Selective Area Growth of Single-Crystalline Alpha-Gallium Oxide on a Sapphire Nanomembrane by Mist Chemical Vapor Deposition

Alpha-gallium oxide (α-Ga2O3) has been considered a promising material for efficient power semiconductors because of its large bandgap. Sapphire can be an appropriate substrate for α-Ga2O3 because the two materials have the same crystal structure. However, it is hard to obtain high-quality α-Ga2O3 t...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied electronic materials 2021-10, Vol.3 (10), p.4328-4336
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Duyoung, Kim, Byungsoo, Lee, Tae Hyung, Oh, Jehong, Lee, Seungmin, Sohn, Woonbae, Yoon, Euijoon, Park, Yongjo, Jang, Ho Won
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Alpha-gallium oxide (α-Ga2O3) has been considered a promising material for efficient power semiconductors because of its large bandgap. Sapphire can be an appropriate substrate for α-Ga2O3 because the two materials have the same crystal structure. However, it is hard to obtain high-quality α-Ga2O3 thin films on sapphire due to a large lattice mismatch. Herein, we demonstrate the selective area growth of high-quality and strain-relaxed α-Ga2O3 thin films on the top of stripe-patterned sapphire nanomembranes. This process is enabled by the well-understood diffusion of adatoms to the highest surface energy plane of a sapphire nanomembrane at different growth temperatures. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy confirmed that misfit dislocations on the nanomembrane were reduced by 13% compared to those of α-Ga2O3 grown directly on a sapphire substrate. Reciprocal space mapping reveals that the sapphire nanomembrane reduces in-plane compressive strain in the film by up to 51.6%. This work paves a way for synthesizing high-quality α-Ga2O3 thin films that are promising for optoelectronic applications of high voltage and in deep ultraviolet.
ISSN:2637-6113
2637-6113
DOI:10.1021/acsaelm.1c00512