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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(46): 52192-52200, 2020 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33146516

ABSTRACT

ScAlN is an emergent ultrawide-band-gap material with both a high piezoresponse and demonstrated ferroelectric polarization switching. Recent demonstration of epitaxial growth of ScAlN on GaN has unlocked prospects for new high-power transistors and nonvolatile memory technologies fabricated from these materials. An understanding of the band alignments between ScAlN and GaN is crucial in order to control the electronic and optical properties of engineered devices. To date, there have been no experimental studies of the band offsets between ScAlN and GaN. This work presents optical characterization of the band gap of molecular beam epitaxy grown ScxAl1-xN using spectroscopic ellipsometry and measurements of the band offsets of ScxAl1-xN with GaN using X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, along with a comparison to first-principles calculations. The band gap is shown to continuously decrease as a function of increasing ScN alloy fraction with a negative bowing parameter. Furthermore, a crossover from straddling (type-I) to staggered (type-II) band offsets is demonstrated as Sc composition increases beyond approximately x = 0.11. These results show that the ScAlN/GaN valence band alignment can be tuned by changing the Sc alloy fraction, which can help guide the design of heterostructures in future ScAlN/GaN-based devices.

2.
ACS Nano ; 13(6): 6730-6741, 2019 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31184132

ABSTRACT

Surface phonon polaritons (SPhPs), the surface-bound electromagnetic modes of a polar material resulting from the coupling of light with optic phonons, offer immense technological opportunities for nanophotonics in the infrared (IR) spectral region. However, once a particular material is chosen, the SPhP characteristics are fixed by the spectral positions of the optic phonon frequencies. Here, we provide a demonstration of how the frequency of these optic phonons can be altered by employing atomic-scale superlattices (SLs) of polar semiconductors using AlN/GaN SLs as an example. Using second harmonic generation (SHG) spectroscopy, we show that the optic phonon frequencies of the SLs exhibit a strong dependence on the layer thicknesses of the constituent materials. Furthermore, new vibrational modes emerge that are confined to the layers, while others are centered at the AlN/GaN interfaces. As the IR dielectric function is governed by the optic phonon behavior in polar materials, controlling the optic phonons provides a means to induce and potentially design a dielectric function distinct from the constituent materials and from the effective-medium approximation of the SL. We show that atomic-scale AlN/GaN SLs instead have multiple Reststrahlen bands featuring spectral regions that exhibit either normal or extreme hyperbolic dispersion with both positive and negative permittivities dispersing rapidly with frequency. Apart from the ability to engineer the SPhP properties, SL structures may also lead to multifunctional devices that combine the mechanical, electrical, thermal, or optoelectronic functionality of the constituent layers. We propose that this effort is another step toward realizing user-defined, actively tunable IR optics and sources.

3.
J Vis Exp ; (117)2016 11 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27911417

ABSTRACT

Plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy is well suited for the epitaxial growth of III-nitride thin films and heterostructures with smooth, abrupt interfaces required for high-quality high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMTs). A procedure is presented for the growth of N-polar InAlN HEMTs, including wafer preparation and growth of buffer layers, the InAlN barrier layer, AlN and GaN interlayers and the GaN channel. Critical issues at each step of the process are identified, such as avoiding Ga accumulation in the GaN buffer, the role of temperature on InAlN compositional homogeneity, and the use of Ga flux during the AlN interlayer and the interrupt prior to GaN channel growth. Compositionally homogeneous N-polar InAlN thin films are demonstrated with surface root-mean-squared roughness as low as 0.19 nm and InAlN-based HEMT structures are reported having mobility as high as 1,750 cm2/V∙sec for devices with a sheet charge density of 1.7 x 1013 cm-2.


Subject(s)
Transistors, Electronic , Electrons
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