Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1794032 Journal of Crystal Growth 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

We have studied the low-temperature growth of gallium nitride arsenide (GaN)As layers on sapphire substrates by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. We have succeeded in achieving GaN1−xAsx alloys over a large composition range by growing the films much below the normal GaN growth temperatures with increasing the As2 flux as well as Ga:N flux ratio. We found that alloys with high As content x>0.1 are amorphous and those with x<0.1 are crystalline. Optical absorption measurements reveal a continuous gradual decrease of band gap from ∼3.4 to ∼1.35 eV with increasing As content. The energy gap reaches its minimum of ∼1.35 eV at x∼0.6–0.7. The structural, optical and electrical properties of these crystalline/amorphous GaNAs layers were investigated. For x<0.3, the composition dependence of the band gap of the GaN1−xAsx alloys follows the prediction of the band anticrossing model developed for dilute alloys. This suggests that the amorphous GaN1−xAsx alloys have short-range ordering that resembles random crystalline GaN1−xAsx alloys.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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