Study of Thin Films Polarity of Group III Nitrides


K. Dovidenko
North Carolina State University

S. Oktyabrsky
State University of New York, Albany

J. Narayan
North Carolina State University

M. Razeghi
Northwestern University

This article was presented as part of Symposium G, "Gallium Nitride and Related Alloys" at the 1998 Fall Meeting of the Materials Research Society held in Boston, Massachusetts, November 30-December 4.

Abstract

Thin films of GaN grown by MOCVD on (0001) sapphire were studied by transmission electron microscopy in order to correlate the observed extended defects with crystal polarity of the films. We propose relatively simple and unambiguous method of polarity determination for wurtzite group III nitrides based on the dependence of the intensity of diffracted beams upon thickness of the specimen. Due to the dynamic scattering by polar structure, the convergent beam electron diffraction patterns lose inversion symmetry and become in fact fingerprints of the structure carrying information about crystal polarity. In this study, we have used the thinnest regions of the specimens (< 15 nm) and multiple diffraction spots in high-symmetry orientation for polarity determination. The films were found to have Ga-polar surfaces, either being unipolar, or containing thin (10-30 nm in diameter) columnar inversion domains (IDs) of N-polarity. The occurrence of IDs was correlated with specific types of dislocation distribution in the films.

Full text of this article is available.

For information about using Adobe Acrobat files, click here .

Cite this article as: MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 4S1, G6.46 (1999).


Reference List Building

For information on building reference lists, see About the MIJ-NSR Reference List Builder



MRS Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research
last updated Saturday, April 3, 1999 2:43:54 AM.
© 1999 The Materials Research Society