Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T01:11:34.492Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Temperature-Composition Dependence of the Bandgap and Possible Non-complanar Structures in GaN-AlN, GaN-InN and InN-AlN Mixed Crystals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2014

E. V. Kalashnikov
Affiliation:
Institute of Mechanical Engineering, RAN
V. I. Nikolaev
Affiliation:
Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute

Abstract

The virtual crystal approximation has been used to determine the temperature-composition dependence of the GaN-AlN, GaN-InN, and InN-AlN band gap energies. Also, the thermodynamic instability states in the mixed crystals were studied. The expression for the band gap of mixed A-B crystals has been derived: EgAB = (1−x)EgA + xEgB − bSxx, where EgA and EgB are the direct gaps for compounds A and B, respectively, and x is the alloy concentration. The term Sxx ~ T0/(∂2G/∂x2) where G is the thermodynamic potential of the mixed crystal, b is a bowing parameter, and T0 has the meaning of a growth temperature.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1997 Materials Research Society

1. Introduction

Recent progress in the nitride semiconductors is connected with the realization of high-quality AlGaN and InGaN crystal layers and their application to high brightness light-emitting diodes (LEDs) operating from the near ultraviolet (~3.4 eV) to yellow (~2.1 eV) Reference Nakamura[1] Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[2]. The bright emission of the LEDs is associated with direct band-to-band transitions in unstrained InGaN quantum wells Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[2] in which the InN mole fraction is varied from 0 – 70%.

It is obvious that the band gap (Eg) of semiconductor alloys (mixed crystals) is strongly composition dependent. However, theoretically the alloy bandgap can only be solved at small deviations from the pure components. Experimental Eg values have been measured in nitride alloys throughout the entire compositional range Reference Nakamura[1] Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[2] Reference Kubota, Kobayashi and Fujimoto[3] Reference Koide, Itoh, Khan, Hiramatu, Sawaki and Akasaki[4] Reference Akasaki, Hiramatsu and Amano[5] Reference Osamura, Nakajima, Murakami, Shingu and Ohtsuki[6] Reference Zubrilov, Tsvetkov, Nikolaev and Nikitina[7] by optical absorption spectroscopy and edge luminescence measurements. The compositional dependence of the band gap is generally described by a parabolic function of the molar fraction x:

(1)

where Eg A and Eg B are the band gaps of the pure components, and b is the bowing parameter. To be more precise we have to note that the term containing x(1−x) is reasonable based on the assumption that the mixed crystal is an ideal solid solution. This approximation is well suited to mixed crystals at small concentrations of one component or at very high temperature where the interactions between the A and B components can be neglected. Larger concentrations of both components usually lead to additional ordering, and in some respects these alloys can be likened to the order in a liquid where Brillouin zones have no conventional meaning. Derivation of the compositional dependence of Eg under these conditions requires special theoretical analysis and calculations.

2. Correction of the Compositional Dependence of the Band Gap

Experiments Reference Lyutaya and Bartnitskaya[8] show that the group III nitride alloys are substituted solid solutions in the cation sublattice of A1−xBxN. That is why the A1−xBxN complexes can be thought of in the following as binary A1−xBx solutions. To derive the expression for Eg(x) for the solution we apply the virtual-crystal approximation Reference Parmenter[9]. By considering all possible electron scattering in the conduction band, averaging over random distributions of interacting A and B atoms, and expressing the compositional fluctuations through the thermodynamic potential (G), we can derive the general relation:

(2)

in which

Reference Landau and Lifshitz[10] where r is a space coordinate, K, N, T, P are the Boltzmann constant, the number of atoms per mole, the temperature and the pressure, respectively. The brackets (< >) denote the averaging over all lattice sites.

In particular G is expressed as G = (1 − x) · G A + x · G B + KT[x · ln x + (1 − x) · ln(1 − x)] if A-B alloy is an ideal solution. In this case (2) reverts to the traditional formula (1), where 〈 Δx(r′) · Δx(r) 〉 ≡ x · (1 − x).

To discuss the main features of (2), mixed crystals are considered for simplicity within the framework of the Williams-Bragg (or regular solution) approximation. This simply means that we neglect the compositional dependence of the compressibility, and G is assumed to be roughly equal to the free energy (F). The thermodynamic potential written for regular solutions has an added term equal to x(1−x)W. The value of W can be expressed as an interaction energy between pairs of different atoms. These energies were calculated in terms of the electronegativities (c) and solubility parameters (d) of the pure elements,

(3)

where Va and Vb are the molar volumes.

Although this equation was used earlier for the calculation of the energy in liquid solutions Reference Stringfellow[11], we are sure that the parameters c, d, and V are weakly dependent on any phase state of the solutions. Moreover it would be expected that the atomic structure of the nitrides has no serious distortions during cooling from the growth temperature. These reasonable assumptions allow us to link Sxx with the actual crystal growth temperature.

The analysis of the behavior of G (or F) and Sxx at various temperatures indicates the possibility of alloy decomposition at some mole fraction. Figure 1 schematically demonstrates the thermodynamic diagram for a regular solution. The diagram region where the solution is unstable (labile) is captured by the spinodal (curve 2). Alloys grown at temperatures and compositions in the range under the spinodal are spatially inhomogeneous. An example of the compositional dependence F(x) for these alloys is also shown in figure 1. The critical temperatures for AIIIBV alloys were calculated using Tc = W/2R Reference Stringfellow[11]. The nitride Tc values are shown in table 1. The compositional dependences of Sxx at various temperatures are shown in figure 2. It should be noted that Sxx(x) is a pointwise discontinuous function in the area captured by the spinodal (curve 2 in figure 1). The points “a” and “b” in figure 2 pick out the compositional range at T3 < Tc where the formation of composition-periodical structures would be expected.

Figure 1. Temperature-composition diagrams for the regular solution and examples of the space structures. F(x) is the compositional variation of the free energy at T3 < Tc. The curves 1 and 2 are the binodal and the spinodal respectively. Curve 3 schematically shows the space periodical structure at T3 in the labile (L) states of the solution (the area of lability is under the spinodal). Curve 4 demonstrates the space relaxation structure in the region of metastable (M) states of the solutions (between curves 1 and 2). S marks the area, where the solution is stable.

Figure 2. Compositional dependence of Sxx at various temperature.

Table 1 Figure 1. Bowing parameters and critical temperatures for nitride semiconductors.

3. Noncomplanar Space Periodical Structures

The critical temperature in the alloy diagram denotes the appearance of compositionally inhomogeneous regions with a composition gradient (dx/dr). The free energy (F) of such system may be written:

(4)

where a, b, d are phenomenological coefficients. The compositional variation of F(x) leads to the Duffing equation Reference Moiseev[12]:

(5)

The solution of (5) is written through the functions:

(6)

with a space period

which depends on original deviation Π0, where K(k) is the first order elliptic integral, a ~ Tc − T > 0, y = r/rc where rc = d/a is a correlation length, and P = x/x* where x* = a/b. The space periodical solution (6) appears only in the range captured by the spinodal. This is schematically demonstrated by curve 3 in figure 1. The conditions of free energy minimization and the existence of temperature gradients in grown samples lead to the fact that the compositional gradient here is normal to the temperature gradient. In other words, layer growth at these parameters is inhomogeneous across the substrate. The space coordinate axis (r) in figure 1 shows the direction parallel to the substrate. An example of another non-complanar structure is the spatial relaxation structure shown in curve 4 of figure 1.

4. Temperature-Composition Dependencies of the Band Gap in Semiconductor Nitrides

The temperature-composition dependencies of the band gaps for each crystal type (AlGaN, InGaN, InAlN) were calculated from (2) taking into account the experimental Eg values of the pure semiconductors Reference Strite and Morkoç[13] Reference Guo and Yoshida[14]. It has been demonstrated that there are three alternative runs of the Eg(x) curve at various growth temperatures. The first is appropriate to InGaN where Tc is slightly lower than the growth temperatures of the mixed crystals Reference Nakamura[1] Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[2] Reference Nagatomo, Kuboyama, Minamino and Omoto[15]. Common temperatures and growth techniques for the nitrides are listed in table 2. Figure 3 shows the result of Eg(x) calculations when the growth temperatures are 700 K, 900 K and 1100 K. The last value is close to the substrate temperature for the MOCVD growth of InGaN crystals. The calculated Eg(x) curve at this temperature is in good agreement with the experimental data at any reasonable bowing parameter (b). It should be noted here that although the bowing factor may be derived from first principles through the effective mass of the electrons in the solution Reference Nagatomo, Kuboyama, Minamino and Omoto[15], it is doubtful that b can be calculated in this manner. That is why the bowing factor is usually considered as a fitting constant. To determine this parameter we fitted b to experimental data of the alloy band gap variation, but only at small compositions x « 0.5 where b is nearly constant (see table 1).

Figure 3. Variation of the direct energy band gap Eg with x for InxGa1−xN at room temperature. The curves show Eg(x) calculated from (2) at various “growth” temperatures. The dashed line marks the range where term Eg loses its ordinary meaning. The symbols are experimental data: (*) represents Eg of the polycrystalline alloys grown by electron beam plasma technique from mixtures of Ga and In (Osamura et al. Reference Osamura, Nakajima, Murakami, Shingu and Ohtsuki[6]); (Δ) and (open squares) represent Eg of high quality single crystal layers grown at the temperature from the range 1050-1100 K and LEDs (Nakamura et al. Reference Nakamura[1] Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[2] Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa, Nagahama, Yamada and Mukai[17]); (red diamonds) represent Eg of the single crystal alloys grown by MOVPE at about 770 K (Nagatomo et al. Reference Nagatomo, Kuboyama, Minamino and Omoto[15]).

Table 2 Growth techniques, technological temperatures and experimental procedure for nitride alloy research. EPMA is electron probe microanalysis; PL, EL are photo- and electroluminecsence, respectively.

The other curves in figure 3 show that decreasing the growth temperature leads to anomalous Eg(x). The alloys of InGaN with x ~ 0.5 grown at T0 ≈ 700 K should have near zero band gap. As described above, Sxx(x) has discontinuities and a solution with mole fraction x ranging between “a” and “b” in figure 2 tends to decompose if the growth temperature is below Tc. Figure 4 demonstrates Eg(x) at T0 < Tc for AlInN, where this condition is practical, because the critical temperature for this solution (Tc = 2116 K) is much higher than the experimental growth temperatures Reference Kubota, Kobayashi and Fujimoto[3]. In this case Eg(x) is a single-valued function only at small concentrations of either component outside the interval between “a” and “b” in figure 4. The strange compositional dependence of Eg with very large bowing is observed in the alloy experimentally Reference Kubota, Kobayashi and Fujimoto[3]. Probably such behavior of Eg(x) in AlN-InN at a mole fraction between “a” and “b” is caused by the absence of stable (and metastable) states in InAlN alloys at low growth temperature.

Figure 4. Variation of room temperature Eg(x) for InxAl1−xN alloys grown at temperature T0 = 800 K. The curve represents the calculated dependence of Eg(x), the dashed line marks the range where the Eg(x) is not uniquely determined. The dots show the data from Reference Kubota, Kobayashi and Fujimoto[3].

The band gap variations throughout the entire compositional range for GaAlN at 77 K (upper curve) and 300 K (lower curve) are shown in figure 5. Here the calculated dependences of Eg(x) have no peculiarities because Tc is well below the growth temperatures for AlGaN Reference Koide, Itoh, Khan, Hiramatu, Sawaki and Akasaki[4] Reference Akasaki, Hiramatsu and Amano[5] Reference Zubrilov, Tsvetkov, Nikolaev and Nikitina[7] Reference Lee, Gershenzon and Goldenberg[16]. In this case weaker effects begin to dominate. Elastic deformation of the crystal at its cooling from the growth temperature should be taken properly into account for the correction of Eg. Probably the high dispersion of experimental points in papers devoted to AlGaN Reference Koide, Itoh, Khan, Hiramatu, Sawaki and Akasaki[4] is explained by non-controlled thermal strain of the crystal layers.

Figure 5. The compositional dependence of the band gap in AlxGa1−xN alloys at 77 K and 300 K. The curves are calculated from (2) for alloys grown at 1300 K. The solid curve is Eg(x) at room temperature and the dashed curve is Eg(x) at 77 K. The circles represent experimental data; the filled circles from Reference Koide, Itoh, Khan, Hiramatu, Sawaki and Akasaki[4], open from Reference Zubrilov, Tsvetkov, Nikolaev and Nikitina[7], both at the room temperature; and crossed out circles are experimental values of Eg at 77 K Reference Lee, Gershenzon and Goldenberg[16].

5. Conclusion

The approach to semiconductor solid solutions which takes into consideration their thermodynamic instability states within the framework of the virtual crystal approximation allows the behavior of the alloy bandgap Eg at any composition and temperature to be analyzed. In particular, we were able to estimate the range of convenient growth temperatures and mark the mole fraction range where Eg(x) has an anomaly. Moreover, this approach predicts possible periodic structures in the alloys.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Grant Nos. 95-02-04148-a and 96-03-32396)

References

Nakamura, S., Microelectr. J. 25, 651-659 (1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, S., Senoh, M., Iwasa, N., Nagahama, S., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 34, L797-L799 (1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kubota, K., Kobayashi, Y., Fujimoto, K., J. Appl. Phys. 66, 2984-2988 (1989).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koide, Y., Itoh, H., Khan, M. R. H., Hiramatu, K., Sawaki, N., Akasaki, I., J. Appl. Phys. 61, 4540-4543 (1987).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Akasaki, I., Hiramatsu, K., Amano, H., Memories of the Faculty of Engineering, Nagoya University 43, 147-178 (1991).Google Scholar
Osamura, K., Nakajima, K., Murakami, Y., Shingu, P. H., Ohtsuki, A., Sol. St. Comm. 11, 617 (1972).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zubrilov, A.S., Tsvetkov, D.V., Nikolaev, V.I., Nikitina, I.P., unpublished (1996).Google Scholar
Lyutaya, M. D., Bartnitskaya, T. S., Inorg. Mat. 9, 1052 (1973).Google Scholar
Parmenter, R.H., Phys. Rev. 97, 587-598 (1955).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Landau, L.D., Lifshitz, E.M., Statistical Physics (Nauka (in russian), Moscow, 1976) .Google Scholar
Stringfellow, G.B., J. Phys. Chem. Sol. 33, 665-677 (1972).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moiseev, N., Asymptotic methods of nonlinear mechanics (Nauka (in russian), Moscow, 1969) .Google Scholar
Strite, S., Morkoç, H., J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 10, 1237-1266 (1992).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guo, Q., Yoshida, A., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 33, 2453-2456 (1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagatomo, T., Kuboyama, T., Minamino, H., Omoto, O., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 28, L1334 (1989).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, H.G., Gershenzon, M., Goldenberg, B.L., J. Electron. Mater. 20, 621-625 (1991).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, S., Senoh, M., Iwasa, N., Nagahama, S., Yamada, T., Mukai, T., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 34, L1332-L1335 (1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osamura, K., Naka, S., Murakami, Y., J. Appl. Phys. 46, 3432 (1975).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, S., Mukai, T., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 31, L1457-L1459 (1992).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sakai, H., Koide, T., Suzuki, H., Yamaguchi, M., Yamasaki, S., Koike, M., Amano, H., Akasaki, I., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 34, L1429-L1431 (1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Temperature-composition diagrams for the regular solution and examples of the space structures. F(x) is the compositional variation of the free energy at T3 < Tc. The curves 1 and 2 are the binodal and the spinodal respectively. Curve 3 schematically shows the space periodical structure at T3 in the labile (L) states of the solution (the area of lability is under the spinodal). Curve 4 demonstrates the space relaxation structure in the region of metastable (M) states of the solutions (between curves 1 and 2). S marks the area, where the solution is stable.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Compositional dependence of Sxx at various temperature.

Figure 2

Table 1 Figure 1. Bowing parameters and critical temperatures for nitride semiconductors.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Variation of the direct energy band gap Eg with x for InxGa1−xN at room temperature. The curves show Eg(x) calculated from (2) at various “growth” temperatures. The dashed line marks the range where term Eg loses its ordinary meaning. The symbols are experimental data: (*) represents Eg of the polycrystalline alloys grown by electron beam plasma technique from mixtures of Ga and In (Osamura et al. [6]); (Δ) and (open squares) represent Eg of high quality single crystal layers grown at the temperature from the range 1050-1100 K and LEDs (Nakamura et al. [1][2][17]); (red diamonds) represent Eg of the single crystal alloys grown by MOVPE at about 770 K (Nagatomo et al. [15]).

Figure 4

Table 2 Growth techniques, technological temperatures and experimental procedure for nitride alloy research. EPMA is electron probe microanalysis; PL, EL are photo- and electroluminecsence, respectively.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Variation of room temperature Eg(x) for InxAl1−xN alloys grown at temperature T0 = 800 K. The curve represents the calculated dependence of Eg(x), the dashed line marks the range where the Eg(x) is not uniquely determined. The dots show the data from [3].

Figure 6

Figure 5. The compositional dependence of the band gap in AlxGa1−xN alloys at 77 K and 300 K. The curves are calculated from (2) for alloys grown at 1300 K. The solid curve is Eg(x) at room temperature and the dashed curve is Eg(x) at 77 K. The circles represent experimental data; the filled circles from [4], open from [7], both at the room temperature; and crossed out circles are experimental values of Eg at 77 K [16].