Introduction
GaN and its alloys are of great interest for visible and UV light emitting devices because of their applications for displays, scanners, printers, optical disks, etc. Recently, commercialized laser diodesReference Nakamura, Mukai and Senoh 1 have been announced using GaN-based structure grown on sapphire and SiC substrate. Most of the research and development to date is focused on GaN grown on sapphire substrates because of good crystal quality. However, there still remain some fabrication issues concerning sample preparation and processing. In particular, suitable cavity and high reflectivity mirror facets are hard to obtain by conventional processing procedures due to the large misalignmentReference Edgar 2 between sapphire and GaN-based materials. Currently, facets are formed by either the cleaving methodReference Khan, Olson, Van Hove and Kuznia 3 (which cannot provide lower roughness on the sidewalls), or by dry plasma etchingReference Binet, Duboz, Laurent, Bonnat, Collot, Hanauer, Briot and Aulombard 4 (which generates high ion-induced damage and smooth etched sidewalls). Therefore, it is important to find a simple and efficient processing technique in order to fabricate low mirror loss and mode selection of laser diodes.
Conventional edge-emitting semiconductor lasers fabricated by cleaving result in the low mirror reflectivity in the range of ∼0.3-0.4. Even though there are distributed feedback (DFB) or distributed Bragg reflector (DBR)Reference Smith, Hughes, Osowski, Forbes and Coleman 5 , Reference Hofstetter, Zappe, Epler and Söchtig 6 in the ends of the laser cavity, the overall mirror reflectivity still remains low. Recently several research groupsReference Baba, Hamasaki, Watanabe, Kaewplung, Matsutani, Mukaihara, Koyama and Iga 7 , Reference Yuan, Brock, Bhattacharya, Caneau and Bhat 8 , Reference Krauss, Painter, Scherer, Roberts and De La Rue 9 reported an alternative method to increase the mirror reflectivity of semiconductor lasers by introducing a short (but deep) stack of DBR grating consisting of multilayers of semiconductor materials and air. This is attractive since the large refractive index difference between semiconductor materials and air provides a very high reflectivity and reduces the length of cavity at the same time.
The Focused Ion Beam (FIB) technique has been applied to many aspects of microelectronic device fabrication. In particular, FIB is successfully used in the areas of micromachiningReference Harriott, Temkin, Dagenais, Leheny and Crow 10 and ion-induced mixingReference Steckl, Chen, Jackson, Choo, Cao, Boyd and Kumar 11 , with applications to photonic components such as waveguides, mirrors, gratings and laser cavity in the GaAs/AlAs and InP materials systems. Recently, there are several groupsReference Ito, Ishikawa, Egawa, Jimbo and Umeno 12 , Reference Katoh, Takeuchi, Anbe, Mizumotos, Yamaguchi, Weitzel, Amano, Akasaki, Kaneko and Yamado 13 who have applied FIB micromachining to produce flat and smooth mirror facets for GaN laser diodes. Nonetheless, no quantitative analysis of GaN micromachining has been reported to date. In this paper, we present the results on FIB micromachining of GaN and related substrates under various experimental parameters of energy, incident angle and scan strategy. We also apply FIB micromachining for the fabrication of GaN laser with short-period cavity with semiconductor/air DBR mirrors.
Experiment
Liquid metal ion source (LMIS) of Ga+ and Au+ were used with the MBI (MicroBeam Inc.) NanoFab 150 system of FIB. This system has two sets of electrostatic lenses and E×B mass separation. The total emission current was typically set at 3 µA for Ga+ and 15 µA for Au+ . The target current of Ga+ was ∼170 pA for measuring milling rate, ∼220pA for fabricating the waveguides and ∼22 pA for grating fabrication. The Au+ target current was ∼185 pA for measuring milling rate. The total dose used in the experiments for the milling rate analysis reported here was kept constant at 1×1018 cm−2. We used 2.5×1018cm−2 for waveguide and gratings. Multiple number of scans with FIB, ranging from 10, 20 and 50, are made to achieve this dose. The GaN micromilling was investigated using Ga+ ions with energy ranging from 30 to 70 keV, and Au+ ions from 30 to 90 keV, respectively. The ion beam angle of incidence was varied between 0° (normal incidence) and 30° for Ga+, while Au+ is incident to the normal surface of GaN.
The primary GaN material used for milling experiments was grown by hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) on sapphire substrates. The GaN film was relatively thick (∼20µm) which allowed for milling experiments to be performed without encountering any substrate effects. However, since in practice thinner GaN layers are grown on various substrates for fabricating devices, we have investigated the FIB Ga+ milling for the primary substrate material: c-face sapphire. We fabricated the waveguides and gratings on GaN (thickness = 2 µm), grown on sapphire by MOCVD.
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe the structures of laser cavity, mirror facets, and gratings on GaN samples. Another useful instrument to measure the depth profiles of milled pattern is the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM), which measures detailed information in the milling depth, side-wall angles and roughness of surface and bottom of the GaN pattern. AFM images and data were obtained by using Nanoscope II and Dimension 3100 systems from Digital Instruments.
Results
Fig. 1(a) shows an SEM microphotograph of a GaN pattern micromilled using 90kV Au+ FIB with a dose of 1×1018cm−2, at normal incidence, and 10 FIB scans. The total area of the pattern FIB-micromilled into GaN is 200 µmReference Edgar 2 , which requires approximately 30-35 min exposure for a 1×1018 cm−2 dose. The milling depth of GaN experiments ranged between ∼0.6 to 1 µm for Ga+, and ∼2.3 to 3 µm for Au+. The “writing” strategy is that of serpentine scan, illustrated in Fig 1
Fig. 1(b), where the scan direction is reversed after each pass to minimize redeposition effects. A sharply defined milled region is obtained, with a uniform depth, a smooth milled surface, and with minimum redeposition of material. A deeper trench is observed where the two rectangles of the pattern have a slight overlap.
In Fig. 2, we compare the Ga+ milling rate as a function of off-axis angle from the normal target surface at different energy from 30 to 70 keV and 10 FIB scans. We found that the milling rate increases with the Ga+ incident angle in all cases. For the normal angle (i.e. 0°), increasing the ion energy results in an increasing the milling rate. For 15° and 30° the incident angles, the milling rate is weakly independent of ion energy. Fig. 3 shows the effect of changing the number of scans on the milling rate for various incident angles at a fixed ion energy of 50 keV. The milling rate is independent of FIB scans at 0°. For angles of 15° and 30°, the milling rate becomes larger as the number of FIB scans increases. A similar effect was also observed at 30 and 70 keV.
The milling rate of Au+ ions for energies from 30 to 90 keV and different repetitive scans under the condition of normal incident angle (0 degree) is observed in Fig. 4. The milling rate increased with ion energy increasing from 30 to 70 keV, decreased at 90 keV. For Au+ ion, the physical limitation of milling rate is at 70 keV. The reason is that for most of ion energy over 70 keV, the ions will be implanted into the target instead of milling the target. The increase of scan speed (i.e. number of scans) reduces the milling rate for all energies. In Fig. 5, we compare the sputtering yield of Au+ ions for GaN with Ga+ ion for GaN and sapphire. As expected, the Au+ ion which is heavier than Ga+ ion has a much higher sputtering yield. For example, the sputtering yield of Au+ ion at conditions of 70 keV and 10 FIB scans is 26 atoms/ion, which is almost 4 times larger than Ga+ ion under the same conditions. The drawbacks of Au+ FIB milling add more redeposition on the side-wall and a wider beam diameter. From Fig. 1(a), we can see that there is some redeposition on the side-wall and bottom surface of the milled pattern. The Ga+ sputtering yield of GaN is about 3 times larger than that of sapphire substrate. The fact that the GaN milling rate is always higher than sapphire is of assistance in terminating the milling process without removing excessive amounts of substrate material. We have observed that an increase in scan speed causes a decrease in sputtering yield of Au+ ions at normal incidence, which is similar to the same result with Ga+ ions shown in Fig. 3.
We have applied FIB milling to the fabrication of short cavity lasers which utilize air/semiconductor DBR grating mirrors. With this DBR structure, the mirrors formed by grating structures can offer better reflectivity than conventional cleaved mirrors. In Fig. 6, we show the SEM photographs for the DBR gratings and short cavity laser structures fabricated in GaN using Ga+ ion FIB micromachining. The cavity length is 120 μm and the cavity width is 18 μm, shown in Fig. 6(a). The DBR grating shown in Fig. 6(b) is a 5th order grating, with a grating period of 675 nm and spacing of 200 nm. The SEM photographs indicate that FIB is a very precise technique for the fabrication of DBR gratings and other optoelectronic and photonic applications in GaN.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we have reported the Ga+ and Au+ FIB micromachining characteristics of GaN. We have compared the milling rate and sputtering yield of GaN by two potential ion species, Ga+ and Au+, under various experimental conditions (ion energy, numbers of FIB scans, angle of incidence). The high FIB milling rate of GaN (significantly higher than that of common sapphire substrate) has positive implications for future fabrication of GaN devices. We also demonstrated that FIB micromachining has the capability to fabricate DBR gratings in order to obtain better reflectivity for laser diodes. We believe that FIB micromachining is a very promising technique for GaN laser fabrication. The authors gratefully acknowledge the HVPE GaN material provided by R. Molnar and the support of this work by MRL/NSA.