worldwide pa. The outstanding commitment of 10 leading industrial partners who have expressed support with a value in excess of £2M defines their view of the high level of commercial opportunities for GaN on Si technology to the UK and highlights the importance of the project to the future economic wealth of the UK.
Specifically, IQE, with its commercial GaN growth in Wales, believe the market opportunities for them in the area of GaN on Si materials will be at least $10M by 2020; NXP are committed to developing GaN on Si electronics and, based on a recent £16M investment in the area which has secured over 400 technically skilled jobs in high value manufacturing, establishing a commercial GaN power electronics production facility in Stockport/Manchester, are currently projecting annual sales revenues of around $150M by 2020. IR with its GaN growth and fabrication facility in Newport established further employment of 100s of highly trained employments. GaN Systems Ltd project employing 30 highly qualified engineers in the UK by 2020, and estimate an annual market potential of $200M. Semefab are of the view that they can capture a fraction of the market worth at least $10M pa, whilst Plessey predict the need to run with 4 growth reactors for their 150 mm production line, generating ~£100M pa in the coming 5 years. As stated by NMI, the project "is of vital strategic importance to our membership" and are committed to facilitate linkages with systems end users in the automotive, aerospace, consumer and energy sectors where the UK has significant strengths. The capability to innovate has excellent potential to dramatically increase revenue generation. The relatively new emerging UK strength in renewable energy generation represents a rapidly expanding market opportunity for GaN on Si power electronics in both control and conditioning applications. In addition, DSTL are engaged in the project to assess impact in the military sector and have identified opportunities for strengthening linkages into key European programmes.
In line with one of the key BIS Power Electronics 2011 report recommendations, this project will enhance significantly the talent pool of trained scientists and engineers who can become future generation leaders in the area of power electronics. The project will train 12 postdoctoral researchers and at least 8 PhDs (contributed from the partner DTA accounts) during the lifetime of the project. In addition, numerous undergraduates and Masters students will receive high quality training through associated project work. We expect all researchers to work across the traditional boundaries of domain expertise, which a large, multi-disciplinary project of this type facilitates, exactly the type of skills required to succeed in modern high technology, high value industry. Research outputs will be disseminated via the usual academic channels, with the associated profile that international conferences and publication in leading journals brings, suitable IP agreements will be put in place to formally protect any valuable IP generated The advantage of already having significant UK industrial engagement is that the companies will have early visibility of emerging opportunities and so uptake of new technology should be rapid and efficient. This project will target devices and device structures at a TRL level 1-3 which will benefit the companies involved and the UK in economic impact via potential subsequent implementation in a commercial environment.

Subjects by relevance
  1. Power electronics
  2. Semiconductors
  3. Renewable energy sources
  4. Transistors
  5. Amplifiers
  6. Electronics industry
  7. Electronics
  8. Diodes
  9. Energy efficiency
  10. Energy consumption (energy technology)
  11. Gallium nitride
  12. Conference publications
  13. Sound reproduction equipment
  14. Semiconductor technology
  15. Energy control
  16. Live electronics

Extracted key phrases
  1. Silicon Compatible GaN Power Electronics
  2. Gallium nitride power electronic component
  3. Power electronic
  4. Key BIS Power Electronics
  5. Commercial GaN power electronics production facility
  6. Gallium nitride power electronics device
  7. GaN Systems Ltd project
  8. UK power semiconductor industry
  9. Si electronic
  10. Power electronics device manufacture
  11. Commercial GaN growth
  12. Consumer electronic
  13. Flagship UK project
  14. High profile research project
  15. Global power electronics market

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations