Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1791599 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2012 | 6 Pages |
N-rich growth by NH3-based molecular beam epitaxy was investigated for intermediate-temperature GaN and InGaN on c-plane GaN templates. The dependences of growth mode and surface morphology on group-V overpressure, In/Ga ratio, and temperature were explored with atomic force microscopy and high resolution x-ray diffraction. Extension to an “ultra-NH3-rich” regime of very high NH3-flows showed a decreased growth rate and increased In-content for InGaN alloys for constant group III source fluxes. Rapid modulation of NH3 overpressure, growth rate, and substrate temperature has enabled the growth of high quality, many-period InGaN/GaN superlattices, while suppressing morphological instabilities and subsequent stress relaxation.
► Increased In-content is demonstrated for InGaN films grown with higher V/III ratio. ► Gas-phase scattering is shown to limit film growth rates at high NH3 flux. ► RHEED oscillations indicate InGaN films are grown in a layer-by-layer mode. ► Temperature-modulated growth enables thick InGaN/GaN MQW or SL structures.