Innovative III-Nitride Epitaxy Approach for Low Dislocation GaN and Free-Standing GaN Substrate
GaN and its related alloys have emerged as eminently useful materials for the fabrication of green-to-ultraviolet light-emitting diodes (LEDs), laser diodes (LD) and also high-power, high-efficiency transistor devices due to their widely tunable bandgap. The key technological challenge in the manufa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society) 2014-08, Vol.MA2014-02 (46), p.2151-2151 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | GaN and its related alloys have emerged as eminently useful materials for the fabrication of green-to-ultraviolet light-emitting diodes (LEDs), laser diodes (LD) and also high-power, high-efficiency transistor devices due to their widely tunable bandgap. The key technological challenge in the manufacturing of these high performance optoelectronic and electronic devices is the absence of GaN substrates of practical size. As a result, all epitaxial GaN films are grown on the top of a substrate with different lattice constant, such as sapphire, Si and SiC, leading to the inevitable introduction of dislocations and residual strain in the epilayers, which is known to degrade the performance and reliability of the devices. Moreover, the popularly used sapphire substrate is an insulator with low thermal conductivity and difficult to cleave beneath the GaN based LD wafers. So there is a high demand for both low dislocation GaN epilayers and freestanding substrate. In this work, we present two approaches to meet this demand. (1). The Innovative One-step Lateral Epitaxy with Serpentine Mask Structures. There are two key features to this technology, one being a unique mask structure that blocks threading dislocations using amorphous films, and the other being associated with the controlled selective nucleation directly on sapphire surface. The direction of the growth front of GaN makes two 90
°
turns before emerging from the serpentine channel. The growth direction at the beginning is along the substrate surface norm that subsequently turns to become parallel to the surface and finally turns towards the surface norm again when emerging from the serpentine channel. It achieves the blockage of threading dislocations from reaching the active device region. The second key feature is the selective nucleation of GaN on sapphire surfaces but not on the amorphous mask surfaces, which is the enabling factor that allows for the entire fabrication process being carried out with only one single epitaxial step, leading to significant reduction in the fabrication cost. The microstructural and optical properties of the GaN epilayer grown on serpentine masked structures will be described. Furthermore, we will summarize that this novel technique is a promising candidate for the growth of high quality III-nitride and the subsequent high-performance device fabrication including high brightness LED, laser diodes, and high-power, high-efficiency transistors. (2) Free-Standing (FS) GaN Su |
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ISSN: | 2151-2043 2151-2035 |
DOI: | 10.1149/MA2014-02/46/2151 |