Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8151879 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The electronic structure of the conduction and valence bands of highly mismatched alloys (HMAs) such as GaN1âxSbx are well described by the band anticrossing model. The properties of this alloy, which has a large band gap range and controllable valence band positions, make it a candidate material for efficient solar energy conversion devices. We have examined the growth and structural properties of amorphous and crystalline GaN1âxSbx. These HMAs were grown by low temperature molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) under Ga-rich conditions. While there is a monotonic linear increase of Sb incorporation with Sb overpressure, there was no obvious dependence of Sb incorporation with growth temperature for the range of 10-470 °C. At growth temperatures lower than 100 °C, GaN1âxSbx HMAs lose crystallinity and become amorphous for Sb compositions at or exceeding ~5%. Ga-rich growth resulted in strong absorption at energies as low as 1 eV for GaN1âxSbx alloys of all compositions. The strong low energy absorption may arise from a Ga-related defect band.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
W.L. Sarney, S.P. Svensson, S.V. Novikov, K.M. Yu, W. Walukiewicz, C.T. Foxon,