Introduction
GaN and related compounds are being developed for short wavelength light-emitting devices, such as laser (LD) and light-emitting diodes (LED), in addition to high temperature and high power electronics. GaN-based LEDs and LDs have been successfully developed and are being commercialized. Several factors impede the further development of GaN devices. A principal difficulty is the high density of dislocations within the GaN epilayers, which can be as high as 108-1010/cm2 [Reference Ponce and Bour1]. Recently, epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELO) has been demonstrated to effectively reduce the dislocation density in the GaN epilayers within the lateral overgrown regions [Reference Sakai, Sunakawa and Usui2]. Long-lifetime GaN LDs fabricated on ELO-grown materials has been reported [Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Nagahama, Iwase, Yamada, Matsushita, Kiyoku, Sugimoto, Kozaki, Umemoto, Sano and Chocho3]. Most reports on GaN ELO have used the metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy (MOVPE) growth technique [Reference Nam, Bremser, Zheleva and Davis4,Reference Matsushima, Yamaguchi, Hiramatsu and Sawaki5]. Hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) is also a very attractive technique for GaN ELO. HVPE utilizes GaCl generated in situ through the reaction of liquid Ga with HCl. HVPE offers a high growth rate and high material quality for GaN growth [Reference Perkins, Horton, Bandic, McGill and Kuech6,Reference Molnar, Nichols, Maki, Brown and Melngailis7]. The typical growth rate can be as high as 100-200 μm/hr. The halide process has been shown to offer a higher lateral-to-vertical growth rate ratio [Reference Carlsson8] than MOVPE materials, which is critical for ELO. GaN produced by the HVPE technique does result in a greatly reduced intensity of the defect-based luminescence referred to as the yellow band (YL) when compared to the TMG-based MOVPE materials. This has been attributed to the lack of carbon in the HVPE growth system but is present in the growth sources used in MOVPE-growth systems. Intentional carbon introduction into HVPE materials can result in the appearance of YL [Reference Zhang and Kuech9]. If a controlled amount of GaCl can be introduced into a cold wall MOVPE reactor, a low carbon source could be combined with the advantages of the MOVPE reactor environment. Diethyl gallium chloride (DEGaCl) is used here as a Ga source in GaN ELO growth. DEGaCl will decompose to GaCl through the β-elimination reaction in the gas phase allowing the in situ formation of GaCl at relatively low gas phase temperatures:
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The decomposition of the DEGaCl to GaCl near the growth front makes it possible to realize a high quality growth of GaN through a HVPE chemistry at high V/III ratio. This source was successfully used in GaAs growth that resulted in high uniformity, low carbon content GaAs film [Reference Kuech, Potemski and Cardone10, Reference Narmann and Yu11]. GaAs selective area growth, with a complete selectivity of GaAs growth with respect to SiO2, Si3N4, and Al2O3 masking materials, has been demonstrated over a wide range of process window [Reference Kuech12,Reference Yamaguchi and Okamoto13,Reference Shiraishi, Furuhata and Okamoto14]. The present work demonstrates the utility of the DEGaCl source in GaN ELO. In this paper, we systematically investigate the GaN ELO by using both HVPE and MOVPE with DEGaCl as the Ga source. It has been found that both the growth rate and the geometric shape of the GaN prisms are dependent on the growth condition and the orientation of the window opening. High growth temperatures and a low V/III ratio are helpful in enhancing the lateral overgrowth. Under optimized growth conditions, high quality ELO GaN films are produced with a planar surfaces and free of observable voids at the coalescence interface.
Experiments and Results
The initial GaN ‘substrate’ is a 1µm thick GaN film grown by MOVPE on a (0001) sapphire substrate. The masking material a ∼100nm thick patterned CVD SiO2 layer. There are two kinds of pattern used in this study. The first pattern is a radial pattern consisting of many ∼5 µm wide stripe openings in the masking materials with a 0.74° angle separation. An additional pattern consisted of 2-4μm wide parallel stripe openings on a 12μm pitch oriented along the <1
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The extent and properties of the GaN ELO on SiO2-masked substrates were determined. Both the growth rate and the morphology of ELO regions depend on the growth conditions and stripe or opening orientation. Figure 1 presents the typical growth morphology, obtained through scanning electron microscopy (SEM) on a HVPE GaN ELO sample on a radial patterned substrate using the growth conditions of Tg=1050°C, input mole fraction [NH3]=0.12 and HCl input mole fraction of [HCl]=0.0022. In the Figure 1(a) is an image of an ELO GaN prism obtained within an opening oriented along the <11
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Figure 1: The orientation dependence of GaN ELO prisms grown by HVPE. The stripe opening was varied from the <1 1
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The SEM observations also reveal a strong dependence of the geometric prism shape on the specific growth conditions. Figure 2 shows two SEM micrographs of the cross-sections of GaN HVPE ELO prisms oriented along the <1 1
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Figure 2: The orientation dependence of cross-sections of prisms grown under high temperature
Under optimized growth conditions, high-quality coalesced ELO GaN films on parallel patterned substrates, having planar surfaces, have been fabricated by the HVPE technique. A cross-sectional SEM image of the coalesced film is shown in Figure 3. The growth temperature is 1100oC and [NH3]=0.076, [HCl]=0.023 for this sample. No observable void was found at the coalescence interface under these conditions.
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Figure 3: Cross-sectional SEM picture of a coalesced ELO GaN sample grown by HVPE. There is no void observed at the coalescence interface.
MOVPE GaN ELO, when using DEGaCl, exhibit similar trends to the HVPE samples. As shown in Figure 4, the MOVPE ELO GaN samples grown in <1
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Figure 4: The growth temperature dependence of MOVPE ELO GaN by using DEGaCl on the <1
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The dependence of MOVPE GaN ELO, using DEGaCl, on the V/III ratio during growth has been investigated and is shown in Figure 5. These GaN ELO samples were grown at the growth temperature of 1100 °C over the V/III ratio range of 3500-1800. The cross-section of ELO GaN prisms grown with V/III ratio of 1800 is rectangular, while those of ELO GaN prisms grown with higher V/III ratio are trapezoidal, with sloping facets becoming evident. The lateral and vertical growth rates are somewhat dependent on the V/III ratio at this temperature with a lower V/III ratio leading to a higher vertical growth rate.
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Figure 4: The dependence of MOVPE ELO GaN by using DEGaCl with the <1
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Discussion
The resulting structure during the ELO process is known to be dependent on the gas phase transport of reactants to the growth front, which is dependent on the growth conditions and mask geometry. The difference in growth behavior between the inorganic, GaCl-based growth, and conventional MOVPE ELO using trimethyl gallium, also indicates that the growth chemistry plays an important role in the local growth rates and facet formation [Reference Carlsson8]. The chemical and physical properties of mask and substrate materials affect the surface diffusion [Reference Usui and Nishinaga15], nucleation and kinetics. The lateral and vertical growth rates of ELO GaN are thus determined by the interplay of these various influences at the growth front. The local growth environments near a mask opening will differ from those in large-scale deposition and the optimization of the material properties and growth habit of the localized regions may be quite different from that found on non-masked regions. Under the conventional conditions for HVPE deposition, it has been suggested from the observed large surface roughness of HVPE-grown large scale GaN films that the (0001) plane is not the most stable growth facet [Reference Perkins, Horton, Bandic, McGill and Kuech6]. Under such conditions, the most stable growth front is thought to be the (1
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where in the DEGaCl case, the GaCl is generated through the intramolecular decomposition of the growth source as presented in Equation 1. Reaction 3 implies equilibrium between the steady state concentrations of HCl and GaCl at the growth front. The MOVPE growth front has often been considered to be near thermodynamic equilibrium [Reference Stringfellow16]. If this is the case for the high temperature growth of GaN, the supersaturation at the growth front will decrease with increasing temperature due the reversible reaction associated with the HCl reacting at the GaN surface. A similarity between the growth habits and behavior between the HVPE and MOVPE-DEGaCl systems is therefore expected.
The presence of chlorine in the growth system can modify the growth habit from the trimethyl gallium based growth. Experimentally, the chloride-based systems lead to both higher lateral-to-vertical growth and desirable growth facets, such as vertical sidewalls over a broader range of growth conditions. The near surface concentration of GaCl in the HVPE system is higher than in the DEGaCl systems. If adsorbed chlorine or GaCl species can stabilize certain facets, the higher concentration of GaCl within the HVPE would more readily promote the formation of specific facets, such as the {1
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Conclusions
ELO of GaN has been systematically investigated by using chloride-based growth chemistry in both HVPE and MOVPE, through the use of DEGaCl, systems. The lateral and vertical growth rates as well as the morphology of the ELO regions depend on the growth condition and orientations of opening stripes. The high growth temperatures and a low V/III ratio enhance the lateral overgrowth. The reverse trapezoid prism has been fabricated in [1
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Acknowledgments
R. Z., K.L. Chen, D.Q. Lu, B. Shen and Y.D. Zheng thank the financial support of the China “863” national high-tech development program. The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support of the ONR MURI on Compliant Substrates, and the facilities support of the NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center on Nanostructured Materials and Interfaces, USA.