DocumentCode
1087921
Title
LPE and VPE In1-x Gax Asy P1-y /InP: Transport properties, defects, and device considerations
Author
Bhattacharya, Pallab K. ; Ku, Joseph W. ; Owen, S.J.T. ; Olsen, Gregory H. ; Chiao, Sun-Hai
Author_Institution
Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA
Volume
17
Issue
2
fYear
1981
fDate
2/1/1981 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
150
Lastpage
161
Abstract
The electrical properties of In1-x Gax Asy P1-y alloys lattice matched to InP, grown by liquid-phase and vapor-phase epitaxial techniques, have been determined by various measurements. Several electron and hole traps, with activation energies varying from 0.26 to 0.82 eV, have been identified by transient capacitance and photocapacitance measurements and their density and capture cross section have been measured. The 0.82 electron trap has emission and capture properties identical to the dominant 0.83 eV electron trap present in bulk and VPE GaAs. Hall measurements were made on the alloys in the temperature range of 20-600 K. Analysis of the mobility data has yielded the values of several transport parameters including the alloy scattering potential
as a function of composition. The maximum value of
eV corresponding to the bandgap
eV. Photo-Hall measurements at low temperatures show the presence of donor- and acceptor-like defects in the LPE and VPE alloys, respectively. These centers exhibit persistent photoconductivity at low temperatures and have a high barrier energy (∼0.2 eV) associated with electron capture. Defects, which are possibly located in the interconduction-valley region, have been identified from analysis of Hall data for
K. The strong temperature dependence of the threshold current in injection lasers and the large leakage currents near breakdown in avalanche photodiodes have been discussed in the fight of the defects identified in the present investigation.
as a function of composition. The maximum value of
eV corresponding to the bandgap
eV. Photo-Hall measurements at low temperatures show the presence of donor- and acceptor-like defects in the LPE and VPE alloys, respectively. These centers exhibit persistent photoconductivity at low temperatures and have a high barrier energy (∼0.2 eV) associated with electron capture. Defects, which are possibly located in the interconduction-valley region, have been identified from analysis of Hall data for
K. The strong temperature dependence of the threshold current in injection lasers and the large leakage currents near breakdown in avalanche photodiodes have been discussed in the fight of the defects identified in the present investigation.Keywords
Bibliographies; Gallium materials/devices; Semiconductor defects; Capacitance measurement; Charge carrier processes; Density measurement; Electric variables measurement; Electron traps; Energy measurement; Gallium alloys; Indium phosphide; Lattices; Temperature measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9197
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JQE.1981.1071069
Filename
1071069
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