AbstractsBiology & Animal Science

Development of aluminum gallium nitride based optoelectronic devices operating in deep UV and terahertz spectrum ranges

by Wei Zhang




Institution: Boston University
Department:
Year: 2014
Record ID: 2043814
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/11093


Abstract

In this research project I have investigated AIGaN alloys and their quantum structures for applications in deep UV and terahertz optoelectronic devices. For the deep UV emitter applications the materials and devices were grown by rf plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy on 4H-SiC, 6H-SiC and c- plane sapphire substrates. In the growth of AIGaN /AIN multiple quantum wells on SiC substrates, the AIGaN wells were grown under excess Ga, far beyond than what is required for the growth of stoichiometric AIGaN films, which resulted in liquid phase epitaxy growth mode. Due to the statistical variations of the excess Ga on the growth front we found that this growth mode leads to films with lateral variations in the composition and thus, band structure potential fluctuations. Transmission electron microscopy shows that the wells in such structures are not homogeneous but have the appearance of quantum dots. We find by temperature dependent photoluminescence measurements that the multiple quantum wells with band structure potential fluctuations emit at 240 nm and have room temperature internal quantum efficiency as high as 68%. Furthermore, they were found to have a maximum net modal optical gain of 118 cm-1 at a transparency threshold corresponding to 1.4 x 1017 cm-3 excited carriers. We attribute this low transparency threshold to population inversion of only the regions of the potential fluctuations rather than of the entire matrix. Some prototype deep UV emitting LED structures were also grown by the same method on sapphire substrates. Optoelectronic devices for terahertz light emission and detection, based on intersubband transitions in Ill-nitride semiconductor quantum wells, were grown on single crystal c-plane GaN substrates. Growth conditions such the ratio of group Ill to active nitrogen fluxes, which determines the appropriate Ga- coverage for atomically smooth growth without requiring growth interruptions were employed. Emitters designed in the quantum cascade structure were fabricated into mesa-structure devices and the 1-V characterization at 20 K indicates sequential tunneling with electroluminescence emission at about 10 THz. Similarly, Far-infrared photoconductive detectors were grown by the same method. Photocurrent spectra centered at 23 1-1m (13 THz) are resolved up to 50 K, with responsivity of approximately 7 mAIW.