Mobility-limiting mechanisms in polar semiconductor heterostructures

Acta Materialia, Volume 60, Issues 6–7, April 2012, Pages 3176-3180
Saurabh Pandey, Daniela Cavalcoli, Albert Minj, Beatrice Fraboni, Anna Cavallini, Daria Skuridina, Patrick Vogt, Michael Kneissl

Physics Department, University of Bologna, viale Berti Pichat 6/II, I-40127 Bologna, Italy

Institut fur Festkorperphysik, Technische Universitat Berlin, Hardenbergstr. 36, D-10623 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

The mechanisms controlling the carrier mobility of two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) in ultrathin polar semiconductor heterostructures, such as III–V nitrides, have been analyzed. InxAl1−xN/AlN/GaN heterostructures with different AlN layer thicknesses have been investigated. These structures can be considered a very good benchmark for the analyses of III–V nitrides, due to the possibility of modulating the strain by varying the In composition. In order to determine an estimate of the mobility, charged dislocation and remote surface roughness scattering lifetimes have been calculated. Atomic force microscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy analyses have been used to measure the parameters required for the lifetime calculation, such as surface roughness, correlation length and dislocation density, and the total mobility has thus been calculated without the need of any a priori assumptions on the values of these parameters. The mobility of InxAl1−xN/AlN/GaN heterostructures has been measured at room temperature and liquid nitrogen temperature by the Hall effect. A comparison between the calculated and the Hall-effect-measured mobilities allowed us to establish, without using any ad hoc assumptions or fitting parameters, that the remote surface roughness is the most effective factor in controlling the transport properties of 2DEGs in nitride-based heterostructures at low temperature.

Go To Journal

 

Mobility-limiting mechanisms in polar semiconductor heterostructures1

 

 

Check Also

Rectangular Rhomboid-Ring Monolayers in Zinc Pnictides

Significance  Reference Thapa D, Kim SG. Lattice Engineering Novel 2D Monolayer in Zinc Pnictides. ACS …