Low temperature growth of AlGaAs by MOMBE (CBE) using trimethylamine alane |
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Authors: | C. R. Abernathy |
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Affiliation: | AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974, USA Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., Allentown, Pennsylvania 18195, USA |
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Abstract: | In order to gain further insight into the surface chemistry of AlGaAs growth by metalorganic molecular beam epitaxy, we have investigated the deposition behavior and material quality of AlGaAs grown at temperatures from 350 to 500°C using trimethylamine alane (TMAA), triethylgallium (TEG) and arsine (AsH3). Though the Al incorporation rate decreases with decreasing temperature, Ga-alkyl pyrolysis, and hence Ga incorporation rate, declines more rapidly. Thus the Al content increases from XAlAs = 0.25 at 500°C to XAlAs = 0.57 at 350°C. Below 450°C, the Ga incorporation rate appears to be determined by the desorption of diethylgallium species, rather than interaction with adsorbed AlH3. Similarly, carbon incorporation is enhanced by 2 orders of magnitude over this temperature range due to the increasingly inefficient pyrolysis of the Ga-C bond in TEG. Additionally, active hydrogen from the TMAA1, which normally is thought to getter the surface alkyls, is possibly less kinetically active at lower growth temperatures. Contrary to what has been observed in other growth methods, low growth temperatures produced a slight decrease in oxygen concentration. This effect is likely due to reduced interaction between Ga alkoxides (inherent in the TEG) and the atomic hydrogen blocked Al species on the growth surface. This reduction in oxygen content and increase in carbon concentration causes the room temperature PL intensity to actually increase as the temperature is reduced from 500 to 450°C. Surprisingly, the crystalline perfection as measured by ion channeling analysis is quite good, χmin≤5%, even at growth temperatures as low as 400°C. At 350°C, the AlGaAs layers exhibit severe disorder. This disorder is indicative of insufficient Group III surface mobility, resulting in lattice site defects. The disorder also supports our conclusions of kinetically limited surface mobility of all active surface components. |
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