Chemical treatment effects on Schottky contacts to metalorganic chemical vapor deposited n-type N-polar GaN
Abstract
In this work, we investigate the effect of different chemical treatments, such as solvents, bases, and acids, on the surface properties and electrical behavior of Schottky diodes fabricated on metalorganic chemical vapor deposition-grown, n-type, N-polar GaN. The I–V and C–V barrier heights of the as-grown Schottky diodes are found to be 0.40 eV and 0.60 eV, respectively, with an ideality factor n = 1.07. It is found that the solvent treatments neither change the surface nor the electrical performance of the Schottky diodes, as expected. However, the treatments by the alkaline photolithography developer and acid—the latter of which is often used to clean the surface of Ga-polar GaN films prior to metal contact deposition—degrade the performance of N-polar GaN. These base and acid treatments severely roughen the surface by creating triangular/hexagonal crystallographic facets. The I–V and C–V barrier heights of these base- and acid-treated diodes are increased to 0.63 eV and 1.00 eV, respectively, with ideality factor values n < 1.2. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies indicate that base- and acid-treated surfaces have lower oxygen content as compared to the as-grown sample surface. It is understood that the increment in the barrier height for base- and acid-treated diodes could be due to the change in polarity, from N-polar to semi-polar/non-polar, on these crystallographic features. All these results demonstrate that, unlike for Ga-polar GaN, the N-polar GaN surface is highly reactive to bases and acids.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Aug 11, 2020
- Source ID
- 10.1063/5.0015140
Entities
People
- Dennis Szymanski
- Dolar Khachariya
- Erhard Kohn
- Pramod Reddy
- Ramón Collazo
- Rohan Sengupta
- Spyridon Pavlidis
- Zlatko Sitar
Organizations
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- Army Research Office
- National Science Foundation
- North Carolina State University
- United States Department of Energy