Title
Molecular beam homoepitaxy of N-polar AlN on bulk AlN substrates
Date Issued
01 September 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Singhal J.
Cho Y.
Van Deurzen L.
Zhang Z.
Nomoto K.
Toita M.
Xing H.G.
Jena D.
Cornell University
Publisher(s)
American Institute of Physics Inc.
Abstract
N-polar AlN epilayers were grown on the N-face of single-crystal bulk AlN substrates by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. A combination of in situ thermal deoxidation and Al-assisted thermal desorption at high temperature aided in removing native surface oxides and impurities from the N-polar surface of the substrate enabling successful homoepitaxy. Subsequent epitaxial growth of the AlN layer on the in situ cleaned substrates, grown in a sufficiently high Al droplet regime, exhibited smooth surface morphologies with clean and wide atomic steps. KOH etch studies confirmed the N-polarity of the homoepitaxial films. Secondary ion mass spectrometry profiles show Si and H impurity concentrations below the noise levels, whereas O and C impurity concentrations of ∼8×1017 and ∼2×1017 atoms/cm3 are observed, respectively. Although the structural defect densities are low, they interestingly appear as inversion domains of different dimensionalities.
Volume
12
Issue
9
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ingeniería eléctrica, Ingeniería electrónica Física de partículas, Campos de la Física Ciencias de la computación
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85138263984
Source
AIP Advances
ISSN of the container
21583226
Sponsor(s)
The authors at Cornell University acknowledge financial support from Asahi Kasei, the Cornell Center for Materials Research (CCMR)—an NSF MRSEC program (Grant No. DMR-1719875); ULTRA, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES), under Award No. DE-SC0021230; AFOSR Grant No. FA9550-20-1-0148; and Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) Joint University Microelectronics Program (JUMP). This work uses the Cornell Nanoscale Facilities, supported by NSF Grant No. NNCI-202523 and CESI Shared Facilities partly sponsored by NSF Grant No. MRI DMR-1631282 and Kavli Institute at Cornell (KIC).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus