Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T07:41:54.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Spectroscopic Studies in InGaN Quantum Wells

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2014

S. F. Chichibu
Affiliation:
Materials and ECE Departments, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 Department of EE, Science University of Tokyo, 2641 Yamazaki, Noda, Chiba 278-8510, Japan, [email protected]
T. Sota
Affiliation:
EECE Department, Waseda University, 3-4-1 Ohkubo, Shinjuku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan
K. Wada
Affiliation:
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139
S. P. DenBaars
Affiliation:
Materials and ECE Departments, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106
S. Nakamura
Affiliation:
Department of Research and Development, Nichia Chemical Industries Ltd., 491 Oka, Kaminaka, Anan, Tokushima 774-8601, Japan

Abstract

Fundamental electronic modulations in strained wurtzite III-nitride, in particular InxGa1−xN, quantum wells (QWs) were treated to explore the reason why practical InGaN devices emit bright luminescences in spite of the large threading dislocation (TD) density. The emission mechanisms were shown to vary depending on the well thickness L and InN molar fraction x. The electric field across the QW plane, F, which is a sum of the fields due to spontaneous and piezoelectric polarization and the pn junction field, causes the redshift of the ground state resonance energy through the quantum confined Stark effect (QCSE). The absorption spectrum is modulated by QCSE, quantum-confined Franz-Keldysh effect (QCFK), and Franz-Keldysh (FK) effect from the barrires when, for the first approximation, potential drop across the well (FL) exceeds the valence band discontinuity, EV. Under large FL, holes are confined in the triangular potential well formed at one side of the well. This produces apparent Stokes-like shift in addition to the in-plane net Stokes shift on the absorption spectrum. The QCFK and FK further modulate the electronic structure of the wells with L greater than the three dimensional (3D) free exciton (FE) Bohr radius, aB. When FL exceeds EC, both electron (e) and hole (h) confined levels drop into the triangular potential wells at opposite sides of the wells, which reduces the wavefunction overlap. Doping of Si in the barriers partially screens the F resulting in a smaller Stokes-like shift, shorter recombination decay time, and higher emission efficiency. Finally, the use of InGaN was found to overcome the field-induced oscillator strength lowering due to the spontaneous and piezoelectric polarization. Effective in-plane localization of the QW excitons (confined excitons, or quantized excitons) in quantum disk (Q-disk) size potential minima, which are produced by nonrandom alloy potential fluctuation enhanced by the large bowing parameter and F, produces confined e-h pairs whose wavefunctions are still overlapped when L<aB. Their Coulomb interaction is more pronounced for FL<EV.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 Materials Research Society

Introduction

Major developments of III-nitride semiconductorsReference Nakamura and Fasol 1 , Reference Akasaki and Amano 2 have led to the commercial productionReference Nakamura and Fasol 1 of blue and green single quantum well (SQW) light-emitting-diodes (LEDs) and to the demonstration of multiple quantum well (MQW) purplish-blue laser diodes (LDs).Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 - Reference Kaneko, Watanabe, Yamaoka, Hidaka, Nakagawa, Marenger, Takeuchi, Yamaguchi, Amano and Akasaki 10 The growth of nearly TD-free GaN has been realized by the lateral epitaxial overgrowth (LEO) technique,Reference Bauser, Farrow, Parkin, Dobson, Neave and Arrott 11 - Reference Marchand, Ibbetson, Fini, Kozodoy, Keller, DenBaars, Speck and Mishra 16 and the device lifetime of the cw MQW LDs has been extended up to 10,000 hours using low TD density GaN on sapphireReference Nakamura, Senoh, Nagahama, Iwasa, Yamada, Matsushita, Kiyoku, Sugimoto, Umemoto, Kozaki, Sano and Chocho 14 and pure GaN substratesReference Nakamura, Senoh, Nagahama, Iwasa, Yamada, Matsushita, Kiyoku, Sugimoto, Kozaki, Umemoto, Sano and Chocho 15 prepared by LEO technique. InGaN alloys are attracting special interest because they are adopted as active regions of ultra-violet (UV),Reference Mukai, Morita and Nakamura 17 blue,Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 green,Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 and amberReference Mukai, Narimatsu and Nakamura 18 SQW LEDs and all MQW LDsReference Nakamura and Fasol 1 - Reference Kaneko, Watanabe, Yamaoka, Hidaka, Nakagawa, Marenger, Takeuchi, Yamaguchi, Amano and Akasaki 10 and they emit bright luminescences despite of the large TD density up to 1010 cm−3.Reference Ponce and Bour 19 The emission mechanisms in InGaN alloys are not yet fully understood due to complex material physics and engineering, such as large and anisotropic effective masses,Reference Suzuki, Uenoyama and Yanase 20 polarization due to the wurtzite crystal lattice,Reference Bernardini, Fiorentini and Vanderbilt 21 , Reference Hellman 22 and phase separating natureReference Koukitsu, Takahashi, Taki and Seki 23 , Reference Osamura and Murakami 24 due to large lattice, thermal, and chemical mismatches.

Several groups have assigned the spontaneous emission from InGaN QWs to the recombination of excitons localized at certain potential minima.Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 - Reference Narukawa, Kawakami, Fujita, Fujita and Nakamura 27 On the other hand, several groups have discussed the importance of the quantum confined Stark effect (QCSE)Reference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 due to the piezoelectric field (FPZ) in strained wurtzite InGaN QWs.Reference Akasaki and Amano 2 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Takeuchi, Takeuchi, Sota, Sakai, Amano, Akasaki, Wetzel, Amano, Akasaki, Suski, Ager, Weber, Haller and Meyer 29 - Reference Im, Kollmer, Off, Sohmer, Scholz and Hangleiter 31 In particular, the blueshift of the electroluminescence (EL) peak in InGaN SQW LEDsReference Nakamura and Fasol 1 with increasing drive current has been explainedReference Nakamura and Fasol 1 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 by the combined effects of a reduction of QCSE due to Coulomb screening of FPZ Reference Akasaki and Amano 2 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Takeuchi, Takeuchi, Sota, Sakai, Amano, Akasaki, Wetzel, Amano, Akasaki, Suski, Ager, Weber, Haller and Meyer 29 and band-filling of the energy tail states.Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 Moreover, characteristic optical gain mechanisms were reported for InGaN LD wafersReference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Deguchi, Azuhata, Sota, Chichibu, Nakamura and Deguchi 32 - Reference Chichibu, Cohen, Mack, Abare, Kozodoy, Minsky, Fleischer, Keller, Bowers, Mishra, Coldren, Clarke and DenBaars 34 although gain spectra which can be explained by the well-known e-h plasma (EHP)Reference Haug and Koch 35 lasing model were reported.Reference Frankowsky, Steuber, Härle, Scholz and Hangleiter 36 - Reference Kuball, Jeon, Song, Nurmikko, Kozodoy, Abare, Keller, Coldren, Mishra, DenBaars and Steigerwald 38 In order to obtain an insight into what dominates the emission properties of InGaN QWs for further optimization of blue LDs, it is necessary to investigate the effects of effective bandgap inhomogeneity and electric field in the QW separately and consistently.

In this article, several important physics which affect the emission properties of InGaN QWs are discussed. First, the influence of F was reexamined on AlGaN/GaN and GaN/InGaN strained QWs to conclude that there exists polarization-induced and junction high electric fields across the strained QWs. Presence of QW excitons is shown for the wells with L<aB even under high F. Next the presence of effective bandgap inhomogeneity, which produces certain quantum disk-size localized potential minima in InGaN, in practical LEDs is shown. Finally the origin of the QW exciton localization was investigated by comparing optical properties of InGaN QWs grown on dislocated GaN-base on sapphire and nearly TD-free GaN overgrown laterally on the SiO2 mask.

Framework

Optical properties peculiar to wurtzite InGaN and III-nitride materials in comparison to familiar III-V semiconductors such as GaAs or InP known to date are summarized as follows:

  1. (i) Nitrides have an excitonic character in their optical properties. Indeed, dominant resonance structures due to A and B FEs were found in both absorption and photoreflectance spectra of 3D GaN layers, and FE emission has been found even at RT,Reference Chichibu, Azuhata, Sota and Nakamura 39 , Reference Monemar, Bergman, Amano, Akasaki, Detchprohm, Hiramatsu and Sawaki 40 since the exciton binding energy, Eb, is as large as 26 meV and aB is as small as 3.4 nm.Reference Suzuki, Uenoyama and Yanase 20 , Reference Chichibu, Azuhata, Sota and Nakamura 39 - Reference Chichibu, Shikanai, Azuhata, Sota, Kuramata, Horino and Nakamura 43 It is also known that Eb is increased in QWsReference Bastard, Mendez, Chang and Esaki 44 due to confinement of wavefunctions.

  2. (ii) The wurtzite structure has the highest symmetry compatible with the existence of spontaneous polarization. Moreover, strain-induced piezoelectric tensor of wurtzite has three nonvanishing independent components. In the absence of the external fields, the total macroscopic polarization, P, is the sum of the spontaneous polarization in the equilibrium structure, P0, and of the strain induced piezoelectric polarization, PPZ.

  3. (iii) InGaN alloys have an immisible gapReference Koukitsu, Takahashi, Taki and Seki 23 , Reference Osamura and Murakami 24 and they usually show broad luminescence band.Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 In following arguments follow these information.

Polarization in wurtzite lattice

Since III-nitride epilayers grown on sapphire (0001) or SiC (0001)Si substrates are along the c-axis, we shall consider only the polarization along the c-axis, P3=P0,3-PPZ,3. Bernardini et al.Reference Bernardini, Fiorentini and Vanderbilt 21 calculated P0,3 in AlN, GaN, and InN as −0.081, −0.029, and −0.032 C/m2, respectively. P0,3 induces the electric field according to F0,3=−P0,3/ 0 r, and is estimated to be 3.4 MV/cm for GaN, which is nearly 50 times the ionization field, Fi, of FEs in 3D GaN (7.6 104 V/cm).Reference Chichibu, Azuhata, Sota and Nakamura 39 From the fact that FE emissions can be observed from 3D GaN even at RT,Reference Chichibu, Azuhata, Sota and Nakamura 39 F0,3 should be smaller than Fi. This may be due to internal screening of the polarization since the layer is usually too thick and any kinds of internal charges contribute to screening. An expression for PPZ,3 under the biaxial strain (a−a0)/a0= xx= yy=−(C33/2C31) zz is given by PPZ,3=2(e31−e33C31/C33) xx, where a is the lattice constant, a0 is that of strain-free material, Cij are the elastic stiffness constants, and eij are the piezoelectric constants. Bernardini et al.Reference Bernardini, Fiorentini and Vanderbilt 21 reported the following values in units of C/m2: e33=1.46 and e31=−0.60 for AlN; e33=0.73 and e31=−0.49 for GaN; e33=0.97 and e31=−0.57 for InN. For in-plane compressive strains usually found in InGaN, the direction of FPZ is from Ga face to N face (surface to substrate) according to HellmanReference Hellman 22 if we consider the Ga surface growth (-C). The direction of FPZ,3 is opposite to F0,3 and the pn junction field Fpn. This means that total electric field F exists in the QW regions of practical devices is a sum of polarization-induced fields and the pn junction field, F3=F0,3-Fpn−FPZ,3. Details of this will be discussed elsewhere, and we simply consider the effect of F on the band structures of strained QWs in this article.

Schematic band diagrams of InGaN QWs under an electric field

From the framework (i) and (ii), physical scenarios of the optical transitions in InGaN QWs are drawn as follows. Since the critical thickness of InxGa1−xN (0<x<0.15) is reported to be greater than 40 nm,Reference Akasaki and Amano 2 , Reference Takeuchi, Takeuchi, Sota, Sakai, Amano, Akasaki, Wetzel, Amano, Akasaki, Suski, Ager, Weber, Haller and Meyer 29 coherent growth of InGaN is assumed. This strain causes FPZ but excitons should also be significant. Therefore the problem treated here is the behavior of confined energy levels in QWs under F, as discussed for GaAs/AlGaAs QWs in the 1980's.Reference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 , Reference Bastard, Mendez, Chang and Esaki 44 , Reference Miller, Chemla and Schmitt-Rink 45 In QWs, FE absorption is observed even at RT under high F across the QWReference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 , Reference Bastard, Mendez, Chang and Esaki 44 due to quantum confinement of the wavefunctions which enhances the Coulomb interaction between the e-h pair to increase Eb.Reference Bastard, Mendez, Chang and Esaki 44 Miller et al.Reference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 have observed an excitonic absorption in GaAs QWs, which was redshifted by 2.5 times the zero-field Eb for F=105 V/cm (50 times the Fi of 3D excitons). They have explained the redshift in terms of field modulation of quantized energy levels (QCSE).Reference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 We estimate 46 Eb in GaN / Al0.1Ga0.9N QWs under F=0 as a function of L according to Bastard et al.Reference Bastard, Mendez, Chang and Esaki 44 introducing finite barrier height. The obtained Eb value for L=3 nm is 47 meV and Fi is estimated to be 6.0 105 V/cm taking into account the shrinkage of e-h distance in z-direction down to 0.78 nm. Eb is 37 meV for L=6 nm.

Taking the small fraction (1/4) of EV against the conduction band discontinuity EC into account,Reference Van de Walle and Neugebauer 47 schematic band diagrams of InGaN / GaN QWs are drawn in Fig. 1 for several cases; i.e. restrictions among FxL, EV, and aB. Since the restriction FxL> EV breaks before breaking FxL> EC with increasing F or L, restrictions between FxL and EV and between L and aB (quantum size effect) only are drawn in Fig.1. Note that in-plane (lateral) bandgap inhomogeneity is omitted.

Fig.1 Schematic band diagrams of GaN/InGaN QWs under the electric field F. Each case represents the restrictions determined resonance energy slightly shifts to lower energy among F, L, EV, and aB.

In CASE I, both electron and hole wavefunctions are confined in the well and have unique quantized energy levels where zero Strokes-like shift is expected though the resonance energy slightly shifts to lower energy due to QCSE. In CASE II, at least the hole wavefunction drops into the triangular shape potential well at one side of the well, and continuum states are formed at the rest of the potential slope inside the QW region. In addition the penetration of the barrier continuum wavefunction cannot be neglected. Therefore vertical component Stokes-like shift is produced. For the extreme situation of CASE II (pronounced CASE II), both the e-h wavefunctions drop into the triangular potential wells formed at opposite sides of the well resulting in z-directional separation. In CASE III and IV, the absorption tail would be modulated due primarily to QCSEReference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 and QCFK.Reference Miller, Chemla and Schmitt-Rink 45

Optical properties as a function of QW thickness

Low excitation PLE and PL spectra at RT of In0.1Ga0.9N/GaN MQWs with various L are shown in Fig. 2. The PL spectra exhibited a broad luminescence peak due to InGaN QWs, whose full width at half maximum (FWHM) was nearly 120 meV. The PL peak showed a redshift by 360 meV with increasing L from 1.2 to 6.2 nm, and the intensity decreased for L>3.6 nm (L>aB). The PLE spectra exhibited broadened absorption tail except for the L=1.2 nm case. The broadening was pronounced for wells with L>aB. These results agree with the scenario that the QW configuration changes from CASE I, II, to IV due to increasing L assuming constant x and FPZ. The apparent bandgap energy determined as the energy where the PLE signal intensity drops to half the maximum, PL peak energies, and Stokes-like shifts are plotted as a function of L in Fig. 3. As expected, the apparent Stokes-like shift increased from nearly 50 meV to 220 meV. Since in CASE I, zero Stokes-shift is expected if the well had a homogeneous bandgap energy, the observed Stokes shift for CASE I (L<aB) directly shows the presence of in-plane net Stokes shift due to localized energy states in the QW. Similar results were obtained at 4 K where the Stokes-shift was nearly 100 meV (L<2.5 nm). The observed blueshift of the high excitation PL peak indicates presence of high F across the wells.

Fig.2 Low excitation PL and PLE spectra at RT of In0.1Ga0.9N / GaN:Si MQWs for different well thickness, L. The apparent bandgap is defined as the energy where the PLE signal intensity drops to half the maximum.

Fig.3 High and low excitation PL peak energies, apparent bandgap energy estimated from PLE spectra, and apparent Stokes-like shift of In0.1Ga0.9N wells at RT as a function of L.

In order to estimate F, confined energy levels and wavefunctions in In0.1Ga0.9N QWs are calculated as functions of F, L, and n in the barrier by variational method neglecting Eb within the Hartree approximation by solving the Schrödinger equation and Poisson equation simultaneously and self-consistently. We did not fit the data but simply calculated and compared the relation between the low excitation PL peak energy and L (L<3.6 nm) in Fig. 3. As a result, the zero-field bandgap of the 3D InGaN well is obtained to be 2.92 eV and EC and EV are estimated to be about 400 and 100 meV, respectively. F is estimated to be nearly 3.5 105 V/cm which gives Stark shift of nearly 45 meV in the 3-nm-thick QW. Examples of the calculated quantized energy levels and e-h wavefunctions for InGaN under F=400 kV/cm are shown in Fig. 4. Under F=3.5 105 V/cm, F L exceeds EV for L>3.4 nm. The hole confined level would already be formed in the triangular potential (CASE II) between 2.5 and 3.6 nm. Beyond this, the system belongs to CASE IV where the e-h are confined in opposite sides of the well, as shown in Fig. 4. This may explain the extremely long decay time in terms of reduction of the oscillator strength for large L at low temperature where nonradiative recombination is suppressed. At 4 K, was nearly 35 ns for L=5nm (>aB). This may cause serious degradation of the emission intensity. Relatively shorter 0.97-4 ns) for L<2.5 nm at 4 K indicates that the overlap of the eh wavefunction is still large because L is smaller than aB. Note that the estimated Fi (6.0 105 V/cm) is larger than F (3.5 105 V/cm), which implies that Coulomb interaction between the e-h pair still remains. This kind of particles can be regarded as QW excitons.

Fig.4 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e-h pair in In0.1Ga0.9N SQW under the condition of F=400kV/cm.

Optical properties as a function of InN molar fraction x

Next sample series have a 3-nm-thick InGaN SQW with various x, which correspond to CASE I, II, and pronounced CASE II. Note that change in x changes in EC, EV, and FPZ simultaneously. The PLE spectra broadened and the PL peak energy showed pronounced redshift with increasing x, as shown in Fig. 5. The QW (x=0.03) exhibited a sharp onset of the PLE spectra at 3.3 eV, as is the case with L=1.2 nm in Fig. 2. If we assume a linear relation between FPZ and x, FPZ is estimated to be nearly 1.1 105 V/cm. The PLE spectra were taken at 10 K, and the sample is considered to belong to CASE I, as shown in Fig. 6. The appearance of the Stokes shift in the CASE I sample again indicates the presence of localized energy states. With increasing x, first the hole confined level drops into the triangular potential, as shown in Fig. 6 (400 kV/cm), and that of electron will also drop into the triangular potential at opposite side for higher x (pronounced CASE II). This scenario explain the broadness of the PLE spectra with increasing x. In addition, the spatial separation of the e-h pair normal to the QW plane may reduce the wavefunction overlap and increase the emission decay time with increasing x. However, as shown in Fig.6, the overlap of e-h wavefunction is still large.

Fig.5 Low excitation PL and PLE spectra at 10 K of 3-nm-thick InxGa1−xN / GaN:Si SQW structures with different InN molar fraction, x. The x values are estimated assuming coherent growth.

Fig.6 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e−h pair in 3-nm-thick InGaN SQW under the condition of F=100kV/cm (x=0.03) and 400kV/cm (x=0.1).

Both the Stokes-like shift and the decay time had a critical x25 of nearly 0.1 as shown in Fig. 7. This composition is considered to correspond to the point that the band diagram changes from CASE I to CASE II or pronounced CASE II where the absorption due to continuum states from barriers becomes remarkable. On the other hand, the degree of effective bandgap inhomogeneity suddenly increases by alloying In then increase monotonically with increasing x, judging from the values of PL FWHM, as shown in Fig. 7.

Fig.7 PL FWHM, apparent Stokes-like shift, and TR-PL decay time of 3-nm-thick InxGa1−xN QWs as a function of x.

Coulomb screening effects by Si-doping of GaN barriers

One of the effective methods to screen polarization-induced F is by doping the wells or barriers. If the injected or different Si-doping concentrations in the GaN barriers were examined. FPZ in the undoped MQW is estimated to be 5-6 105 V/cm. The PL peak shifted to higher energy and the absorption tail in the PLE spectrum decreased by doping Si up to 1019 cm 3, as shown in Fig. 9. The apparent resonance energy shifted to higher energy by 50 meV, which nearly agrees with Fig.8, and the apparent Stokes-like shift decreased from 220 meV to 120 meV. At the same time, the emission decay time decreased from 14 ns to 850 ps with increasing Si-doping. These results indicate that FPZ was effectively screened, and the overlap of the e-h wavefunction was recovered. Note that screening of FPZ reduces the slope of the conduction and valence bands within the QW to doped charge density is enough to screen FPZ, the pronounced CASE II QWs may recover wavefunction overlap.Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of a 3-nm-thick In0.13Ga0.87N SQWs for F=0, F=500 kV/cm, and F=500 kV/cm with injected e−h pair density of 4 1012 cm−2 are shown in Fig. 8. As shown, the wavefunction overlap and the transition energy between the energy levels were recovered by the Si-doping. To confirm this experimentally, 3-nm-thick In0.13Ga0.87N / GaN MQWs with result in sharp onset of the absorption tail. This reduces the "vertical" component of the apparent Stokes-like shift. Of course, increased electron density due to the modulation doping may improve the radiative recombination rate, and the electrons will fill the energy tail states at the same time. The sample with the highest doping level showed the shortest =850 ps and the brightest emission. This value seems to be close to the intrinsic radiative recombination lifetime. The longer usually observed in the practical LEDs will be discussed later.

Fig.8 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e-h pair in 3-nm-thick InGaN SQW under the condition of F=0kV/cm, F=500kV/cm, and F=500kV/cm and Ne−h pair =4 1012cm−2.

Fig.9 Low-excitation PL and PLE spectra at 300 K of In0.13Ga0.87N/GaN MQWs for different Si-doping concentrations (n). PLE edge was sharpened and the PL peak blueshifted with increasing n.

Why InGaN emits efficient luminescences / In-plane localization of QW excitons

Blue and green InGaN SQW LEDs show blueshift of the EL peak energy with increasing driving current.Reference Nakamura and Fasol 1 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Nakamura and Fasol 48 This has been explained by combined effects of Coulomb screening of FPZ and band filling of the localized energy states by QW excitons.Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 Really recently, Mukai et al.Reference Mukai, Yamada and Nakamura 49 reported that current and temperature dependences of the EL peak energy of 5.5-nm-thick InxGa1−xN SQW LEDs change drastically at a critical emission peak wavelength of 375 nm. When x is very small, LEDs do not show any blueshifts but show temperature dependence. Conversely, when x is larger than corresponding emission peak of 375 nm, the LEDs show nearly temperature-independent but current density-dependent EL peak energy. Moreover, the output power of UV LEDs increase with increasing wavelength in UV region longer than 370nm where the self-absorption due to GaN base layer is already negligible. These results indicate that the emission mechanisms change with x, and those of GaN QW and InGaN QW are totally different.

Another supporting evidence of the importance of exciton localization in InGaN is shown in Fig. 10. Figure 10 shows the optical transmittance at 10 K and RT and high excitation PL spectra at RT of a 5-nm-thick GaN / Al0.15Ga0.85N double-hetero (DH) structure grown on thick Al0.3Ga0.7N base layer and those of 5.5-nm-thick Al0.15Ga0.85N / InGaN / Al0.1Ga0.9N DH structure (SQW UV-LED)Reference Mukai, Yamada and Nakamura 49 grown on thick GaN base. Since the former sample was grown on thick Al0.3Ga0.7N to observe QW absorption spectrum, both GaN/AlGaN/AlGaN and InGaN/AlGaN/GaN QWs suffer from compressive biaxial strain. Then the FPZ is opposite to the pn junction field. Against FPZ, the GaN/AlGaN SQW exhibits an excitonic absorption peak up to RT, as predicted form the increase of Eb in QWs.Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Miller, Chemla, Damen, Gossard, Wiegmann, Wood and Burrus 28 , 46 , Reference Bulutay, Dagli and Imamoðlu 50 Therefore InGaN SQW would also show the excitonic character. Since the PL peak energy of InGaN/AlGaN SQW is higher than that of GaN/AlGaN SQW, the QW resonance energy of GaN/AlGaN should be smaller than that of InGaN/AlGaN structure, which means that QCSE due to FPZ dominates the optical transitions in the binary GaN wells. Accordingly, the PL intensity of GaN/AlGaN SQW was far lower than that of InGaN/AlGaN, although the self-absorption due to the GaN base is remarkable for the particular UV-LED structure. Note that the PL peak energy agrees with the excitonic absorption peak at RT and excitons are delocalized for the GaN/AlGaN SQW, which is different from the results obtained from InGaN QWs.

Fig. 10 Optical transmittance and high excitation PL spectra at 10 K and RT of a 5-nm-thick GaN / Al0.15Ga0.85N DH structure grown on thick Al0.3Ga0.7N base layer and those of 5.5-nm-thick InGaN / Al0.1Ga0.9N DH structure (SQW UV-LED)Reference Mukai, Yamada and Nakamura 49 grown on thick GaN base.

Typical wide-area and spot-excitation CL spectra at 10 K of a 3-nm-thich In0.1Ga0.9N SQW are shown in Fig. 11. Although the effect of the multiple interference fringes on the CL spectra is not negligible, wide area (10 m 10 m) broad CL band (FWHM nearly 100 meV) consists of many sharp peaks (FWHM less than 20 meV)Reference Chichibu, Wada and Nakamura 51 at 10 K. This clearly shows that the broad CL band consists of sharper emission peaks having various peak energies. Therefore, there exist several structures composed of an InN-rich part surrounded by a GaN-rich part in each spot area. This structure may be due to mesoscopic compositional undulation and it can act as quantum-disks (Q-disks),Reference Sugawara 52 dots, or segmented QWs having compositional and/or size inhomogeneity. Monochromatic scanning CL images of the same GaN-capped In0.1Ga0.9N SQW taken at wavelengths of 400 nm and 420 nm are also shown in Fig. 11. A careful comparison between the two images using a triangular-shaped dark marker on the bottom-left corner indicated following results; (a) each bright (white in the figure) area consists of emissions from real spaces of about 60-400 nm in lateral size, (b) some dark areas in one figure correspond complementary to bright ones in the other figure, and (c) some areas exhibit both 400 and 420 nm CL emissions. These results can also be explained by the existence of compositional undulation whose lateral interval is smaller than 60 nm, which value is the spatial resolution of the system (diffusion length). Supporting evidences of the short diffusion length in InGaN QWs were reported by Rosner et al.Reference Rosner, Carr, Ludwise, Girolami and Erikson 53 , Reference Speck, Marchand, Kozodoy, Fini, Wu, Ibbetson, Keller, DenBaars, Mishra and Rosner 54 They showed less pronounced CL contrast in InGaN SQW compared to GaN.Reference Speck, Marchand, Kozodoy, Fini, Wu, Ibbetson, Keller, DenBaars, Mishra and Rosner 54 Sato et al.Reference Sato, Sugahara, Naoi and Sakai 55 estimated the PL intensity as a function of TD density and also supported the short diffusion length model in InGaN QWs.Reference Chichibu, Wada and Nakamura 51 The result (c) indicates that the real area that emits CL is far smaller than the diffusion length (60 nm). Kisielowski et al.Reference Kisielowski 56 and Ponce et al.Reference Ponce, Galloway, Goetz and Kern 57 estimated the structural size of InN-rich clusters to be less than 10 nm and 20 nm, respectively. Such CL nanostructure was also found for compositions as low as x=0.03. This means that large FWHM of the PL peak and broadness of the PLE signal edge for the CASE I QWs represent the in-plane effective emission bandgap inhomogeneity. Note that e-h wavefunctions in the Q-disks are confined with respect to the z-direction, and Q-disks or Q-dots can improve the emission efficiency of QW excitons due to the lateral confinement in limited spaces, that can reduce nonradiative pathways. This is the reason why InGaN exhibits bright spontaneous emissions. Naturally, it overcomes disadvantages of using wurtzite materials due to the polarization-induced electric fields. The e-h wavefunctions are still overlapped even in the pronounced CASE II. The emission lifetime is affected by both the e-h pair separation due to FPZ and in-plane localization for CASE II and pronounced CASE II. In Q-disks, the spontaneous emission lifetime becomes long since the emission is prohibited when the wave vector of exciton center-of-mass motion is above the critical energy.Reference Sugawara 52

Fig.11 Wide-area (10 m 10 m) scanning and spot excitation CL spectra of 3-nm-thick In0.1Ga0.9N SQW capped by a 6-nm-thick GaN. The broad CL peak (FWHM=100 meV) consists of several sharp emission peaks (FWHM=20 meV) having different peak energies. Monochromatic CL images taken at 400 and 420 nm showed primarily the complimentary relation. The resolution of the CL mapping is limited by the diffusion length, which was nearly 60 nm in lateral direction.

Origin of exciton localization

One of the possible origins of the in-plane bandgap inhomogeneity is an inhomogeneous distribution of FPZ due to strain fluctuation. If we attribute the in-plane net Stokes shift to this, the potential fluctuation can be leveled by filling carriers to screen FPZ. However, the FWHM of PL or EL in InGaN QWs does not change or even increase with increasing excitation level. Therefore, an intrinsic compositional inhomogeneity is the most probable. Keller et al.Reference Keller, Keller, Minsky, Bowers, Mishra, DenBaars and Seifert 58 found a spiral growth of InGaN initiated by the mixed character TDs. If such a growth mode accumulates In to the growth step edge, compositional inhomogeneity would be produced. To investigate this, optical properties of InGaN QWs were investigated as a function of TD densityReference Chichibu, Marchand, Keller, Fini, Ibbetson, Minsky, Fleischer, Speck, Bowers, Hu, Mishra, DenBaars, Deguchi, Sota and Nakamura 59 using LEO technique. A series of InGaN QWs were grown on dislocated GaN grown from the SiO2 mask opening (window) and nearly TD-free GaN laterally overgrown on SiO2 from the opening (wing) at the same time in order to minimize run-to-run or place-to-place fluctualtion. Figure 12 shows PL and PLE spectra at 10 K of InGaN SQW and MQW structures grown on the window and wing. As shown, they showed exactly the same properties. The luminescence decay time measured by the time-resolved PL measurements was 6 ns at RT for the MQW structure, and was independent of TD density.Reference Chichibu, Marchand, Keller, Fini, Ibbetson, Minsky, Fleischer, Speck, Bowers, Hu, Mishra, DenBaars, Deguchi, Sota and Nakamura 59 The low temperature PL lifetime was also independent of the TD density. In addition, the energy resolved of nearly TD-free InGaN MQW increased with decreasing the photon energy, as shown in Fig. 13. This is characteristics of the localized electronic system. The relation between and E was fitted using (E)= r /{1-exp[(E−Eme)/E0], where E0=60 meV represents the depth in the tail states, Eme=2.88 eV is the energy similar to the mobility edge, and r=12 ns is the radiative lifetime. These values are reasonable for the device-quality InGaN QW1 systems with highly lattice mismatched nonrandom alloy broadening.

Fig. 12 PL and PLE spectra at 10 K obtained from InGaN SQW and MQW structures grown on LEO window and LEO wing regions.

Fig. 13 Time-integrated PL spectra and the decay time as a function of emission energy at RT of InGaN MQW grown on the LEO wing.

It should be noted that all the optical properties do not depend on TD density. Conversely, the inplane net Stokes shift is affected by changing the barrier growth rateReference Keller, Chichibu, Minsky, Hu, Mishra and DenBaars 60 and InN molar fraction of the QWs.Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 Therefore the in-plane effective bandgap inhomogeneity is caused by growth parameters, point defects, or thermodynamics rather than phase separation initiated by TDs. Anomalous temperature independence of the luminescence peak energyReference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 1 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 cannot be explained only by an inhomogeneous FPZ. Since the change in x changes FPZ, the Q-disk size / segmented QW potential may, at least partly come from the nonrandom alloy potential fluctuation emphasized by the large bowing parameter in InGaN.Reference Akasaki and Amano 2 , Reference Takeuchi, Takeuchi, Sota, Sakai, Amano, Akasaki, Wetzel, Amano, Akasaki, Suski, Ager, Weber, Haller and Meyer 29 , Reference Mcluskey, Van de Walle, Master, Romano and Johnson 61

For LDs, the effective bandgap inhomogeneity more than 50 meV is too large to obtain an uniform EHP in the well. Indeed, some InGaN MQW LDs showed EHP lasing in tail states.Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 25 , Reference Jeon, Kozlov, Song, Vertikov, Kuball, Nurmikko, Liu, Chen, Kern, Kuo and Crawford 26 ,Reference Deguchi, Azuhata, Sota, Chichibu, Nakamura and Deguchi 32 - Reference Chichibu, Cohen, Mack, Abare, Kozodoy, Minsky, Fleischer, Keller, Bowers, Mishra, Coldren, Clarke and DenBaars 34 , Reference Chichibu, Sota, Wada and Nakamura 62 This may cause the increase of threshold current density of InGaN LDs in terms of reduiction in differential gain.Reference Domen, Kuramata and Tanahashi 62

Summary

Importance of QW exciton localization into the energy tail states was explained in addition to high-field effects in InGaN QWs. This Q-disk size potential minima make the diffusion length short and effectively keep carriers away from nonradiative pathways, which is a distinct difference between GaN and InGaN QWs. Strong FPZ separate e-h pair into triangular potential wells formed at opposite sides of the well and apparent Stokes-like shift is dominated by FPZ for CASE II, III, and IV. The oscillator strength of the separate e-h pair is very small for CASE III and IV. State-of-the-art InGaN LEDs and LDs generally have QWs with L = 2.5-3.5 nm and most of blue, green, and amber LEDs may belong to pronounced CASE II. However, the overlap of e-h wavefunctions is recovered by screening FPZ by injecting carriers or doping Si, resulting in huge blueshift of the emission peak and a decrease of the apparent Stokes-like shift. Note that vertical e-h pair distance is still smaller than aB, resulting in large overlap of their wavefunctions. Therefore the localized QW excitons have strong Coulomb interaction provided that L<aB. In order to understand precise mechanisms of the bandgap inhomogeneity and carrier localization, and to obtain long wavelength LDs expanding from pure green to red wavelengths, fabrication and investigation of cubic zincblende InGaN QWs are mandatory to eliminate the modulation due to strain-induced piezoelectricity.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Professors U. Mishra, L. Coldren, J. Bowers, E. Hu, J. Speck, and K. Suzuki, and Drs. S. Keller, S. Fleischer, D. Cohen, J. Ibbetson, C. Bulutay, T. Azuhata, and T. Uenoyama for helpful discussions. The authors would like to thank A. Abare, M. Mack, M. Minsky, T. Deguchi, A. Shikanai, K. Torii, P. Kozodoy, M. Hansen, P. Fini, and H. Marchand for help in the experiments. The first author is thankful to Professor H. Nakanishi and Professor Y. Horikoshi for continuous encouragement.

Footnotes

MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 4S1, G2.7(1999).

References

Nakamura, S. and Fasol, G., The Blue Laser Diode, (Springer, Berlin, 1997).Google Scholar
for a review, Akasaki, I., and Amano, H., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, 5393 (1997).Google Scholar
Akasaki, I., Sota, S., Sakai, H., Tanaka, T., Koike, M., and Amano, H., Electron. Lett. 32, 1105 (1996).Google Scholar
Itaya, K., Onomura, M., Nishio, J., Sugiura, L., Saito, S., Suzuki, M., Rennie, J., Nunoue, S., Yamamoto, M., Fujimoto, H., Kokubun, Y., Ohba, Y., Hatakoshi, G., and Ishikawa, M., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 35, L1315 (1996).Google Scholar
Bulman, G., Doverspike, K., Sheppard, S., Weeks, T., Kong, H., Dieringer, H., Edmond, J., Brown, J., Schetzina, J. Swindell, , and , J., Electron. Lett. 33, 1556 (1997).Google Scholar
Kuramata, A., Domen, K., Soejima, R., Horino, K., Kubota, S., and Tanahashi, T., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, L1130 (1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mack, M., Abare, A., Aizcorbe, M., Kozodoy, P., Keller, S., Mishra, U., Coldren, L., and DenBaars, S., MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 2, 41 (1997); J. Cryst. Growth 180/190, 837 (1998).Google Scholar
Nakamura, F., Kobayashi, T., Asatsuma, T., Funato, K., Yanashima, K., Hashimoto, S., Naganuma, K., Miyajima, S. Tomioka, , , T., Morita, E., Kawai, H., and Ikeda, M., J. Cryst. Growth 180/190, 841 (1998).Google Scholar
Kneissl, M., Bour, D. P., Johnson, N. M., Romano, L. T., Krusor, B. S., Donaldson, R., Walker, J., and Dunnrowicz, C., Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 1539 (1998).Google Scholar
Kaneko, Yamada, Y., Watanabe, S., Yamaoka, Y., Hidaka, T., Nakagawa, S., Marenger, E., Takeuchi, T., Yamaguchi, S., Amano, H., and Akasaki, I., Proc. 10th IEEE Lasers and Electro-Optics Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, USA, Nov. 10-13, 1997, PD1.2.Google Scholar
application of LEO technique is introduced in several publications. For example, Bauser, E., Thin film growth techniques for low dimensional structures, eds. Farrow, R., Parkin, S., Dobson, P., Neave, J. and Arrott, A. (Plenum, New York, 1987), p. 171.Google Scholar
Usui, A., Sunakawa, H., Sakai, A., and Yamaguchi, A., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, L899 (1997); A. Sakai, H. Sunakawa, and A. Usui, Appl. Phys. Lett. 71, 2259 (1997).Google Scholar
Zheleva, T., Nam, O-H., Bremser, M., and Davis, R., Appl. Phys. Lett. 71, 2472 (1997); O-H. Nam, M. Bremser, T. Zheleva, and R. Davis, Appl. Phys. Lett. 71, 2638 (1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, S., Senoh, M., Nagahama, S., Iwasa, N., Yamada, T., Matsushita, T., Kiyoku, H., Sugimoto, Y., Umemoto, T. Kozaki, , , H., Sano, M., and Chocho, K., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, L1568 (1997); Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 211(1998).Google Scholar
Nakamura, S., Senoh, M., Nagahama, S., Iwasa, N., Yamada, T., Matsushita, T., Kiyoku, H., Sugimoto, Y., Kozaki, T., Umemoto, H., Sano, M., and Chocho, K., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 37, L309 (1998).Google Scholar
Marchand, H., Ibbetson, J., Fini, P., Kozodoy, P., Keller, S., DenBaars, S., Speck, J., and Mishra, U., MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 3, 3 (1998); H. Marchand, X. H. Wu, J. Ibbetson, P. Fini, P. Kozodoy, S. Keller, J. Speck, S. DenBaars, and U. Mishra, Appl. Phys. Lett. 73, 747 (1998).Google Scholar
Mukai, T., Morita, D., and Nakamura, S., J. Cryst. Growth 189/190, 778 (1998).Google Scholar
Mukai, T., Narimatsu, H., and Nakamura, S., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 37, L479 (1998).Google Scholar
Ponce, F. and Bour, D., Nature 386, 351 (1997).Google Scholar
Suzuki, M., Uenoyama, T., and Yanase, A., Phys. Rev. B 52, 8132 (1995).Google Scholar
Bernardini, F., Fiorentini, V., and Vanderbilt, D., Phys. Rev. B 56, R10024 (1997).Google Scholar
polarity problem has been reviewed in Hellman, E., MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 3,11 (1998).Google Scholar
Koukitsu, A., Takahashi, N., Taki, T., and Seki, H., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 35, L673 (1996); I-hsiu Ho and G. B. Stringfellow, Appl. Phys. Lett. 69, 2701 (1996).Google Scholar
Osamura, S. Naka, and Murakami, Y., J. Appl. Phys. 46, 3432 (1975); R. Singh, D. Doppalapudi, T. D. Moustakas, and L. Romano, Appl. Phys. Lett. 70, 1089 (1997).Google Scholar
properties of localized excitons in InGaN QWs are summarized in previous papers [Chichibu, S., Sota, T., Wada, K., and Nakamura, S., J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 16, 2204 (1998) and S. Chichibu, A. Abare, M. Mack, M. Minsky, T. Deguchi, D. Cohen, P. Kozodoy, S. Fleischer, S. Keller, J. Speck, J. Bowers, E. Hu, U. Mishra, L. Coldren, S. DenBaars, K. Wada, T. Sota, and S. Nakamura, European Mater. Res. Soc. 98 Spring Meeting, Session L-IV.1, Strasbourg, France, June 16-19 (1998); Mater. Sci. Eng. B (1998; unpublished)]; original papers are S. Chichibu, T. Azuhata, T. Sota, and S. Nakamura, Appl. Phys. Lett. 69, 4188 (1996); 70, 2822 (1997); 73, 2006 (1998).Google Scholar
Jeon, E., Kozlov, V., Song, Y., Vertikov, A., Kuball, M., Nurmikko, A., Liu, H., Chen, C., Kern, R., Kuo, C., and Crawford, M., Appl. Phys. Lett. 69, 4194 (1996); A. Vertikov, A. Nurmikko, K. Doverspike, G. Bulman, and J. Edmond, ibid 73, 493 (1998).Google Scholar
Narukawa, Y., Kawakami, Y., Fujita, Sz., Fujita, Sg., and Nakamura, S., Phys. Rev. B 55, R1938 (1997); Y. Narukawa, Y. Kawakami, M. Funato, Sz. Fujita, Sg. Fujita, and S. Nakamura, Appl. Phys. Lett. 70, 981 (1997).Google Scholar
Miller, D. A., Chemla, D. S., Damen, T. C., Gossard, A. C., Wiegmann, W., Wood, T. H., and Burrus, C. A., Phys. Rev. Lett. 53, 2173 (1984); Phys. Rev. B 32, 1043 (1985).Google Scholar
Takeuchi, T., Takeuchi, H., Sota, S., Sakai, H., Amano, H., and Akasaki, I., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, L177 (1997); T. Takeuchi, S. Sota, M. Katsuragawa, M. Komori, H. Takeuchi, H. Amano, and I. Akasaki, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, L382 (1997); Wetzel, C., Amano, H., Akasaki, I., Suski, T., Ager, J., Weber, E., Haller, E., and Meyer, B. K., Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 482, 489 (1998).Google Scholar
Bergman, J., Saksulv, N., Dalfors, J., Holtz, P., Monemar, B., Amano, H., and Akasaki, I., Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 482, 631 (1998).Google Scholar
Im, J., Kollmer, H., Off, J., Sohmer, A., Scholz, F., and Hangleiter, A., Phys. Rev. B 57, R9435 (1998).Google Scholar
Deguchi, T., Azuhata, T., Sota, T., Chichibu, S., and Nakamura, S., Mater. Sci. Eng. B 50, 251 (1997); Deguchi, T., A. Shikanai, K. Torii, T. Sota, S. Chichibu, and S. Nakamura, Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 3329(1998).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohs, G., Aoki, T., Nagai, M., Shimano, R., K-Gonokami, M., and Nakamura, S., Solid State Commun. 104, 643 (1997).Google Scholar
Chichibu, S., Cohen, D., Mack, M., Abare, A., Kozodoy, P., Minsky, M., Fleischer, S., Keller, S., Bowers, J., Mishra, U., Coldren, L., Clarke, D., and DenBaars, S., Appl. Phys. Lett. 73, 496 (1998).Google Scholar
Haug, H. and Koch, S., Quantum Theory of the Optical and Electronic Properties of Semiconductors, (World Scientific, Singapore, 1990); W. Chow, S. W. Koch, and M. Sargent III, Semiconductor-Laser Physics, (Springer, Berlin, 1994); W. Chow, A. Wright, and J. Nelson, Appl. Phys. Lett. 68, 296 (1996).Google Scholar
Frankowsky, G., Steuber, F., Härle, V., Scholz, F., and Hangleiter, A., Appl. Phys. Lett. 68, 3746 (1996).Google Scholar
Wiesmann, D., Brener, I., Pfeiffer, L., Kahn, M., and Sun, C., Appl. Phys. Lett. 69, 3384 (1996).Google Scholar
Kuball, M., Jeon, E., Song, Y., Nurmikko, A., Kozodoy, P., Abare, A., Keller, S., Coldren, L., Mishra, U., DenBaars, S., and Steigerwald, D., Appl. Phys. Lett. 70, 2580 (1997).Google Scholar
Chichibu, S., Azuhata, T., Sota, T., and Nakamura, S., J. Appl. Phys. 79, 2784 (1996); Proc. Int. Symp. On Blue Laser and Light Emitting Diodes (Ohmsha, Tokyo, 1996), pp.202; S. Chichibu, H. Okumura, S. Nakamura, G. Feuillet, T. Azuhata, T. Sota, and S. Yoshida, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 36, 1976 (1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monemar, B., Bergman, J. P., Amano, H., Akasaki, I., Detchprohm, T., Hiramatsu, K., and Sawaki, N., Proc. Int. Symp. on Blue Laser and Light Emitting Diodes (Ohmsha, Tokyo, 1996), pp. 135.Google Scholar
Dingle, R., Sell, D. D., Stokowski, S. E., and Ilegems, M., Phys. Rev. B 4, 1211 (1971).Google Scholar
Monemar, B., Phys. Rev. B 10, 676 (1974).Google Scholar
Chichibu, S., Shikanai, A., Azuhata, T., Sota, T., Kuramata, A., Horino, K., and Nakamura, S., Appl. Phys. Lett. 68, 3766 (1996); A. Shikanai, T. Azuhata, T. Sota, S. Chichibu, A. Kuramata, K. Horino, and S. Nakamura, J. Appl. Phys. 81, 417 (1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bastard, G., Mendez, E. E., Chang, L. L., and Esaki, L., Phys. Rev. B 26 (1982) 1974.Google Scholar
Miller, D. A. B., Chemla, D. S., and Schmitt-Rink, S., Phys. Rev. B 33 (1986) 6976.Google Scholar
Eb in GaN / Al0.1Ga0.9N QW was calculated according to Ref. 44 using a variational method. We further consider the finite well potential. An usual variational function with two variational parameters was used as an envelop function of exciton, i.e. exp{−[r2/a2-(ze−zh)2/b2]}, where a and b are the variational parameters, r is the absolute value of the relative position of electron and hole in the QW plane, and ze (zh) is the transformed z coordinate of the electron (hole).Google Scholar
Van de Walle, C. G. and Neugebauer, J., Appl. Phys. Lett. 70, 2577 (1997).Google Scholar
Taguchi, T., presented at the 43rd Spring Meeting of the Japan Society of Applied Physics and Related Societies, Asaka, Japan, Mar.29, 1996 (unpublished).Google Scholar
Mukai, T., Yamada, M., and Nakamura, S., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 37, L1358 (1998).Google Scholar
Bulutay, C., Dagli, N., and Imamoðlu, A., IEEE J. of Quantum Electron. QE (1999) (unpublished).Google Scholar
Chichibu, S., Wada, K., and Nakamura, S., Appl. Phys. Lett. 71, 2346 (1997).Google Scholar
Sugawara, M., Phys. Rev. B 51, 10743 (1995).Google Scholar
Rosner, S., Carr, E., Ludwise, M., Girolami, G., and Erikson, H., Appl. Phys. Lett. 70, 420 (1997).Google Scholar
Speck, J., Marchand, H., Kozodoy, P., Fini, P., Wu, X., Ibbetson, J., Keller, S., DenBaars, S., Mishra, U., and Rosner, S., Proc. 2nd Int. Symp. on Blue Laser and Light Emitting Diodes (Ohmsha, Tokyo, 1998), pp. 37.Google Scholar
Sato, H., Sugahara, T., Naoi, Y., and Sakai, S., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 37, 2013 (1998).Google Scholar
their results are summarized in Kisielowski, C., Proc. 2nd Int. Symp. on Blue Laser and Light Emitting Diodes (Ohmsha, Tokyo, 1998), pp. 321.Google Scholar
Ponce, F., Galloway, S., Goetz, W., and Kern, R., Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 482, 625 (1998).Google Scholar
Keller, S., Keller, B., Minsky, M., Bowers, J., Mishra, U., DenBaars, S, and Seifert, W., J. Cryst. Growth 189/190, 29 (1998).Google Scholar
Chichibu, S., Marchand, H., Keller, S., Fini, P., Ibbetson, J., Minsky, M., Fleischer, S., Speck, J., Bowers, J., Hu, E., Mishra, U., DenBaars, S., Deguchi, T., Sota, T., and Nakamura, S., Proc. 2nd Int. Symp. on Blue Laser and Light Emitting Diodes (Ohmsha, Tokyo, 1998), pp. 604; Appl. Phys. Lett. 74,(1999) (unpublished).Google Scholar
Keller, S., Chichibu, S., Minsky, M., Hu, E., Mishra, U., and DenBaars, S., J. Crystal Growth (1998) (unpublished).Google Scholar
Mcluskey, M., Van de Walle, C., Master, C., Romano, L., and Johnson, N., Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 2725 (1998).Google Scholar
Domen, K., Kuramata, A., and Tanahashi, T., Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 1359 (1998).Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig.1 Schematic band diagrams of GaN/InGaN QWs under the electric field F. Each case represents the restrictions determined resonance energy slightly shifts to lower energy among F, L, EV, and aB.

Figure 1

Fig.2 Low excitation PL and PLE spectra at RT of In0.1Ga0.9N / GaN:Si MQWs for different well thickness, L. The apparent bandgap is defined as the energy where the PLE signal intensity drops to half the maximum.

Figure 2

Fig.3 High and low excitation PL peak energies, apparent bandgap energy estimated from PLE spectra, and apparent Stokes-like shift of In0.1Ga0.9N wells at RT as a function of L.

Figure 3

Fig.4 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e-h pair in In0.1Ga0.9N SQW under the condition of F=400kV/cm.

Figure 4

Fig.5 Low excitation PL and PLE spectra at 10 K of 3-nm-thick InxGa1−xN / GaN:Si SQW structures with different InN molar fraction, x. The x values are estimated assuming coherent growth.

Figure 5

Fig.6 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e−h pair in 3-nm-thick InGaN SQW under the condition of F=100kV/cm (x=0.03) and 400kV/cm (x=0.1).

Figure 6

Fig.7 PL FWHM, apparent Stokes-like shift, and TR-PL decay time of 3-nm-thick InxGa1−xN QWs as a function of x.

Figure 7

Fig.8 Quantized energy levels and wavefunctions of e-h pair in 3-nm-thick InGaN SQW under the condition of F=0kV/cm, F=500kV/cm, and F=500kV/cm and Ne−h pair =4 1012cm−2.

Figure 8

Fig.9 Low-excitation PL and PLE spectra at 300 K of In0.13Ga0.87N/GaN MQWs for different Si-doping concentrations (n). PLE edge was sharpened and the PL peak blueshifted with increasing n.

Figure 9

Fig. 10 Optical transmittance and high excitation PL spectra at 10 K and RT of a 5-nm-thick GaN / Al0.15Ga0.85N DH structure grown on thick Al0.3Ga0.7N base layer and those of 5.5-nm-thick InGaN / Al0.1Ga0.9N DH structure (SQW UV-LED)49 grown on thick GaN base.

Figure 10

Fig.11 Wide-area (10 m 10 m) scanning and spot excitation CL spectra of 3-nm-thick In0.1Ga0.9N SQW capped by a 6-nm-thick GaN. The broad CL peak (FWHM=100 meV) consists of several sharp emission peaks (FWHM=20 meV) having different peak energies. Monochromatic CL images taken at 400 and 420 nm showed primarily the complimentary relation. The resolution of the CL mapping is limited by the diffusion length, which was nearly 60 nm in lateral direction.

Figure 11

Fig. 12 PL and PLE spectra at 10 K obtained from InGaN SQW and MQW structures grown on LEO window and LEO wing regions.

Figure 12

Fig. 13 Time-integrated PL spectra and the decay time as a function of emission energy at RT of InGaN MQW grown on the LEO wing.