Self-Healing Thermal Annealing: Surface Morphological Restructuring Control of GaN Nanorods
GaN nanorods
Thermal annealing
Physics
Nanolithography
02 engineering and technology
540
530
Hyperspectral imaging,
Atomic force microscopy
Electron microscopy
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM)
0210 nano-technology
QC
DOI:
10.1021/acs.cgd.6b00756
Publication Date:
2016-10-31T19:26:33Z
AUTHORS (12)
ABSTRACT
With advances in nanolithography and dry etching, top-down methods of nanostructuring have become a widely used tool for improving the efficiency of optoelectronics. These nano dimensions can offer various benefits to the device performance in terms of light extraction and efficiency, but often at the expense of emission color quality. Broadening of the target emission peak and unwanted yellow luminescence are characteristic defect-related effects due to the ion beam etching damage, particularly for III–N based materials. In this article we focus on GaN based nanorods, showing that through thermal annealing the surface roughness and deformities of the crystal structure can be “self-healed”. Correlative electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy show the change from spherical nanorods to faceted hexagonal structures, revealing the temperature-dependent surface morphology faceting evolution. The faceted nanorods were shown to be strain- and defect-free by cathodoluminescence hyperspectral imaging, micro-Raman, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In-situ TEM thermal annealing experiments allowed for real time observation of dislocation movements and surface restructuring observed in ex-situ annealing TEM sampling. This thermal annealing investigation gives new insight into the redistribution path of GaN material and dislocation movement post growth, allowing for improved understanding and in turn advances in optoelectronic device processing of compound semiconductors.
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