Vertical gallium nitride (GaN) p-n diodes have garnered significant interest for use in power electronics where high-voltage blocking and high-power efficiency are of concern. In this article, we detail the growth and fabrication methods used to develop a large area (1 mm2) vertical GaN p-n diode capable of a 6.0-kV breakdown. We also demonstrate a large area diode with a forward pulsed current of 3.5 A, an 8.3-mΩ$\cdot$cm2 differential specific ON-resistance, and a 5.3-kV reverse breakdown. In addition, we report on a smaller area diode (0.063 mm2) that is capable of 6.4-kV breakdown with a differential specific ON-resistance of 10.2 mΩ$\cdot$cm2, when accounting for current spreading through the drift region at a 45° angle. Finally, the demonstration of avalanche breakdown is shown for a 0.063-mm2 diode with a room temperature breakdown of 5.6 kV. In this work, these results were achieved via epitaxial growth of a 50-μm drift region with a very low carrier concentration of <1×1015 cm–3 and a carefully designed four-zone junction termination extension.
In this project we endeavored to improve the state-of-the-art in UV lasers diodes. We made important advancements in several fronts from modeling, to epitaxial growth, to fabrication, and testing. Throughout the project it became clear that polarization doping would be able to help advance the state of laser diode design in terms of electrical performance, but the optical design would need to be investigated to ensure that a 2D guided mode would be supported. New capability in optical modeling using commercial software demonstrated that the new polarization doped structures would be viable. New capability in pulsed testing was established to reach the current and voltage required. Our fabricated devices had some parasitic electrical paths which hindered performance that we were ultimately unable to overcome in the project timeframe. We do believe that future projects will be able to leverage the advancements made under this project.
This project explored chemical vapor deposition as a technique to synthesis cubic boron nitride (c-BN) for electronics and coating applications. Current c-BN synthesis techniques are greatly limiting due to requiring high pressure or non-equilibrium energy sources, such as ion bombardment.
Advanced GaN power devices are promising for many applications in high power electronics but performance limitations due to material quality in etched-and-regrown junctions prevent their widespread use. Carrier diffusion length is a critical parameter that not only determines device performance but is also a diagnostic of material quality. Here we present the use of electron-beam induced current to measure carrier diffusion lengths in continuously grown and etched-and-regrown GaN pin diodes as models for interfaces in more complex devices. Variations in the quality of the etched-and-regrown junctions are observed and shown to be due to the degradation of the n-type material. We observe an etched-and-regrown junction with properties comparable to a continuously grown junction.
We carefully investigate three important effects including postgrowth activation annealing, delta (δ) dose and magnesium (Mg) buildup delay as well as experimentally demonstrate their influence on the electrical properties of GaN homojunction p–n diodes with a tunnel junction (TJ). The diodes were monolithically grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) in a single growth step. By optimizing the annealing parameters for Mg activation, δ-dose for both donors and acceptors at TJ interfaces, and p+-GaN layer thickness, a significant improvement in tunneling properties is achieved. For the TJs embedded within the continuously-grown, all-MOCVD GaN diode structures, ultra-low voltage penalties of 158 mV and 490 mV are obtained at current densities of 20 A cm−2 and 100 A cm−2, respectively. The diodes with the engineered TJs show a record-low differential resistivity of 1.6 × 10−4 Ω cm2 at 5 kA cm−2.
Ultra-wide-bandgap aluminum gallium nitride (AlGaN) possesses several material properties that make it attractive for use in a variety of applications. This chapter focuses on power switching and radio-frequency (RF) devices based on Al-rich AlGaN heterostructures. The relevant figures of merit for both power switching and RF devices are discussed as motivation for the use of AlGaN heterostructures in such applications. The key physical parameters impacting these figures of merit include critical electric field, channel mobility, channel carrier density, and carrier saturation velocity, and the factors influencing these and the trade-offs between them are discussed. Surveys of both power switching and RF devices are given and their performance is described including in special operating regimes such as at high temperatures. Challenges to be overcome, such as the formation of low-resistivity Ohmic contacts, are presented. Finally, an overview of processing-related challenges, especially related to surfaces and interfaces, concludes the chapter.
This work provides the first demonstration of vertical GaN Junction Barrier Schottky (JBS) rectifiers fabricated by etch and regrowth of p-GaN. A reverse blocking voltage near 1500 V was achieved at 1 mA reverse leakage, with a sub 1 V turn-on and a specific on-resistance of 10 mΩ-cm2. This result is compared to other reported JBS devices in the literature and our device demonstrates the lowest leakage slope at high reverse bias. A large initial leakage current is present near zero-bias which is attributed to a combination of inadequate etch-damage removal and passivation induced leakage current.
Etched-and-regrown GaN pn-diodes capable of high breakdown voltage (1610 V), low reverse current leakage (1 nA = 6 μ A /cm2 at 1250 V), excellent forward characteristics (ideality factor 1.6), and low specific on-resistance (1.1 m Ω.cm2) were realized by mitigating plasma etch-related defects at the regrown interface. Epitaxial n -GaN layers grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition on free-standing GaN substrates were etched using inductively coupled plasma etching (ICP), and we demonstrate that a slow reactive ion etch (RIE) prior to p -GaN regrowth dramatically increases diode electrical performance compared to wet chemical surface treatments. Etched-and-regrown diodes without a junction termination extension (JTE) were characterized to compare diode performance using the post-ICP RIE method with prior studies of other post-ICP treatments. Then, etched-and-regrown diodes using the post-ICP RIE etch steps prior to regrowth were fabricated with a multi-step JTE to demonstrate kV-class operation.
Steady-state photocapacitance (SSPC) was conducted on nonpolar m-plane GaN n-type Schottky diodes to evaluate the defects induced by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) dry etching in etched-and-regrown unipolar structures. An ∼10× increase in the near-midgap Ec - 1.9 eV level compared to an as-grown material was observed. Defect levels associated with regrowth without an etch were also investigated. The defects in the regrown structure (without an etch) are highly spatially localized to the regrowth interface. Subsequently, by depth profiling an etched-and-regrown sample, we show that the intensities of the defect-related SSPC features associated with dry etching depend strongly on the depth away from the regrowth interface, which is also reported previously [Nedy et al., Semicond. Sci. Technol. 30, 085019 (2015); Fang et al., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 42, 4207-4212 (2003); and Cao et al., IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 47, 1320-1324 (2000)]. A photoelectrochemical etching (PEC) method and a wet AZ400K treatment are also introduced to reduce the etch-induced deep levels. A significant reduction in the density of deep levels is observed in the sample that was treated with PEC etching after dry etching and prior to regrowth. An ∼2× reduction in the density of Ec - 1.9 eV level compared to a reference etched-and-regrown structure was observed upon the application of PEC etching treatment prior to the regrowth. The PEC etching method is promising for reducing defects in selective-area doping for vertical power switching structures with complex geometries [Meyers et al., J. Electron. Mater. 49, 3481-3489 (2020)].
A sidewall activation process was optimized for buried magnesium-doped p-GaN layers yielding a significant reduction in tunnel junction-enabled light emitting diode (LED) forward voltage. This buried activation enabled the realization of cascaded blue LEDs with fully transparent GaN homojunction tunnel junctions. The initial optimization of buried p-GaN activation was performed on PN junctions grown by metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) buried under hybrid tunnel junctions grown by MOCVD and molecular beam epitaxy. Next the activation process was implemented in cascaded blue LEDs emitting at 450 nm, which were enabled by fully transparent GaN homojunction tunnel junctions. The tunnel junction-enabled multi-active region blue LEDs were grown monolithically by MOCVD. This work demonstrates a state-of-the-art tunnel junction-enabled cascaded LED utilizing homojunction tunnel junctions which do not contain any heterojunction interface.
GaN p-n diodes were formed by selective area regrowth on freestanding GaN substrates using a dry etch, followed by post-etch surface treatment to reduce etch-induced defects, and subsequent regrowth into wells. Etched-and-regrown diodes with a 150 μm diameter achieved 840 V operation at 0.5 A/cm2 reverse current leakage and a specific on-resistance of 1.2 mΩ·cm2. Etched-and-regrown diodes were compared with planar, regrown diodes without etching on the same wafer. Both types of diodes exhibited similar forward and reverse electrical characteristics, which indicate that etch-induced defectivity of the junction was sufficiently mitigated so as not to be the primary cause for leakage. An area dependence for forward and reverse leakage current density was observed, suggesting that the mesa sidewall provided a leakage path.
Impacts of silicon, carbon, and oxygen interfacial impurities on the performance of high-voltage vertical GaN-based p–n diodes are investigated. The results indicate that moderate levels (≈5 × 1017 cm-3) of all interfacial impurities lead to reverse blocking voltages (Vb) greater than 200 V at 1 μA cm-2 and forward leakage of less than 1 µA cm-2 at 1.7 V. At higher interfacial impurity levels, the performance of the diodes becomes compromised. Herein, it is concluded that each impurity has a different effect on the device performance. For example, a high carbon spike at the junction correlates with high off-state leakage current in forward bias (≈100× higher forward leakage current compared with a reference diode), whereas the reverse bias behavior is not severely affected (> 200 V at 1 μA cm-2). High silicon and oxygen spikes at the junction strongly affect the reverse leakage currents (≈ 1–10 V at 1 μA cm-2). Regrown diodes with impurity (silicon, oxygen, and carbon) levels below 5 × 1017 cm-3 show comparable forward and reverse results with the reference continuously grown diodes. The effect of the regrowth interface position relative to the metallurgical junction on the diode performance is also discussed.
The impact of dry-etch-induced defects on the electrical performance of regrown, c-plane, GaN p-n diodes where the p-GaN layer is formed by epitaxial regrowth using metal-organic, chemical-vapor deposition was investigated. Diode leakage increased significantly for etched-and-regrown diodes compared to continuously grown diodes, suggesting a defect-mediated leakage mechanism. Deep level optical spectroscopy (DLOS) techniques were used to identify energy levels and densities of defect states to understand etch-induced damage in regrown devices. DLOS results showed the creation of an emergent, mid-gap defect state at 1.90 eV below the conduction band edge for etched-and-regrown diodes. Reduction in both the reverse leakage and the concentration of the 1.90 eV mid-gap state was achieved using a wet chemical treatment on the etched surface before regrowth, suggesting that the 1.90 eV deep level contributes to increased leakage and premature breakdown but can be mitigated with proper post-etch treatments to achieve >600 V reverse breakdown operation.
Edge termination for vertical power devices presents a significant challenge, as improper termination can result in devices with a breakdown voltage significantly less than the ideal infinite-planar case. Edge termination for vertical GaN devices is particularly challenging due to limitations in ion implantation for GaN, and as such this work investigates a bevel edge termination technique that does not require implantation and has proven to be effective for Si and SiC power devices. However, due to key differences between GaN versus Si and SiC p-n junctions (specifically, a grown versus an implanted junction), this technology needs to be reevaluated for GaN. Simulation results suggest that by leveraging the effective bevel angle relationship, a 10-15° physical bevel angle can yield devices with 85-90% of the ideal breakdown voltage. Results are presented for a negative bevel edge termination on an ideally 2 kV vertical GaN p-n diode.
AlGaN-channel high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) were operated as visible- and solar-blind photodetectors by using GaN nanodots as an optically active floating gate. The effect of the floating gate was large enough to switch an HEMT from the off-state in the dark to an on-state under illumination. This opto-electronic response achieved responsivity > 108 A/W at room temperature while allowing HEMTs to be electrically biased in the offstate for low dark current and low DC power dissipation. The influence of GaN nanodot distance from the HEMT channel on the dynamic range of the photodetector was investigated, along with the responsivity and temporal response of the floating gate HEMT as a function of optical intensity. The absorption threshold was shown to be controlled by the AlN mole fraction of the HEMT channel layer, thus enabling the same device design to be tuned for either visible- or solar-blind detection.
GaN is an attractive material for high-power electronics due to its wide bandgap and large breakdown field. Verticalgeometry devices are of interest due to their high blocking voltage and small form factor. One challenge for realizing complex vertical devices is the regrowth of low-leakage-current p-n junctions within selectively defined regions of the wafer. Presently, regrown p-n junctions exhibit higher leakage current than continuously grown p-n junctions, possibly due to impurity incorporation at the regrowth interfaces, which consist of c-plane and non-basal planes. Here, we study the interfacial impurity incorporation induced by various growth interruptions and regrowth conditions on m-plane p-n junctions on free-standing GaN substrates. The following interruption types were investigated: (1) sample in the main MOCVD chamber for 10 min, (2) sample in the MOCVD load lock for 10 min, (3) sample outside the MOCVD for 10 min, and (4) sample outside the MOCVD for one week. Regrowth after the interruptions was performed on two different samples under n-GaN and p-GaN growth conditions, respectively. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) analysis indicated interfacial silicon spikes with concentrations ranging from 5e16 cm-3 to 2e18 cm-3 for the n-GaN growth conditions and 2e16 cm-3 to 5e18 cm-3 for the p-GaN growth conditions. Oxygen spikes with concentrations ∼1e17 cm-3 were observed at the regrowth interfaces. Carbon impurity levels did not spike at the regrowth interfaces under either set of growth conditions. We have correlated the effects of these interfacial impurities with the reverse leakage current and breakdown voltage of regrown m-plane p-n junctions.
Over the past 15 years, tremendous progress has been made in AlGaN-based optoelectronic devices, including light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and laser diodes (LDs) in the deep UV (DUV) region of the spectrum. However, performance levels are still lagging those of InGaN light emitters in the visible region due to outstanding materials challenges of the wider band gap AlGaN alloys. In this review, we focus on two of the most significant materials roadblocks to higher-performing AlGaN devices: doping and substrates. For each topic, we present the state of the art as well as exploratory concepts for enabling future device advances. On the topic of p-type doping, we describe the concomitant challenges of large acceptor activation energy, dopant solubility, and compensating defects and describe growth optimization approaches to mitigate those issues. We further present polarization engineering approaches to enhance p-type doping, including Mg-doped superlattices, distributed polarization doping, and tunnel-junction-enabled LEDs. Limitations to n-type doping for high-Al-composition AlGaN alloys are also reviewed along with insights into the origins these doping challenges. On the topic of substrates, we report the challenges of heteroepitaxy on lattice-mismatched substrates, describe the impact of high dislocation densities on AlGaN emitters, and overview strategies for dislocation reduction. State-of-the-art UV LD performance, enabled by these defect reduction strategies, is also presented. Limitations due to electrically insulating substrates are described as well as promising approaches to achieving vertical-injection UV light emitters. Overall, common themes of employing material and device structures at the micro/nanoscale and leveraging the polarization properties of nitride heterostructures reveal approaches for realizing next-generation UV light emitters.
Here, we present a low resistance, straightforward planar ohmic contact for Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.3Ga0.7N high electron mobility transistors. Five metal stacks (a/Al/b/Au; a = Ti, Zr, V, Nb/Ti; b = Ni, Mo, V) were evaluated at three individual annealing temperatures (850, 900, and 950°C). The Ti/Al/Ni/Au achieved the lowest specific contact resistance at a 900°C anneal temperature. Transmission electron microscopy analysis revealed a metal-semiconductor interface of Ti-Al-Au for an ohmic (900°C anneal) and a Schottky (850°C anneal) Ti/Al/Ni/Au stack. HEMTs were fabricated using the optimized recipe with resulting contacts that had room-temperature specific contact resistances of ρc = 2.5 × 10-5 Ω cm², sheet resistances of RSH = 3.9 kΩ/$\blacksquare$, and maximum current densities of 75 mA/mm (at VGATE of 2 V). Electrical measurements from -50 to 200°C had decreasing specific contact resistance and increasing sheet resistance, with increasing temperature. These contacts enabled state-of-the-art performance of Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.3Ga0.7N HEMTs.
"Ultra" wide-bandgap semiconductors are an emerging class of materials with bandgaps greater than that of gallium nitride (EG >3.4 eV) that may ultimately benefit a wide range of applications, including switching power conversion, pulsed power, RF electronics, UV optoelectronics, and quantum information. This paper describes the progress made to date at Sandia National Laboratories to develop one of these materials, aluminum gallium nitride, targeted toward high-power devices. The advantageous material properties of AlGaN are reviewed, questions concerning epitaxial growth and defect physics are covered, and the processing and performance of vertical- and lateral-geometry devices are described. The paper concludes with an assessment of the outlook for AlGaN, including outstanding research opportunities and a brief discussion of other potential applications.
Electrical performance and characterization of deep levels in vertical GaN P-i-N diodes grown on low threading dislocation density (∼104 - 106cm-2) bulk GaN substrates are investigated. The lightly doped n drift region of these devices is observed to be highly compensated by several prominent deep levels detected using deep level optical spectroscopy at Ec-2.13, 2.92, and 3.2 eV. A combination of steady-state photocapacitance and lighted capacitance-voltage profiling indicates the concentrations of these deep levels to be Nt = 3 × 1012, 2 × 1015, and 5 × 1014cm-3, respectively. The Ec-2.92 eV level is observed to be the primary compensating defect in as-grown n-type metal-organic chemical vapor deposition GaN, indicating this level acts as a limiting factor for achieving controllably low doping. The device blocking voltage should increase if compensating defects reduce the free carrier concentration of the n drift region. Understanding the incorporation of as-grown and native defects in thick n-GaN is essential for enabling large VBD in the next-generation wide-bandgap power semiconductor devices. Thus, controlling the as-grown defects induced by epitaxial growth conditions is critical to achieve blocking voltage capability above 5 kV.
Demonstration of Al00.3Ga0.7N PN diodes grown with breakdown voltages in excess of 1600 V is reported. The total epilayer thickness is 9.1 μm and was grown by metal-organic vapour-phase epitaxy on 1.3-mm-thick sapphire in order to achieve crack-free structures. A junction termination edge structure was employed to control the lateral electric fields. A current density of 3.5 kA/cm2 was achieved under DC forward bias and a reverse leakage current <3 nA was measured for voltages <1200 V. The differential on-resistance of 16 mΩ cm2 is limited by the lateral conductivity of the n-type contact layer required by the front-surface contact geometry of the device. An effective critical electric field of 5.9 MV/cm was determined from the epilayer properties and the reverse current–voltage characteristics. To our knowledge, this is the first aluminium gallium nitride (AlGaN)-based PN diode exhibiting a breakdown voltage in excess of 1 kV. Finally, we note that a Baliga figure of merit (Vbr2/Rspec,on) of 150 MW/cm2 found is the highest reported for an AlGaN PN diode and illustrates the potential of larger-bandgap AlGaN alloys for high-voltage devices.
The realisation of a GaN high voltage vertical p-n diode operating at >3.9 kV breakdown with a specific on-resistance <0.9 mΩ cm2 is reported. Diodes achieved a forward current of 1 A for on-wafer, DC measurements, corresponding to a current density >1.4 kA/cm2. An effective critical electric field of 3.9 MV/cm was estimated for the devices from analysis of the forward and reverse current-voltage characteristics. This suggests that the fundamental limit to the GaN critical electric field is significantly greater than previously believed.
Solar-blind photodetection and photoconductive gain >50 corresponding to a responsivity >8 A/W were observed for β-Ga2O3 Schottky photodiodes. The origin of photoconductive gain was investigated. Current-voltage characteristics of the diodes did not indicate avalanche breakdown, which excludes carrier multiplication by impact ionization as the source for gain. However, photocapacitance measurements indicated a mechanism for hole localization for above-band gap illumination, suggesting self-trapped hole formation. Comparison of photoconductivity and photocapacitance spectra indicated that self-trapped hole formation coincides with the strong photoconductive gain. It is concluded that self-trapped hole formation near the Schottky diode lowers the effective Schottky barrier in reverse bias, producing photoconductive gain. Ascribing photoconductive gain to an inherent property like self-trapping of holes can explain the operation of a variety of β-Ga2O3 photodetectors.
We fabricated optically pumped and electrically injected ultraviolet (UV) lasers on reduced-threading-dislocation-density (reduced-TDD) AlGaN templates. The overgrowth of sub-micron-wide mesas in the Al0.32Ga0.68N templates enabled a tenfold reduction in TDD, to (2-3) × 108cm%2. Optical pumping of AlGaN hetero-structures grown on the reduced-TDD templates yielded a low lasing threshold of 34kW/cm2 at 346 nm. Roomtemperature pulsed operation of laser diodes at 353nm was demonstrated, with a threshold of 22.5 kA/cm2. Reduced-TDD templates have been developed across the entire range of AlGaN compositions, presenting a promising approach for extending laser diodes into the deep UV.
This letter analyzes the proposal to mitigate the efficiency droop in solid-state light emitters by replacing InGaN light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with lasers. The argument in favor of this approach is that carrier-population clamping after the onset of lasing limits carrier loss to that at threshold, while stimulated emission continues to grow with injection current. A fully quantized (carriers and light) theory that is applicable to LEDs and lasers (above and below threshold) is used to obtain a quantitative evaluation. The results confirm the potential advantage of higher laser output power and efficiency above lasing threshold, while also indicating disadvantages including low efficiency prior to lasing onset, sensitivity of lasing threshold to temperature, and the effects of catastrophic laser failure. A solution to some of these concerns is suggested that takes advantage of recent developments in nanolasers.
The growth temperature dependence of Si doping efficiency and deep level defect formation was investigated for n-type Al0.7Ga0.3N. It was observed that dopant compensation was greatly reduced with reduced growth temperature. Furthermore, deep level optical spectroscopy and lighted capacitance-voltage were used to understand the role of acceptor-like deep level defects on doping efficiency. Deep level defects were observed at 2.34 eV, 3.56 eV, and 4.74 eV below the conduction band minimum. The latter two deep levels were identified as the major compensators because the reduction in their concentrations at reduced growth temperature correlated closely with the concomitant increase in free electron concentration. Possible mechanisms for the strong growth temperature dependence of deep level formation are considered, which includes thermodynamically driven compensating defect formation that can arise for a semiconductor with very large band gap energy, such as Al0.7Ga0.3N.
The influence of a dilute InxGa1-xN (x ∼ 0.03) underlayer (UL) grown below a single In0.16Ga0.84N quantum well (SQW), within a light-emitting diode (LED), on the radiative efficiency and deep level defect properties was studied using differential carrier lifetime (DCL) measurements and deep level optical spectroscopy (DLOS). DCL measurements found that inclusion of the UL significantly improved LED radiative efficiency. At low current densities, the non-radiative recombination rate of the LED with an UL was found to be 3.9 times lower than the LED without an UL, while the radiative recombination rates were nearly identical. This suggests that the improved radiative efficiency resulted from reduced non-radiative defect concentration within the SQW. DLOS measurement found the same type of defects in the InGaN SQWs with and without ULs. However, lighted capacitance-voltage measurements of the LEDs revealed a 3.4 times reduction in a SQW-related near-mid-gap defect state for the LED with an UL. Quantitative agreement in the reduction of both the non-radiative recombination rate (3.9×) and deep level density (3.4×) upon insertion of an UL corroborates deep level defect reduction as the mechanism for improved LED efficiency.
Electrical current leakage paths in AlGaN-based ultraviolet (UV) light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are identified using conductive atomic force microscopy. Open-core threading dislocations are found to conduct current through insulating Al0.7Ga0.3N layers. A defect-sensitive H3PO4 etch reveals these open-core threading dislocations as 1-2mu;m wide hexagonal etch pits visible with optical microscopy. Additionally, closed-core threading dislocations are decorated with smaller and more numerous nanometer-scale pits, which are quantifiable by atomic-force microscopy. The performances of UV-LEDs fabricated on similar Si-doped Al0.7Ga0.3N templates are found to have a strong correlation to the density of these electrically conductive open-core dislocations, while the total threading dislocation densities of the UV-LEDs remain relatively unchanged.
Current-voltage (IV) characteristics of two AlGaN-based deep ultraviolet (DUV) light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with differing densities of open-core threading dislocations (nanopipes) are analyzed. A three-diode circuit is simulated to emulate the forward-bias IV characteristics of the DUV-LEDs, but is only able to accurately model the lower leakage current, lower nanopipe density DUV-LED. It was found that current leakage through the nanopipes in these structures is rectifying, despite nanopipes being previously established as inherently n-type. Using defect-sensitive etching, the nanopipes are revealed to terminate within the p-type GaN capping layer of the DUV-LEDs. The circuit model is modified to account for another p-n junction between the n-type nanopipes and the p-type GaN, and an excellent fit to the forward-bias IV characteristics of the leaky DUV-LED is achieved.
The goal of this NETL funded program was to improve the IQE in green (and longer wavelength) nitride- based LEDs structures by using semi-polar GaN planar orientations for InGaN multiple quantum well (MQW) growth. These semi-polar orientations have the advantage of significantly reducing the piezoelectric fields that distort the QW band structure and decrease electron-hole overlap. In addition, semipolar surfaces potentially provide a more open surface bonding environment for indium incorporation, thus enabling higher indium concentrations in the InGaN MQW. The goal of the proposed work was to select the optimal semi-polar orientation and explore wafer miscuts around this orientation that produced the highest quantum efficiency LEDs. At the end of this program we had hoped to have MQWs active regions at 540 nm with an IQE of 50% and an EQE of 40%, which would be approximately twice the estimated current state-of-the-art.
We present the results of a three year LDRD project that has focused on overcoming major materials roadblocks to achieving AlGaN-based deep-UV laser diodes. We describe our growth approach to achieving AlGaN templates with greater than ten times reduction of threading dislocations which resulted in greater than seven times enhancement of AlGaN quantum well photoluminescence and 15 times increase in electroluminescence from LED test structures. We describe the application of deep-level optical spectroscopy to AlGaN epilayers to quantify deep level energies and densities and further correlate defect properties with AlGaN luminescence efficiency. We further review our development of p-type short period superlattice structures as an approach to mitigate the high acceptor activation energies in AlGaN alloys. Finally, we describe our laser diode fabrication process, highlighting the development of highly vertical and smooth etched laser facets, as well as characterization of resulting laser heterostructures.
Vertically aligned InGaN/GaN nanorod light emitting diode (LED) arrays were created from planar LED structures using a new top-down fabrication technique consisting of a plasma etch followed by an anisotropic wet etch. The wet etch results in straight, smooth, well-faceted nanorods with controllable diameters and removes the plasma etch damage. 94% of the nanorod LEDs are dislocation-free and a reduced quantum confined Stark effect is observed due to reduced piezoelectric fields. Despite these advantages, the IQE of the nanorod LEDs measured by photoluminescence is comparable to the planar LED, perhaps due to inefficient thermal transport and enhanced nonradiative surface recombination.
In this work, we model the carrier recombination mechanisms in GaInN/GaN light-emitting diodes as R=An+Bn2+Cn3+f(n), where f(n) represents carrier leakage out of the active region. The term f(n) is expanded into a power series and shown to have higher-than-third-order contributions to the recombination. The total third-order nonradiative coefficient (which may include an f(n) leakage contribution and an Auger contribution) is found to be 8×10-29 cm6 s-1. Finally, comparison of the theoretical ABC+f(n) model with experimental data shows that a good fit requires the inclusion of the f(n) term.