Rp. Vaudo et al., CHARACTERISTICS OF LIGHT-EMITTING-DIODES BASED ON GAN P-N-JUNCTIONS GROWN BY PLASMA-ASSISTED MOLECULAR-BEAM EPITAXY, Journal of applied physics, 79(5), 1996, pp. 2779-2783
We report on the fabrication and physics of mesa-etched light-emitting
diodes (LEDs) made from GaN p-n junctions grown by molecular beam epi
taxy. Rapid thermal annealing was found to improve the electrical prop
erties of these LEDs. Annealed LEDs turn on at 4 V, exhibit an on-seri
es resistance of approximately 14 Omega, and have only 36 mu A of leak
age current for reverse bias levels as high as 10 V. Electroluminescen
ce (EL) spectra obtained from devices driven to 15 mA are dominated by
a peak at 400 nm, which is attributed to recombination between shallo
w donors and Mg luminescent centers on the p side of the junction. The
full width at half maximum of this peak is only 30 nm, which, to the
best of our knowledge, is the narrowest EL peak measured from a GaN p-
n junction LED. In other devices, recombination was found to proceed t
hrough defect states in the middle of the band gap. The broad emission
from these LEDs can be shifted from the orange to the violet spectral
region by adjusting the drive current. In addition, these LEDs withst
and de current densities in excess of 700 A/cm(2) at room temperature.
(C) 1996 American Institute of Physics.