Wolfspeed, Inc.
Reduced-Length Bond Pads for Broadband Power Amplifiers
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Abstract:
In a transistor formed on a semiconductor die mounted on a substrate, where the transistor output is connected to a circuit on the substrate, a bond pad electrically connected to a transistor drain finger manifold extends less than the full length of the manifold. By controlling the length of the bond pad, the parasitic capacitance it contributes may be controlled. In applications such as a Doherty amplifier, this parasitic capacitance forms part of the quarter-wave transmission line of an impedance inverter, and hence directly impacts amplifier performance. In particular, by reducing the parasitic capacitance contribution from transistor output bond pads, the bandwidth of a Doherty amplifier circuit may be improved. At GHz frequencies and with state of the art transistor device feature sizes, concerns about phase mismatch between drain finger outputs are largely moot.
Utility
21 May 2019
26 Nov 2020