DocumentCode :
1560430
Title :
Spectral properties of proton irradiated gallium nitride blue diodes
Author :
Gaudreau, François ; Carlone, Cosmo ; Houdayer, Alain ; Khanna, Shyam M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. de Phys., Sherbrooke Univ., Que., Canada
Volume :
48
Issue :
6
fYear :
2001
fDate :
12/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1778
Lastpage :
1784
Abstract :
The permanent damage induced by 2 MeV proton irradiation at room temperature is reported for gallium nitride based blue emitting diodes (CREE model C430-DH85). Both optical and electrical device characteristics were measured. The I-V dependence was obtained as a function of temperature. At low voltages, the current is proportional to the exponential of the voltage at a constant temperature and the slope of the I-V curve is independent of temperature for the range 75-350 K, confirming the tunneling mechanism of the carrier injection. The room-temperature curve was studied as a function of 2-MeV proton irradiation in the fluence range 1011 to 1015 cm -2. It is hardly affected up to a fluence of 3×1012 cm-2. Higher fluences do not affect the tunneling mechanism, but proton irradiation affects the saturation value of the current. The integrated electroluminescence versus voltage curves were obtained as a function of fluence, but the results were not amenable to a degradation constant interpretation. To gain insight into the degradation mechanism, the electroluminescence was analyzed spectrally and found to be the sum of the band-to-band transition in blue color at ≈430 nm and a parasitic yellow band. The contribution of each transition was determined. The ratio of the contributions depends on driving current, temperature, and fluence. Treated individually, both the band-to-band and the yellow transition are related to fluence. The 2-MeV proton radiation damage constant is (7±1)×10-14 cm-2 for the band-to-band and (2.0±0.4)×10-14 cm-2 for the yellow transitions. The degradation of space charge recombination and diffusion of minority carriers cause the degradation of the electroluminescence. GaN light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are about two orders of magnitude more resistant to 2-MeV proton irradiation than GaAs LEDs
Keywords :
III-V semiconductors; electroluminescence; electron-hole recombination; gallium compounds; light emitting diodes; minority carriers; proton effects; space charge; tunnelling; wide band gap semiconductors; 2 MeV; 75 to 350 K; CREE C430-DH85; GaN; I-V curve; band-to-band transition; carrier injection; damage constant; degradation mechanism; electrical characteristics; electroluminescence; gallium nitride blue light-emitting diode; minority carrier diffusion; optical characteristics; proton irradiation; space charge recombination; spectral properties; tunneling mechanism; yellow transition; Degradation; Electroluminescence; Gallium nitride; III-V semiconductor materials; Light emitting diodes; Optical devices; Protons; Temperature dependence; Temperature distribution; Voltage;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/23.983130
Filename :
983130
Link To Document :
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