Title: Determination of the dislocation density by mphotoluminescence
1Determination of the dislocation density by
m-photoluminescence
2The topics of the presentation
- The heteroepitaxial growth and the dislocation
formation - Dislocation effects
- Photoluminescence principles
- The m-PL set-up
- Some examples about the correlation of micro-PL
measurements with the morphology for GaN - Conclusions
3Why heteroepitaxy ?
- Heteroepitaxy is the growth of one semiconductor
- on another semiconductor
- Motivations of heteroepitaxy
- - Absence of native substrates
(Ex GaN ) - - Growth of active layers on
cheaper substrates (Ex GaAs on Si) - - Realization of heterostructures
(i.e. band- gap engineering quantum wells,
quantum dots, HEMTs, .)
4The three main growth mechanism
- In the F-M case the deposited atoms are bound to
the sub-strate more than to each other,
pseudomorphic growth - In the V-W case is the binding in between the
deposited atoms to prevail, nucleation growth - The S-K case occurs in the intermediate region
5Pseudomorphic vs. strain relaxed
- In the case of Frank-van der Merwe growth the
epilayer undergoes through - (a) a pseudomorphic growth for layers thick
no more - than the critical thickness ( )
- (b) followed by a strain relaxed growth with
creation of misfit dislocation at the interface
6The two energetic contributions
- The strain energy per unit surface is
an e- - lastic energy i.e.
- where is the lattice mismatch
- While the dislocation
- energy per unit surface is
-
- As the thickness is increasing it becomes
energetically more favorable the creation of
misfit dislocations generally associated with
threading dislocations i.e dislocations that
propagate towards the active region of the device
7The nucleation growth modes
- In the case of growth that occurs through
nucleation the coalescence of the islands can
result in the formation of additional
dislocations which treads along the epilayer i.e
the active region of the device - So in the case of large misfit epi-growth, say
above 5, a high density of threading
dislocation is ex-pected - This is the case of the growth of GaN on Sapphire
- ( ) where due to the high mismatch
15 - misfit dislocations form during islands
growth
8The effects of dislocations
- Dislocations generally
- - tend to propagate through layers
- -act as a non-radiative recombi-nation
center or they emit at an e-nergy significantly
lower than - the band edge emission
- -limit the carrier mobility due to
- charging
- -act as gettering centres of im-purities
-
9An example of dislocations in GaN on Sapphire by
HVPE
- Fig. (a) is a cross sec-
- tional TEM image of a
- GaN crystal
- A fraction of dislocations
- propagate from the sub-
- strate to the surface in a
- non perpendicular
- way
() Kyoyeol Lee et al. MRS, 6, 9 (2001)
- TEM analysis cannot by used in the case of a low
- dislocation density
10Basic photoluminescence set-up
- The sample ex-
- cited by the laser
- beam emits lumi
- nescence (PL)
- The PL signal
- is spectrally re-
- solved by a mo-
- nochromator and
- detected
11The monochromator
- The PL signal is dispersed by a grating
- The PL signal is focused on the entrance slit and
- reflected by a collimating mirror on the
grating - The wavelenght that satisfies the interference
con- - dition is collected at the exit slit
12Optical transitions (1)
- Direct band gap vertical transfer of the
electron (1st order transition) - Indirect band gap oblique transfer of the
electron (2nd order transition) a phonon is
emitted or absorbed
13Optical transitions (2)
- The electron and hole pair created interact so
in many cases bound states are formed i.e.
excitons - According to the mean electron hole
distance the excitons are classified as - Wannier excitons
- Frenkel excitons
- Wannier excitons can be de-scribed as an
hydrogen like system with energy
14Optical transitions (3)
- (1) creation of an electron hole pair
- (2) thermalization of the carriers generated
in their respective bands and cre- - ation of an exciton with energy
- (3) recombination of the
- exciton and emission of a phonon with energy
- (4) in addition there can
- be recombinations via lo-
calized centers
15An example of a PL spectra in the case GaN
- An example of a PL spectra in the case of GaN
(0.3 meV) - Informations obtained
- 1) energies and charac-
- teristics of the levels
- involved
- 2) energies of the phon-
- ons
- 3) overall crystal quality
- 4) presence of impurities
-
() M. Mayer et al. Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36,
L1634 (1997)
16Beyond the PL
- The linear dimensions of the excited spot in a
typical PL setup are 100mm and typical final
powers - are in the 0.1 -1W range in the case of UV
excitation - By adding a microscope objective and correcting
the aberrations introduced by the cryostat
windows the spatial resolution can be
reduced to about the diffraction limit i.e
l/2 - In addition the evaluation of the effective
spatial resolution has to take into
account the carriers diffusion of the
generated carriers (in high quality Si can be up
to 100mm) more typically 1mm - A higher excitation intensity is available in
this case
17The m-PL setup
- A complete spec-trum can be re-corded at each
point - Possible infor-mation to extract
- 1) local spectra
- 2) mapping the
- peak wave-
- lenght
- 3) mapping of the
- intensity of a wavelenght window
- Correlation of morphological and optical
properties
18An example of dislocations in GaN on Sapphire by
HVPE
- Fig. (a) is a cross sec-
- tional TEM image of a
- GaN crystal
- A fraction of dislocations
- propagate from the sub-
- strate to the surface in a
- non perpendicular
- way
() Kyoyeol Lee et al. MRS, 6, 9 (2001)
- TEM analysis cannot by used in the case of a low
- dislocation density
19Examples of room temperature scanning m-PL on a
GaN surface
a) 300 mm epilayer
b) 500 mm epilayer
c) Dis. density vs. thickness
- In fig (a) the density of dislocations is still
too high for - being resolved . In fig (b) the spacing is
higher than the - spatial resolution (density
in (b) ) - In fig. (c) the dislocation density vs. the
epilayer thick- - ness is reported
() Kyoyeol Lee et al. MRS, 6, 9 (2001)
20Another example of GaN surface at low temperature
(1)
- Fig. (a) is a mapping of
- a near band edge exciton
- line ( )
- Fig. (b) the position de-
- pendence of the linewidth
- of the same line
- Fig. (c) and (d) energy
- shift of the peak intensity
- that in unstrained condi-
- tions is centered at
N. Gmeinwieser et al. J. Appl. Phys. 98, 116102
(2005)
3.47327 eV
21Another example of GaN surface at low temperature
(2)
- A dipole shift of the energy peak is observed
around each dislocation - (expected shape for an edge dislocation)
- The energy shift is ca-used by the tensile and
compressive strain around the dislocation - where the tensile strain cause a downward
shift - of the peak energy
N. Gmeinwieser et al. J. Appl. Phys. 98, 116102
(2005)
22Conclusions
- PL and m-PL characterization relies on the
creation of electron-hole pairs in semiconductors
or quantum stru-ctures and their radiative
recombination. - Advantages non-destructive, straightforward
and contactless. In addition to its traditional
use (i.e. accurate determination of impurities
energy levels and in some cases quantitative
determination of the dopant concentra-tions) it
can be used for study the surface morphology or
material stress state - Spatial mapping can be accomplished with an
maximun spatial resolution of 1mm - Disadvantages depends on the radiative
recombination of carriers, in general low
temperature is needed
23Thanks for your attention