| Literature DB >> 28345612 |
Tongtong Zhu1, Yingjun Liu1, Tao Ding2, Wai Yuen Fu3, John Jarman1, Christopher Xiang Ren1, R Vasant Kumar1, Rachel A Oliver1.
Abstract
Distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) are essential components for the development of optoelectronic devices. For many device applications, it is highly desirable to achieve not only high reflectivity and low absorption, but also good conductivity to allow effective electrical injection of charges. Here, we demonstrate the wafer-scale fabrication of highly reflective and conductive non-polar gallium nitride (GaN) DBRs, consisting of perfectly lattice-matched non-polar (11-20) GaN and mesoporous GaN layers that are obtained by a facile one-step electrochemical etching method without any extra processing steps. The GaN/mesoporous GaN DBRs exhibit high peak reflectivities (>96%) across the entire visible spectrum and wide spectral stop-band widths (full-width at half-maximum >80 nm), while preserving the material quality and showing good electrical conductivity. Such mesoporous GaN DBRs thus provide a promising and scalable platform for high performance GaN-based optoelectronic, photonic, and quantum photonic devices.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28345612 PMCID: PMC5366952 DOI: 10.1038/srep45344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) A simple schematic of the experimental setup for the EC etching and a photograph of a sample after the etching under room light illumination. (b) Schematic of the DBR structure. (c) Cross-sectional SEM image of the 10 pair GaN/MP-GaN DBR structure.
Figure 2(a) A top-view Nomarski optical image of the GaN/MP-GaN DBR sample, where a darker non-porous region and highly reflective porous region can be seen (the boundary is marked by the white arrow). AFM images taken from regions (b) without porous DBR and (c) with porous DBR. (d) Weak-beam dark-field TEM image taken along [0001] using g = 11–20. (e) HAADF-STEM image of the MP-GaN DBR structure. The white circles indicate the positions where the NID-GaN layers have also been etched due to the vertical etching component of the EC porosification process.
Figure 3(a) Experimental (red dash line), transfer matrix method (blue solid line), and finite element method simulated (black solid line) reflectance spectra from the GaN/MP-GaN DBR structure. The reflectance spectra of the unetched sample (green solid line) and the sapphire substrate (orange solid line) are also shown for comparison. (b) Electric field distribution in a GaN/MP-GaN DBR with real pore morphology inputted by digitising the SEM image shown in Fig. 2b into the finite element model. (c) Photograph of an as-etched 2-inch mesoporous GaN DBR wafer reflecting a card with the Cambridge University Logo.
Figure 4(a) Photographs under room light illumination (scale bar = 1 cm) and (b) Experimental reflectances of a number of GaN/MP-GaN DBR structures with different layer thicknesses demonstrating tunable photonic band gaps across the visible spectrum. (c) Current-voltage (I-V) curves of the non-polar GaN/MP-GaN DBR structure.