Annealing of ion implanted gallium nitride


Autoria(s): Tan, H. H.; Williams, J. S.; Zou, J.; Cockayne, D. J. H.; Pearton, S. J.; Zolper, J. C.; Stall, R. A.
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

In this paper, we examine Si and Te ion implant damage removal in GaN as a function of implantation dose, and implantation and annealing temperature. Transmission electron microscopy shows that amorphous layers, which can result from high-dose implantation, recrystallize between 800 and 1100 °C to very defective polycrystalline material. Lower-dose implants (down to 5 × 1013 cm – 2), which are not amorphous but defective after implantation, also anneal poorly up to 1100 °C, leaving a coarse network of extended defects. Despite such disorder, a high fraction of Te is found to be substitutional in GaN both following implantation and after annealing. Furthermore, although elevated-temperature implants result in less disorder after implantation, this damage is also impossible to anneal out completely by 1100 °C. The implications of this study are that considerably higher annealing temperatures will be needed to remove damage for optimum electrical properties. ©1998 American Institute of Physics.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:34708

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Institute of Physics

Palavras-Chave #Physics, Applied #Gan #Diodes
Tipo

Journal Article