US3839084A - Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds - Google Patents

Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3839084A
US3839084A US00310209A US31020972A US3839084A US 3839084 A US3839084 A US 3839084A US 00310209 A US00310209 A US 00310209A US 31020972 A US31020972 A US 31020972A US 3839084 A US3839084 A US 3839084A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
thin film
produce
aluminum
group
carrier concentration
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00310209A
Inventor
A Cho
M Panish
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US00310209A priority Critical patent/US3839084A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3839084A publication Critical patent/US3839084A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C30CRYSTAL GROWTH
    • C30BSINGLE-CRYSTAL GROWTH; UNIDIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION OF EUTECTIC MATERIAL OR UNIDIRECTIONAL DEMIXING OF EUTECTOID MATERIAL; REFINING BY ZONE-MELTING OF MATERIAL; PRODUCTION OF A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; SINGLE CRYSTALS OR HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; AFTER-TREATMENT OF SINGLE CRYSTALS OR A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C30B23/00Single-crystal growth by condensing evaporated or sublimed materials
    • C30B23/02Epitaxial-layer growth
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C30CRYSTAL GROWTH
    • C30BSINGLE-CRYSTAL GROWTH; UNIDIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION OF EUTECTIC MATERIAL OR UNIDIRECTIONAL DEMIXING OF EUTECTOID MATERIAL; REFINING BY ZONE-MELTING OF MATERIAL; PRODUCTION OF A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; SINGLE CRYSTALS OR HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; AFTER-TREATMENT OF SINGLE CRYSTALS OR A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C30B29/00Single crystals or homogeneous polycrystalline material with defined structure characterised by the material or by their shape
    • C30B29/10Inorganic compounds or compositions
    • C30B29/40AIIIBV compounds wherein A is B, Al, Ga, In or Tl and B is N, P, As, Sb or Bi
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S148/00Metal treatment
    • Y10S148/018Compensation doping
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S148/00Metal treatment
    • Y10S148/02Contacts, special
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S148/00Metal treatment
    • Y10S148/065Gp III-V generic compounds-processing
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S148/00Metal treatment
    • Y10S148/169Vacuum deposition, e.g. including molecular beam epitaxy
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S438/00Semiconductor device manufacturing: process
    • Y10S438/914Doping
    • Y10S438/918Special or nonstandard dopant
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S438/00Semiconductor device manufacturing: process
    • Y10S438/936Graded energy gap

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the epitaxial growth of thin films of controllable thickness and, more particularly, to a molecular beam epitaxy technique for fabricating thin films of Group lIl(a)-V(a) compounds having ptype conductivity.
  • the Group lll(a) and Group V(a) elements referred to herein are those identified in the Chemical Rubber Handbook, Vol. 45, page B-2, published by the Chemical Rubber Company.
  • MBE Molecular beam epitaxy
  • Both Si and Sn are preferentially incorporated into GaAs as donors and therefore produce n-type layers.
  • Ge forms nor p-type layers depending on the surface configuration of the GaAs layer during growth. More specifically, Ge produces a p-type layer when the molecular beams are adapted to create during growth a relatively Ga-rich surface. Conversely, Ge produces an n-type layer when the molecular beams are adapted to create during growth a relatively As-rich surface.
  • the conditions which must be varied to produce these two surfaces are the substrate temperature and the ratio of As /Ga in the molecular beams. The maintenance of a Ga-rich surface during MBE growth without formation of Ga droplets is, however, difficult because it requires relatively highly stable beam intensities (i.e., fluxes) for long periods of time.
  • the p-type dopant be incorporated while maintaining a surface condition which is stabilized in the Group V(a) element (e.g., an As-rich surface condition when grow ing AlGaAs layers).
  • Atoms of a Group II element usually enter the lattice of a IlI(a)-V(a) compound by substituting for atoms of the Group III(a) element to give acceptor centers.
  • the carrier concentration of the grown layers is only about l0 /cm whereas in many devices (e.g., the ptype active region of a double heterostructure laser) it is preferable that the carrier concentration be about 5 l0 to 5 l0 /cm Summary of the Invention During the process of growing MBE layers of A1,. Ga As doped with Mg, we have discovered that the sticking coefficient of magnesium, and hence the carrier concentration of the layers, increases monotonically with x, the mole fraction of AlAs in Al,Ga ,As.
  • the ability to vary the sticking coefficient of Mg by controlling the intensity of the Al beam means that, for a given carrier concentration in the layer grown, a lower Mg beam flux may be used by increasing the amount of Al in the layer, i.e., by increasing the intensity of the Al beam.
  • the latter feature of our invention permits fabrication of MBE multilayered devices in a controlled fashion.
  • Mg beam is adjusted to produce a predetermined, but fixed, arrival rate.
  • the worker would find that the carrier concentration of the GaAszMg layer was only about IO /cm whereas that in the Al Ga As layer was about lO /cm
  • the Mg sticking coefficient is nearly three orders of magnitude higher than for x 0 (i.e., pure GaAs). Consequently, when growing the Al Ga As layer, the Mg beam should be adjusted to produce an arrival rate three orders of magnitude smaller.
  • FIG. 1 is a partial cross-sectional view of illustrative apparatus utilized in practicing our invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a graph of carrier concentration and Mg sticking coefficient versus AlAs mole fraction in A1,. Ga, ,As.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown apparatus for growing by MBE epitaxial films of Group III(a)-V(a) compounds, and mixed crystals thereof, of controllable thickness and conductivity type.
  • the apparatus comprises a vacuum chamber 11 having disposed therein a gun port 12 containing illustratively three cylindrical guns 13a, 13b and 13c, typically Knudsen cells, and a substrate holder 17, typically a molybdenum block.
  • the guns 13 are shown to be disposed in a vertical plane for clarity of illustration.
  • I-Iolder 17 is adapted for rotary motion by means of shaft 19 having a control knob 16 located exterior to chamber 11.
  • a cylindrical liquid nitrogen cooling shroud 22 which surrounds the guns and a collimating frame 23 having a collimating aperture 24.
  • Substrate holder 17 is provided with an internal heater 25 and with clips 26 and 27 for affixing a substrate member 28 thereto.
  • a thermocouple is disposed in aperture 31 in the side of substrate 28 and is coupled externally via connectors 32-33 in order to sense the temperature of substrate 28.
  • Chamber 11 also includes an outlet 34 for evacuating the chamber by means of a pump 35.
  • a typical cylindrical gun 13a comprises a refractory crucible 41 having a thermocouple well 42 and a thermocouple 43 inserted therein for the purpose of determining the temperature of the material contained in the gun source chamber 46.
  • thermocouple 43 is connected to an external detector (not shown) via connectors 44-45.
  • Source material e.g., bulk GaAs
  • the end of crucible 41 adjacent aperture 24 is provided with a knife edge opening 48 (typically about 017cm having a diameter preferably less than the average mean free path of atoms in the source chamber.
  • the first step in a typical MBE technique involves selecting a single crystal substrate member, such as GaAs, which may readily be obtained from commerical sources.
  • a single crystal substrate member such as GaAs
  • One major surface of the GaAs substrate member is initially cut along the (001) plane and polished with diamond paste, or any other conventional technique, for the purpose of removing the surface damage therefrom.
  • An etchant such as a brominemethanol or hydrogen peroxide-sulphuric acid solution may be employed for the purpose of further purifying the substrate surface subsequent to polishing.
  • the substrate is placed in an apparatus of the type shown in FIG. 1, and thereafter, the background pressure in the vacuum chamber is reduced to less than [0 Torr and preferably to a value of the order of about 10 8 to 10 Torr, thereby precluding the introduction of any deleterious components onto the substrate surface.
  • the substrate surface may be subject to atmospheric contamination before being mounted into the vacuum chamber, the substrate is preferably heated, e.g., to about 600 Centigrade, to provide an automically clean growth surface, (i.e., desorption of contaminants such as CO and H 0).
  • next steps in the process involve introducing liquid nitrogen into the cooling shround via entrance port 49 and heating the substrate member to the growth temperature which typically ranges from about 450 to 650 degrees Centigrade dependent upon the specific material to be grown, such range being dictated by considerations relating to arrival rates and surface diffusion.
  • gun 13a contains a Group III(a)-V(a) compound such as a GaAs in bulk form
  • gun 13b contains a Group III(a) element such as Ga
  • gun 13c contains a dopant such as Mg in bulk form
  • a fourth gun (not shown) containing Al is also used.
  • each gun is heated to a temperature (not necessarily all the same) sufficient to vaporize the contents thereof to yield (with shutter 14 open) a molecular beam (or beams); that is, a stream of atoms manifesting velocity components in the same direction, in this case toward the substrate surface.
  • a molecular beam or beams
  • the atoms or molecules reflected from the surface strike the interior surface 50 of the cooled shroud 22 and are condensed, thereby insuring that only atoms or molecules from the molecular beam impinge upon the substrate surface.
  • the amount of source materials (e.g., Ga, Al and GaAs) furnished to the guns and the gun temperatures should be sufficient to provide an excess of the Group V(a) element (As) with respect to the Group III(a) elements (Al and Ga); that is, the surface should be As-rich (also referred to as As-stabilized).
  • This condition arises from the large differences in sticking coefficient at the growth temperature of the several materials; namely, unity for Ga and Al and about 10 2 for As on a GaAs surface, the latter increasing to unity when there is an excess of Ga (and/or Al) on the surface. Therefore, as long as the As arrival rate is higher than that of Ga and/or Al, the growth will be stoichiometric. Similar considerations apply to Ga and P beams impinging, for example, on a GaP substrate.
  • Growth of the desired doped epitaxial film is effected by directing the molecular beam generated by the guns at the collimating frame 23 which functions to remove velocity components therein in directions other than those desired, thereby permitting the desired beam to pass through the collimating aperture 24 to effect reaction at the substrate surface. Growth is continued for a time period sufficient to yield an epitaxial film of the desired thickness.
  • This technique permits the controlled growth of films of thickness ranging from a single monolayer (about 3 Angstroms) to more than 100,000 Angstroms.
  • the collimating frame serves also to keep the vacuum system clean by providing a cooled surface on which molecules reflected from the growth surface can condense. If the effusion cell provides sufficient collimation of the beams, however, the collimating frame is not essential to the growth technique.
  • the growth of stoichiometric III(a)-V(a) semiconductor compounds may be effected by providing vapors of Group III(a) and V(a) elements at the substrate surface, an excess of Group V(a) element being present with respect to the III(a) elements, thereby assuring that the entirety of the III(a) elements will be consumed while the nonreacted V(a) excess is reflected.
  • the aforementioned substrate temperature range is related to the arrival rate and surface mobility of atoms striking the surface, i.e., the surface temperature must be high enough (e.g., greater than about 450 degrees Centigrade) that impinging atoms have enough thermal energy to be able to migrate to favorable surface sites (potential wells) to form the epitaxial layer.
  • the substrate temperature should not be so high (e.g., greater than about 650 Centigrade) that noncongruent evaporation results. As defined by C. D. Thurmond in Journal of Physics Chem.
  • noncongruent evaporation is the preferential evaporation of the V(a) elements from the substrate eventually leaving a new phase containing primarily the III(a) elements.
  • congruent evaporation means that the evaporation rate of the III(a) and V(a) elements are equal.
  • the temperatures of the cell containing the III(a) element and the cell containing the III(a)-V(a) compound, which provides a source of V(a) molecules, are determined by the desired growth rate and the particular III(a)-V(a) system utilized.
  • Example: Doping AlGaAs with Mg This example describes a process for the growth by MBE of p-type layers of Al,Ga, ,As doped with Mg.
  • Each of the guns was made from aluminum oxide lined with spectroscopically pure graphite except for the Al gun which was made from pyrolytic BN in order to reduce the likelihood of aluminum oxides forming.
  • the substrate 28, comprising Si-doped n-type GaAs with its (001) surface facing the guns, was placed about 5cm from the guns and was heated to about 560 Centigrade.
  • the latter temperature was chosen because layers grown at 560 Centigrade have exhibited higher photoluminescent (PL) efficiency than layers grown at other temperatures in the range 450 to 650 Centigrade.
  • High PL efficiency is one of the prerequisites for the active region of a DH laser.
  • the guns were then heated to a suitable temperature effective to produce desired arrival rates at the growth surface.
  • the Al gun 13a was heated to temperatures ranging from about 1200 to 1400 Kelvin to produce Al arrival rates ranging from about 10 to 10 Al/cm see
  • the GaAs gun 13b was heated to about 1180 Kelvin to produce an As arrival rate of about 5 X 10 As /cm sec
  • the Ga gun 13c was heated to about l,250 Kelvin to produce a Ga arrival rate of about 10 Ga/cm sec
  • the Mg gun (not shown) was heated to about 680 Kelvin to produce a Mg arrival rate of about 10 Mg/cm sec.
  • the epitaxial film properties were studied in situ with a reflection high energy electron diffraction (HEED) system commercially available from Varian Associates, Palo Alto, California and by Auger spectroscopy with a PHI cylindrical mirror electron spectrometer commercially available from physical Electronic Industries, Inc., Edina, Minnesota. Subsequent to growth, tests were also made with ion sputtering mass spectrometry (IMS) and Hall measurements.
  • HEED reflection high energy electron diffraction
  • IMS ion sputtering mass spectrometry
  • the arrangement of the in situ analysis instruments in the vacuum system of FIG. 1 is well known in the art and is therefore omitted here for simplicity and clarity of illustration.
  • HEED was used to observe the surface structures of the outermost atomic layers during growth.
  • Ga ,As surface the (001) 2X2 Mg surface structure was formed independent of whether the initial sur face was As-stabilized or Ga-stabilized.
  • Auger electron spectroscopy was used in situ to study the elemental composition of the top few monolayers of the grown epitaxial layers. This technique can be used to determine the substrate cleanliness, contamination (if any) of the layers during growth, and, to some extent, the chemical compositions of the Al,Ga, ,As layers.
  • [MS was used to determine the doping profile of the multi-layer structure and Hall effect measurements were used to determine the carrier concentrations and mobilities in the layers.
  • the room temperature Hall mobilities varied from 215 cm V sec for a carrier concentration (N -N 2.5 10"/cm to 30 cm /V sec for (N -N l /cm Since the Mg beam flux was kept constant during the growth of the layers on the Crdoped substrate, we conclude that the increase in carrier concentration corresponds to an increase in the sticking coefficient of Mg brought about by the presence of Al in the layers.
  • FIG. 2 a graph of carrier concentration (N N and Mg sticking coefficient versus x, the mole fraction of AlAs in AI Ga AS.
  • N N and Mg sticking coefficient versus x the mole fraction of AlAs in AI Ga AS.
  • the graph vividly depicts the drastic (three orders of magnitude) increase in Mg sticking coefficient from about 1X10 to 4X10 as the amount of aluminum in the grown layers (i.e., the mole fraction x) increases from about 0 to 0.1.
  • the corresponding increase in carrier concentration is from about 2.5Xl0 /cm to about 8X10 /cm".
  • Mg incorporates into MBE layers as a p-type dopant under As-stabilized surface conditions. Consequently, larger spurious variations of the As /Ga ratio in the molecular beams can be tolerated without seriously affecting the Mg doping level. Moreover, because growth on a Ga-stabilized surface is not necessary to obtain p-type conductivity (contrast the Ge situation), the likelihood that Ga droplets will form on the surface and disrupt the homogeneity of the layers is substantially reduced.
  • the addition of aluminum to the molecular beam drastically increases the sticking coefficient of Mg and consequently the n-type GaAs substrate on which are grown sequentially the following layers: a ri Al,Ga, ,As layer; a p- Al Ga ,,As layer and a p-Al Ga, As layer with y x and z.
  • the middle layer of Al Ga, ,,As forms the active region of the device where radiative recombination of holes and electrons occurs to produce a coherent light output.
  • the carrier concentration is typically about lo /cm.
  • the condition y x and z creates a pair of heterojunctions at the interfaces with the middle layer.
  • heterojunctions confine injected carriers and optical photons to the middle layer and enable c.w. operation at room temperature if the thickness of the middle layer is less than about 1 pm.
  • the other layers should also be thin (e.g., 1-2 am) in order to facilitate the extraction of heat from the device.
  • MBE with its ability to grow extremely thin layers of controllable thickness, is particularly suited to the fabrication of DH lasers.
  • Sn or Si may be used in MBE to produce the n-type A1,Ga As layer in which typically x 0.1.
  • the layers of Al Ga ,,As and Al Ga, As can be made p-type by doping with Mg, and a predetermined carrier concentration in each can be attained by controlling the amount of Al incorporated into the layers, i.e., by controlling the temperature of the Al and Mg guns during MBE growth.
  • the substrate is maintained at about 560 Centigrade.
  • the Al content should be about y 0.04 which is attained when the Al gun is heated to about l,270 Kelvin.
  • Mg gun heated to a suitable temperature sufficient to evaporate Mg molecules (e.g., to 680 Kelvin)
  • a p-type Al Ga As:Mg layer about 1 pm thick is formed after about 60 minutes of growth time. Thinner layers may be fabricated by growing for shorter periods of time (growth is readily terminated by sliding the shutter 14 in front of aperture 24 of collimating frame 23).
  • a fourth aspect of our invention relates again to our discovery that in Mg doped layers the carrier concentration is a function of the amount of Al in the layer.
  • the Mg beam flux must be adjusted to compensate for the changed Mg sticking coefficient.
  • our invention is not limited in its application to AlGaAs only, but is also suitable to other lIl(a)-V(a) compounds containing Al, e.g., AlGaP, a material particularly attractive for use in GaP-AlGaP spontaneously emitting heterostructure diodes (LEDs).
  • LEDs heterostructure diodes
  • said p-type dopant is magnesium
  • aluminum is included in said at least one molecular beam in an amount determined from said relationship effective to produce a desired carrier concentration in said thin film.
  • said thin film comprises a material selected from the group consisting of Al,Ga As and Al,Ga ,P.
  • said thin film comprises Al,Ga ,As and said at least one molecular beam is formed by heating a first source of liquid Ga to produce a first beam of Ga molecules, by heating a second source of solid Al to produce a second beam of Al molecules, by heating a third source of As to produce a third beam of As molecules and by heating a fourth source of Mg to produce a fourth beam of Mg molecules, said first, second, third and fourth beams impinging simultaneously on said surface.
  • the sticking coefficient of said Mg molecules on said surface increases according to said determinable relationship from about 10 5 to about 10 2 as the amount x of Al in said thin film increases from about 0 to 0.1 and produces a corresponding increase in the carrier concentration of said thin film from about l0 /cm to lO /cm 9.
  • said thin film is made to have a carrier concentration greater than about 5 l0"/cm by adapting the intensity of said aluminum beam to produce a thin film of Al,Ga ,As with x greater than about 0.04.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Physical Deposition Of Substances That Are Components Of Semiconductor Devices (AREA)

Abstract

In a molecular beam epitaxy method of fabricating a Mg doped thin film of a compound of the form AlxB1 xC, where B is a Group III(a) element and C is a Group V(a) element, the sticking coefficient of magnesium is a nonlinear, monotonically increasing function of the amount of aluminum. P-type thin films of AlxB1 xC:Mg having a predetermined carrier concentration are fabricated by including in the molecular beam(s) an appropriate amount of aluminum determined from said function.

Description

United States Patent Cho et al. I Oct. 1, 1974 1 i MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY METHOD [56] References Cited FOR FABRICATING MAGNESIUM DOPED UNITED STATES PATENTS THIN FILMS OF GROUP IH(A)'V(A) 3,615,931 10/1971 Arthur, Jr. et al 148/175 COMPOUNDS 3,751,310 8/1973 Cho l48/l75 Inventors: Alfred Yi Cho, New Providence;
Morton B. Panish, Springfield, both of NJ.
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, Murray Hill, NJ.
Filed: Nov. 29, 1972 App]. No.: 310,209
Assignee:
US. Cl 117/215, 117/106 A, 117/201, 148/175, 317/235 AQ, 317/235 N Int. Cl 344d l/l8 Field of Search 148/175; 1l7/200, 201, 117/215, 217, 227, 107, 106 A; 317/235 AQ, 235 N Primary Examiner-Cameron K. Weiffenbach Attorney, Agent, or FirmM. J. Urbano [5 7 ABSTRACT In a molecular beam epitaxy method of fabricating :1 Mg doped thin film of a compound of the form A1,. E C, where B is a Group lll(a) element and C is a Group V(a) element, the sticking coefficient of magnesium is a nonlinear, monotonically increasing function of the amount of aluminum. P-type thin films of Al B CzMg having a predetermined carrier concentration are fabricated by including in the molecular beam(s) an appropriate amount of aluminum determined from said function.
10 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures PAFENTED 3.839.084
smr 1 or 2' FIG.
FAIENTEDQU H914 I 3,839,084
sum 2m 2 FIG. 2
X AIAS MOLE FRACTION IN AQXGQFXAS MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY METHOD FOR FABRICATING MAGNESIUM DOPED THIN FHLMS OF GROUP IlI(A)-V(A) COMPOUNDS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to the epitaxial growth of thin films of controllable thickness and, more particularly, to a molecular beam epitaxy technique for fabricating thin films of Group lIl(a)-V(a) compounds having ptype conductivity. The Group lll(a) and Group V(a) elements referred to herein are those identified in the Chemical Rubber Handbook, Vol. 45, page B-2, published by the Chemical Rubber Company.
Molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), as described in US. Pat. 3,615,931 granted to J.R. Arthur, Jr. on Oct. 26, 1971 and assigned to the assignee hereof, is a comparatively new technique for the epitaxial growth of semiconductor materials, in which growth results from the simultaneous impingement of one or more molecular beams of the constituent elements onto a heated substrate. In MBE the growth process is governed primarily by kinetics whereas in liquid phase epitaxy or chemical vapor phase epitaxy growth is governed by near thermodynamic equilibrium conditions. in MBE, therefore, the incorporation of doping elements into the grown layers is strongly dependent on the arrival rate, the adsorption lifetime, and the condensation coefficient of the element on a particular substrate surface.
Unfortunately, desirable p-type dopants such as Zn and Cd have such low sticking coefficients on materials such as GaAs at the growth temperature (resulting from low condensation coefficients and/or low adsorption lifetimes) that the incorporation of these elements as useful dopants into GaAs during MBE growth has not been successful. However, as described by one of us, A. Y. Cho, in copending application Ser. No. 127,926 filed on Mar. 25, 1971 (now U.S. Pat. No. 3,751,310, issued on Aug. 7, 1973) and assigned to the assignee hereof, other elements having unity sticking coefficients such as Si, Ge, and Sn have been successfully used to dope layers grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Both Si and Sn are preferentially incorporated into GaAs as donors and therefore produce n-type layers. On the other hand, Ge forms nor p-type layers depending on the surface configuration of the GaAs layer during growth. More specifically, Ge produces a p-type layer when the molecular beams are adapted to create during growth a relatively Ga-rich surface. Conversely, Ge produces an n-type layer when the molecular beams are adapted to create during growth a relatively As-rich surface. The conditions which must be varied to produce these two surfaces are the substrate temperature and the ratio of As /Ga in the molecular beams. The maintenance of a Ga-rich surface during MBE growth without formation of Ga droplets is, however, difficult because it requires relatively highly stable beam intensities (i.e., fluxes) for long periods of time.
Many of the uses of good quality, thin p-type layers are, of course, obvious, e.g., in the fabrication of p-n junction devices. The need for such layers has become significantly greater with the recent devleopment of the GaAs-AlGaAs double heterostructure (DH) junction laser, the only semiconductor laser at this time which is capable of c.w. operation at room temperature. The ability of some types of DH laser to operate c.w. at
room temperature is dependent to a large extent upon the inclusion in the device of an active layer less than 1 pm thick. Thus, the fact that MBE permits reproducible growth of thin layers of controllable thickness less than 1 pm, renders this growth technique particularly suitable to the fabrication of the thin GaAs-AlGaAs layers of the DH laser. However, there is still a need for a technique for incorporating a p-type dopant into MBE layers of compounds of the form Al,B C, where Al is aluminum, B is a Group "1(a) element and C is a Group V(a) element. To avoid the formation of Ga droplets previously mentioned, it is preferred that the p-type dopant be incorporated while maintaining a surface condition which is stabilized in the Group V(a) element (e.g., an As-rich surface condition when grow ing AlGaAs layers).
Atoms of a Group II element usually enter the lattice of a IlI(a)-V(a) compound by substituting for atoms of the Group III(a) element to give acceptor centers. However, as already mentioned, we have been unsuccessful in our attempts to incorporate useful amounts of Zn and Cd, for-example, into GaAs by the MBE method. On the other hand, we have been able to incorporate relatively small amounts of Mg as a p-type dopant in GaAs only by using a relatively high Mg beam flux (e.g., an arrival rate of l0/cm sec) to compensate for its low sticking coefficient (about 10 at 560 Centigrade). Evan at high beam fluxes, however, the carrier concentration of the grown layers is only about l0 /cm whereas in many devices (e.g., the ptype active region of a double heterostructure laser) it is preferable that the carrier concentration be about 5 l0 to 5 l0 /cm Summary of the Invention During the process of growing MBE layers of A1,. Ga As doped with Mg, we have discovered that the sticking coefficient of magnesium, and hence the carrier concentration of the layers, increases monotonically with x, the mole fraction of AlAs in Al,Ga ,As. More specifically, for an illustrative substrate temperature of about 560 Centigrade, we have found that as aluminum is added to the grown layer so that x increases from 0 to 0.2, the sticking coefficient of Mg rapidly increases by nearly three orders of magnitude from about 10 to about 10'? Correspondingly, the carrier concentration of the grown layers increases from about l0 /cm to about lo /cm". Concentrations of 5Xl0 /cm to SXIO /cm are attained with x in the range 0.02 to 0.08 approximately.
The increase by three orders of magnitude in the sticking coefficient of Mg and therefore the increase in the carrier concentration in the grown layers has several important implications. First, we have been able to grow p-type MBE layers having carrier concentrations in the l0/cm range which are suitable for double heterostructure junction lasers, whereas priorly the maximum Mg doping level attained was only l0 /cm. Moreover, the amount of aluminum (x 0.02 to 0.08) to produce the higher concentrations is also suitable for creating in a DH laser the necessary refractive index steps which, as in now well known, produce both optical and carrier confinement.
Secondly, the ability to vary the sticking coefficient of Mg by controlling the intensity of the Al beam (i.e., the Al arrival rate) means that, for a given carrier concentration in the layer grown, a lower Mg beam flux may be used by increasing the amount of Al in the layer, i.e., by increasing the intensity of the Al beam.
Looked at in another way, the latter feature of our invention permits fabrication of MBE multilayered devices in a controlled fashion. Consider, for example, that one skilled in the art desires to grow by MBE contiguous layers of p-type GaAs and p-type Al Ga As both doped with Mg and both having the same carrier concentration. Ordinarily, one would adjust the Mg beam to produce a predetermined, but fixed, arrival rate. To his chagrin, the worker would find that the carrier concentration of the GaAszMg layer was only about IO /cm whereas that in the Al Ga As layer was about lO /cm Our discovery, on the other hand, indicates that for x 0.1 the Mg sticking coefficient is nearly three orders of magnitude higher than for x 0 (i.e., pure GaAs). Consequently, when growing the Al Ga As layer, the Mg beam should be adjusted to produce an arrival rate three orders of magnitude smaller.
Brief Description of the Drawing Our invention, together with its various features and advantages, can be easily understood from the following more detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a partial cross-sectional view of illustrative apparatus utilized in practicing our invention; and
FIG. 2 is a graph of carrier concentration and Mg sticking coefficient versus AlAs mole fraction in A1,. Ga, ,As.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION Apparatus Turning now to FIG. 1, there is shown apparatus for growing by MBE epitaxial films of Group III(a)-V(a) compounds, and mixed crystals thereof, of controllable thickness and conductivity type.
The apparatus comprises a vacuum chamber 11 having disposed therein a gun port 12 containing illustratively three cylindrical guns 13a, 13b and 13c, typically Knudsen cells, and a substrate holder 17, typically a molybdenum block. In FIG. 1 the guns 13 are shown to be disposed in a vertical plane for clarity of illustration. I-Iolder 17 is adapted for rotary motion by means of shaft 19 having a control knob 16 located exterior to chamber 11. Also shown disposed within chamber 11 is a cylindrical liquid nitrogen cooling shroud 22 which surrounds the guns and a collimating frame 23 having a collimating aperture 24. Substrate holder 17 is provided with an internal heater 25 and with clips 26 and 27 for affixing a substrate member 28 thereto. Additionally, a thermocouple is disposed in aperture 31 in the side of substrate 28 and is coupled externally via connectors 32-33 in order to sense the temperature of substrate 28. Chamber 11 also includes an outlet 34 for evacuating the chamber by means of a pump 35.
A typical cylindrical gun 13a comprises a refractory crucible 41 having a thermocouple well 42 and a thermocouple 43 inserted therein for the purpose of determining the temperature of the material contained in the gun source chamber 46. thermocouple 43 is connected to an external detector (not shown) via connectors 44-45. Source material (e.g., bulk GaAs) is inserted in source chamber 46 for evaporation by heating coil 47 which surrounds the crucible. The end of crucible 41 adjacent aperture 24 is provided with a knife edge opening 48 (typically about 017cm having a diameter preferably less than the average mean free path of atoms in the source chamber.
General MBE Technique The first step in a typical MBE technique involves selecting a single crystal substrate member, such as GaAs, which may readily be obtained from commerical sources. One major surface of the GaAs substrate member is initially cut along the (001) plane and polished with diamond paste, or any other conventional technique, for the purpose of removing the surface damage therefrom. An etchant such as a brominemethanol or hydrogen peroxide-sulphuric acid solution may be employed for the purpose of further purifying the substrate surface subsequent to polishing.
Next, the substrate is placed in an apparatus of the type shown in FIG. 1, and thereafter, the background pressure in the vacuum chamber is reduced to less than [0 Torr and preferably to a value of the order of about 10 8 to 10 Torr, thereby precluding the introduction of any deleterious components onto the substrate surface. Since, however, the substrate surface may be subject to atmospheric contamination before being mounted into the vacuum chamber, the substrate is preferably heated, e.g., to about 600 Centigrade, to provide an automically clean growth surface, (i.e., desorption of contaminants such as CO and H 0). The next steps in the process involve introducing liquid nitrogen into the cooling shround via entrance port 49 and heating the substrate member to the growth temperature which typically ranges from about 450 to 650 degrees Centigrade dependent upon the specific material to be grown, such range being dictated by considerations relating to arrival rates and surface diffusion.
The guns 13a, 13b and 13c employed in the system have previously been filled with the requisite amounts of the constituents of the desired film to be grown (e.g., gun 13a contains a Group III(a)-V(a) compound such as a GaAs in bulk form; gun 13b contains a Group III(a) element such as Ga; and gun 13c contains a dopant such as Mg in bulk form). In the practice of our present invention, a fourth gun (not shown) containing Al is also used. Following, each gun is heated to a temperature (not necessarily all the same) sufficient to vaporize the contents thereof to yield (with shutter 14 open) a molecular beam (or beams); that is, a stream of atoms manifesting velocity components in the same direction, in this case toward the substrate surface. The atoms or molecules reflected from the surface strike the interior surface 50 of the cooled shroud 22 and are condensed, thereby insuring that only atoms or molecules from the molecular beam impinge upon the substrate surface.
For the purpose of the present invention, the amount of source materials (e.g., Ga, Al and GaAs) furnished to the guns and the gun temperatures should be sufficient to provide an excess of the Group V(a) element (As) with respect to the Group III(a) elements (Al and Ga); that is, the surface should be As-rich (also referred to as As-stabilized). This condition arises from the large differences in sticking coefficient at the growth temperature of the several materials; namely, unity for Ga and Al and about 10 2 for As on a GaAs surface, the latter increasing to unity when there is an excess of Ga (and/or Al) on the surface. Therefore, as long as the As arrival rate is higher than that of Ga and/or Al, the growth will be stoichiometric. Similar considerations apply to Ga and P beams impinging, for example, on a GaP substrate.
Growth of the desired doped epitaxial film is effected by directing the molecular beam generated by the guns at the collimating frame 23 which functions to remove velocity components therein in directions other than those desired, thereby permitting the desired beam to pass through the collimating aperture 24 to effect reaction at the substrate surface. Growth is continued for a time period sufficient to yield an epitaxial film of the desired thickness. This technique permits the controlled growth of films of thickness ranging from a single monolayer (about 3 Angstroms) to more than 100,000 Angstroms. Note, that the collimating frame serves also to keep the vacuum system clean by providing a cooled surface on which molecules reflected from the growth surface can condense. If the effusion cell provides sufficient collimation of the beams, however, the collimating frame is not essential to the growth technique.
The reasons which dictate the use of the aforementioned temperature ranges can be understood as follows. It is now known that Group III(a)-V(a) elements, which are adsorbed upon the surface of single crystal semiconductors, have different condensation and sticking coefficients as well as different adsorption lifetimes. Group V(a) elements typically are almost entirely reflected in the absence of III(a) elements when the substrate is at the growth temperature. However, the growth of stoichiometric III(a)-V(a) semiconductor compounds may be effected by providing vapors of Group III(a) and V(a) elements at the substrate surface, an excess of Group V(a) element being present with respect to the III(a) elements, thereby assuring that the entirety of the III(a) elements will be consumed while the nonreacted V(a) excess is reflected. In this connection, the aforementioned substrate temperature range is related to the arrival rate and surface mobility of atoms striking the surface, i.e., the surface temperature must be high enough (e.g., greater than about 450 degrees Centigrade) that impinging atoms have enough thermal energy to be able to migrate to favorable surface sites (potential wells) to form the epitaxial layer. The higher the arrival rate of these impinging atoms, the higher must be the substrate temperature. On the other hand, the substrate surface temperature should not be so high (e.g., greater than about 650 Centigrade) that noncongruent evaporation results. As defined by C. D. Thurmond in Journal of Physics Chem. Solids, 26,785 (1965), noncongruent evaporation is the preferential evaporation of the V(a) elements from the substrate eventually leaving a new phase containing primarily the III(a) elements. Generally, therefore congruent evaporation means that the evaporation rate of the III(a) and V(a) elements are equal. The temperatures of the cell containing the III(a) element and the cell containing the III(a)-V(a) compound, which provides a source of V(a) molecules, are determined by the desired growth rate and the particular III(a)-V(a) system utilized.
Example: Doping AlGaAs with Mg This example describes a process for the growth by MBE of p-type layers of Al,Ga, ,As doped with Mg.
In guns 13a, 13b and 130 there were placed, respectively, 1 gram of Al, 3 grams of polycrystalline GaAs and 3 grams of Ga. In a fourth gun (not shown for simplicity) was placed 0.5 gram of Mg. Each of the guns was made from aluminum oxide lined with spectroscopically pure graphite except for the Al gun which was made from pyrolytic BN in order to reduce the likelihood of aluminum oxides forming.
The vacuum in the chamber of FIG. 1, was reduced to about 5 X 10' Torr which is primarily As background pressure.
Next, the substrate 28, comprising Si-doped n-type GaAs with its (001) surface facing the guns, was placed about 5cm from the guns and was heated to about 560 Centigrade. The latter temperature was chosen because layers grown at 560 Centigrade have exhibited higher photoluminescent (PL) efficiency than layers grown at other temperatures in the range 450 to 650 Centigrade. High PL efficiency is one of the prerequisites for the active region of a DH laser.
The guns were then heated to a suitable temperature effective to produce desired arrival rates at the growth surface. Thus, the Al gun 13a was heated to temperatures ranging from about 1200 to 1400 Kelvin to produce Al arrival rates ranging from about 10 to 10 Al/cm see; the GaAs gun 13b was heated to about 1180 Kelvin to produce an As arrival rate of about 5 X 10 As /cm sec; the Ga gun 13c was heated to about l,250 Kelvin to produce a Ga arrival rate of about 10 Ga/cm sec; and the Mg gun (not shown) was heated to about 680 Kelvin to produce a Mg arrival rate of about 10 Mg/cm sec.
With constant temperatures maintained for the Ga and GaAs guns as specified above, we fabricated a multilayered structure on the GaAs substrate to determine the doping profile in the several layers. The temperature of the Mg gun was the same for all layers except in two layers where Mg was omitted altogether. The temperature of the Al gun was changed from one layer to the next, but was constant during the growth of each particular layer. Eight layers were sequentially grown as follows with the temperatures in parenthesis being the Al gun temperature: (I) GaAszMg (850 Kelvin which produces negligible evaporation of Al) (2) AI Ga As: Mg (l,340 Kelvin); (3) Al Ga As: Mg (1,325 Kelvin); (4) Al Ga As: Mg (l,270 Kelvin); (5) Al Ga As: Mg (l,225 Kelvin); (6) AI ,Ga As: Mg (l,200 Kelvin); (7) GaAs: Mg (Al gun unheated); and (8) GaAs: undoped (Al gun unheated).
Several single-layered structures were also grown on Cr-doped semi-insulating GaAs substrates for the purpose of marking Hall effect measurements. All of the layers of the latter structure were grown with constant Mg, Ga and As beam fluxes, but with varying Al beam intensities.
The epitaxial film properties were studied in situ with a reflection high energy electron diffraction (HEED) system commercially available from Varian Associates, Palo Alto, California and by Auger spectroscopy with a PHI cylindrical mirror electron spectrometer commercially available from physical Electronic Industries, Inc., Edina, Minnesota. Subsequent to growth, tests were also made with ion sputtering mass spectrometry (IMS) and Hall measurements. The arrangement of the in situ analysis instruments in the vacuum system of FIG. 1 is well known in the art and is therefore omitted here for simplicity and clarity of illustration.
HEED was used to observe the surface structures of the outermost atomic layers during growth. We observed a new surface structure, GaAs (001 2X2 Mg when the Mg beam was used to dope the various epitaxial layers. As the Mg beam impinged on a GaAs or Al,. Ga ,As surface, the (001) 2X2 Mg surface structure was formed independent of whether the initial sur face was As-stabilized or Ga-stabilized.
Auger electron spectroscopy was used in situ to study the elemental composition of the top few monolayers of the grown epitaxial layers. this technique can be used to determine the substrate cleanliness, contamination (if any) of the layers during growth, and, to some extent, the chemical compositions of the Al,Ga, ,As layers.
[MS was used to determine the doping profile of the multi-layer structure and Hall effect measurements were used to determine the carrier concentrations and mobilities in the layers. The room temperature Hall mobilities varied from 215 cm V sec for a carrier concentration (N -N 2.5 10"/cm to 30 cm /V sec for (N -N l /cm Since the Mg beam flux was kept constant during the growth of the layers on the Crdoped substrate, we conclude that the increase in carrier concentration corresponds to an increase in the sticking coefficient of Mg brought about by the presence of Al in the layers.
The results of our work are summarized in FIG. 2, a graph of carrier concentration (N N and Mg sticking coefficient versus x, the mole fraction of AlAs in AI Ga AS. Although the data presented in FIG. 2 correspond to a substrate temperature of 560 degrees Centigrade, we expect similar results within the typical range of substrate temperatures suitable for epitaxial growth by MBE (i.e., about 450 to 650 Centigrade). The graph vividly depicts the drastic (three orders of magnitude) increase in Mg sticking coefficient from about 1X10 to 4X10 as the amount of aluminum in the grown layers (i.e., the mole fraction x) increases from about 0 to 0.1. The corresponding increase in carrier concentration is from about 2.5Xl0 /cm to about 8X10 /cm". For x between 0.1 and 0.2 the increase is much more gradual: the sticking coefficient increases to about 6X 1 0" and the corresponding carrier concentration increases to about l.5Xl0 /cm As mentioned previously, there are several ramifications of FIG. 2 which are important to the fabrication of devices by MBE.
First, we have demonstrated that Mg incorporates into MBE layers as a p-type dopant under As-stabilized surface conditions. Consequently, larger spurious variations of the As /Ga ratio in the molecular beams can be tolerated without seriously affecting the Mg doping level. Moreover, because growth on a Ga-stabilized surface is not necessary to obtain p-type conductivity (contrast the Ge situation), the likelihood that Ga droplets will form on the surface and disrupt the homogeneity of the layers is substantially reduced.
Secondly, we have demonstrated that the addition of aluminum to the molecular beam drastically increases the sticking coefficient of Mg and consequently the n-type GaAs substrate on which are grown sequentially the following layers: a ri Al,Ga, ,As layer; a p- Al Ga ,,As layer and a p-Al Ga, As layer with y x and z. The middle layer of Al Ga, ,,As forms the active region of the device where radiative recombination of holes and electrons occurs to produce a coherent light output. For efficient recombination to occur the carrier concentration is typically about lo /cm. The condition y x and z creates a pair of heterojunctions at the interfaces with the middle layer. These heterojunctions confine injected carriers and optical photons to the middle layer and enable c.w. operation at room temperature if the thickness of the middle layer is less than about 1 pm. To this end, the other layers should also be thin (e.g., 1-2 am) in order to facilitate the extraction of heat from the device.
Consequently, MBE, with its ability to grow extremely thin layers of controllable thickness, is particularly suited to the fabrication of DH lasers. As discussed in the copending application of A. Y. Cho (Case 2) supra, Sn or Si may be used in MBE to produce the n-type A1,Ga As layer in which typically x 0.1. In accordance with one aspect of our invention, the layers of Al Ga ,,As and Al Ga, As can be made p-type by doping with Mg, and a predetermined carrier concentration in each can be attained by controlling the amount of Al incorporated into the layers, i.e., by controlling the temperature of the Al and Mg guns during MBE growth.
Thus, for example, to enhance photoluminescent efficiency the substrate is maintained at about 560 Centigrade. To produce a carrier concentration of about l.5 l0/cm in the middle layer, the Al content should be about y 0.04 which is attained when the Al gun is heated to about l,270 Kelvin. With the Mg gun heated to a suitable temperature sufficient to evaporate Mg molecules (e.g., to 680 Kelvin), a p-type Al Ga As:Mg layer about 1 pm thick is formed after about 60 minutes of growth time. Thinner layers may be fabricated by growing for shorter periods of time (growth is readily terminated by sliding the shutter 14 in front of aperture 24 of collimating frame 23).
A fourth aspect of our invention relates again to our discovery that in Mg doped layers the carrier concentration is a function of the amount of Al in the layer. Thus, where it is desired to grow successive (not necessarily contiguous) layers of AlGaAs, for example, having different amounts of Al but the same carrier concentration, then the Mg beam flux must be adjusted to compensate for the changed Mg sticking coefficient. Illustratively, in the n-p-p DH laser discussed above, it might be desired that the p-Al Ga As middle layer (y ==0.04) and the p- Al Ga As outer layer (z =0.10) have the same carrier concentrations, e.g., about l.5 l0"*/cm. But y 0.04 produces a Mg sticking coefficient of about 6X10 whereas x 0.10 produces a coefficient of about 3X10, five times higher. Consequently, when growing the p-Al Ga As layer the temperature of the Mg gun should be lowered to produce a Mg arrival rate about five times smaller than that used for growing the p-Al Ga As layer.
It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are merely illustrative of the many possible specific embodiments which can be devised to represent application of the principles of our invention. Numerous and varied other arrangements can be devised in accordance with these principles by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. In particular, although in the lastmentioned aspect of our invention the Mg flux was adjusted to produce the same carrier concentration in contiguous p-type layers of AlGaAs, it is of course apparent to one skilled in the art that our technique is generally applicable to producing different carrier concentrations by predetermining the requisite Al content and/or Mg beam intensity. Moreover, our invention is not limited in its application to AlGaAs only, but is also suitable to other lIl(a)-V(a) compounds containing Al, e.g., AlGaP, a material particularly attractive for use in GaP-AlGaP spontaneously emitting heterostructure diodes (LEDs).
What is claimed is:
1. A method for epitaxially growing upon a surface a p-type thin film of a material having a composition Al,B, ,C, where x S l, A] is aluminum, B is a Group III(a) element and C is a Group V(a) element, comprising the steps of: i
a. reducing the background pressure to a subatmospheric pressure;
b. directing at least one molecular beam comprising a p-type dopant, said aluminum, said Group Ill(a) element and said Group V(a) element, upon said surface for a time period sufficient to effect growth of a p-type film of AI B C, 0 x S l, of the desired thickness;
c. preheating said surface to a temperature effective to allow atoms impinging thereon to migrate to surface sites to form said epitaxial film and effective to produce congruent evaporation of said Group lll(a) elements and said Group V(a) element:
(1. maintaining the relative proportions of the constituents of said at least one molecular beam so that at said surface there is an excess of said Group V(a) element with respect to aluminum and said Group IIl(a) element, and characterized in that:
1. said p-type dopant is magnesium;
2. the sticking coefficient of magnesium on said surface, and hence the carrier concentration of said thin film, increases in accordance with a determinable relationship with increasing amounts of aluminum in said thin film; and
3. aluminum is included in said at least one molecular beam in an amount determined from said relationship effective to produce a desired carrier concentration in said thin film.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said background pressure is reduced to at least 10' Torr.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein a first layer containing a first amount of Al is grown on said surface with the Mg flux in said at least one beam maintained at a first level, then a second layer containing a second amount of Al is grown, and during the growth of said second layer the Mg flux is changed to compensate for the change in the Mg sticking coefficient produced by the different amounts of Al in said layers.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein said surface is preheated to a temperature in the range of about 450 to 650 Centigrade.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein said thin film comprises a material selected from the group consisting of Al,Ga As and Al,Ga ,P.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein said thin film comprises Al,Ga ,As and said at least one molecular beam is formed by heating a first source of liquid Ga to produce a first beam of Ga molecules, by heating a second source of solid Al to produce a second beam of Al molecules, by heating a third source of As to produce a third beam of As molecules and by heating a fourth source of Mg to produce a fourth beam of Mg molecules, said first, second, third and fourth beams impinging simultaneously on said surface.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein said third source comprises polycrystalline GaAs to produce said third beam comprising A5 molecules.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein the sticking coefficient of said Mg molecules on said surface increases according to said determinable relationship from about 10 5 to about 10 2 as the amount x of Al in said thin film increases from about 0 to 0.1 and produces a corresponding increase in the carrier concentration of said thin film from about l0 /cm to lO /cm 9. The method of claim 6 wherein said thin film is made to have a carrier concentration greater than about 5 l0"/cm by adapting the intensity of said aluminum beam to produce a thin film of Al,Ga ,As with x greater than about 0.04.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein said second source of Al is heated to a temperature greater than about l,270 K.
- UNI ED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION Patent No. "3 .839 .08 1 Dated October 1, 197
Inventor(s) Alfred Yi Cho and Morton B. Panish It is certified that efror appears in the above-identified patent and that said Letters Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:'
Column 2," line 28, change "Evan" to -Even-.
' Column 2, line 62, change "in" to --is-.
Column line 21, change "10-8" to -1O Column line- 6", change "10-2" to -1O Signed and sealed this 31st day of December 3974.
Attesting Officer Commissioner of Patents FORM po'wso v USCOMM-DC scam-P69 GOVERNMENT FRlNTlNG OFFICE t [959 O35633,

Claims (15)

1. A METHOD FOR EPTIAXIALLY GROWING UPON A SURFACE A P-TYPE THIN FILM OF A MATERIAL HAVING A COMPOSITION AIXB1-XC, WHERE 0<X$ 1, AL IS ALUMINUM, B IS A GROUP III(A) ELEMENT AND C IS A GROUP V(A) ELEMENT, COMPRISING THE STEPS OF: A. REDUCING THE BACKGROUND PRESSURE TO A SUBATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE; B. DIRECTING AT LEAST ONE MOLECULAR BEAM COMPRISING A P-TYPE DOPANT, SAID ALUMINUM, SAID GROUP III(A) ELEMENT AND SAID GROUP V(A) ELEMENT, UPON SAID SURFACE FOR A TIME PERIOD SUFFICIENT TO EFFECT GROWTH OF A P-TYPE FILM OF ALXB1-XC, 0 < X $ 1, OF THICKNESS; C. PREHEATING SAID SURFACE TO A TEMPERATURE EFFECTIVE TO ALLOW ATOMS IMPINGING THEREON TO MIGRATE TO SURFACE SITES TO FORM SAID EPITAXIAL FILM AND EFFECTIVE TO PRODUCE CONGRUENT EVAPORATION OF SAID GROUP III(A) ELEMENTS AND SAID GROUP V(A0 ELEMENT: D. MAINTAINING THE RELATIVE PROPORTIONS OF THE CONSTITUENTS OF SAID AT LEAST ONE MOLECULAR BEAM SO THAT AT SAID SURFACE THERE IS AN EXCESS OF SAID GROUP V(A) ELEMENT WITH RESPECT TO ALUMINUM AND SAID GROUP III(A) ELEMENT, AND CHARACTERIZED IN THAT:
1. SAID P-TYPE DOPANT IS MAGNESIUM;
2. the sticking coefficient of magnesium on said surface, and hence the carrier concentration of said thin film, increases in accordance with a determinable relationship with increasing amounts of aluminum in said thin film; and
2. THE STICKING COEFFICIENT OF MAGNESIUM ON SAID SURFACE, AND HENCE THE CARRIER CONCENTRATION OF SAID THIN FFILM, INCREASES IN ACCORDANCE WITH A DETERMINABLE RELATIONSHIP WITH INCREASING AMOUNTS OF ALUMINUM IN SAID THIN FILM; AND
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said background pressure is reduced to at least 10 8 Torr.
3. aluminum is included in said at least one molecular beam in an amount determined from said relationship effective to produce a desired carrier concentration in said thin film.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein a first layer containing a first amount of Al is grown on said surface with the Mg flux in said at least one beam maintained at a first level, then a second layer containing a second amount of Al is grown, and during the growth of said second layer the Mg flux is changed to compensate for the change in the Mg sticking coefficient produced by the different amounts of Al in said layers.
3. ALUMINUM IS INCLUDED IN SAID AT LEAST ONE MOLECULAR BEAM IN AN AMOUNT DETERMINED FROM SAID RELATIONSHIP EFFECTIVE TO PRODUCE A DESIRED CARRIER CONCENTRATION IN SAID THIN FILM.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein said surface is preheated to a temperature in the range of about 450* to 650* Centigrade.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein said thin film comprises a material selected from the group consisting of AlxGa1 xAs and AlxGa1 xP.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein said thin film comprises AlxGa1 xAs and said at least one molecular beam is formed by heating a first source of liquid Ga to produce a first beam of Ga molecules, by heating a second source of solid Al to produce a second beam of Al molecules, by heating a third source of As to produce a third beam of As molecules and by heating a fourth source of Mg to produce a fourth beam of Mg molecules, said first, second, third and fourth beams impinging simultaneously on said surface.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein said third source comprises polycrystalline GaAs to produce said third beam comprising As2 molecules.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein the sticking coefficienT of said Mg molecules on said surface increases according to said determinable relationship from about 10 5 to about 10 2 as the amount x of Al in said thin film increases from about 0 to 0.1 and produces a corresponding increase in the carrier concentration of said thin film from about 1016/cm3 to 1019/cm3.
9. The method of claim 6 wherein said thin film is made to have a carrier concentration greater than about 5 X 1017/cm3 by adapting the intensity of said aluminum beam to produce a thin film of AlxGa1 xAs with x greater than about 0.04.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein said second source of Al is heated to a temperature greater than about 1,270* K.
US00310209A 1972-11-29 1972-11-29 Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds Expired - Lifetime US3839084A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00310209A US3839084A (en) 1972-11-29 1972-11-29 Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00310209A US3839084A (en) 1972-11-29 1972-11-29 Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3839084A true US3839084A (en) 1974-10-01

Family

ID=23201456

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00310209A Expired - Lifetime US3839084A (en) 1972-11-29 1972-11-29 Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3839084A (en)

Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3929527A (en) * 1974-06-11 1975-12-30 Us Army Molecular beam epitaxy of alternating metal-semiconductor films
US3941624A (en) * 1975-03-28 1976-03-02 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Sn-Doped group III(a)-v(a) Ga-containing layers grown by molecular beam epitaxy
US3974002A (en) * 1974-06-10 1976-08-10 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated MBE growth: gettering contaminants and fabricating heterostructure junction lasers
US4058430A (en) * 1974-11-29 1977-11-15 Tuomo Suntola Method for producing compound thin films
FR2387514A1 (en) * 1977-04-13 1978-11-10 Philips Nv SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE AND ITS MANUFACTURING PROCESS
US4126930A (en) * 1975-06-19 1978-11-28 Varian Associates, Inc. Magnesium doping of AlGaAs
FR2414367A1 (en) * 1978-01-16 1979-08-10 Western Electric Co MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY PROCESS WITH PRE-MIX
US4233092A (en) * 1978-09-22 1980-11-11 U.S. Philips Corporation Utilizing lead compounds of sulphur, selenium and tellurium as dopant sources
US4239584A (en) * 1978-09-29 1980-12-16 International Business Machines Corporation Molecular-beam epitaxy system and method including hydrogen treatment
US4281029A (en) * 1977-03-10 1981-07-28 Toshinori Takagi Method of coating with a stoichiometric compound
US4447276A (en) * 1981-06-15 1984-05-08 The Post Office Molecular beam epitaxy electrolytic dopant source
US4518846A (en) * 1984-06-11 1985-05-21 International Business Machines Corporation Heater assembly for molecular beam epitaxy furnace
US4523051A (en) * 1983-09-27 1985-06-11 The Boeing Company Thin films of mixed metal compounds
US4553022A (en) * 1984-06-04 1985-11-12 The Perkin-Elmer Corporation Effusion cell assembly
US4944246A (en) * 1988-03-30 1990-07-31 Rohm Co., Ltd. Molecular beam epitaxy apparatus
US5025751A (en) * 1988-02-08 1991-06-25 Hitachi, Ltd. Solid film growth apparatus
US5096533A (en) * 1990-03-20 1992-03-17 Fujitsu Limited Molecular beam epitaxial growth device and molecular beam control method therein for exactly controlling thickness and composition of epitaxial film
US5164040A (en) * 1989-08-21 1992-11-17 Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for rapidly growing films on substrates using pulsed supersonic jets
US5169485A (en) * 1991-03-07 1992-12-08 Bell Communications Research, Inc. Method for the preparation of epitaxial ferromagnetic manganese aluminum magnetic memory element
US5419787A (en) * 1994-06-24 1995-05-30 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Stress reduced insulator
WO1996019597A1 (en) * 1994-12-22 1996-06-27 Northrop Grumman Corporation A method and apparatus for varying the flux of a molecular beam produced by a molecular beam epitaxy cell
US5544618A (en) * 1991-12-04 1996-08-13 Emcore Corp Apparatus for depositing a coating on a substrate

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3615931A (en) * 1968-12-27 1971-10-26 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Technique for growth of epitaxial compound semiconductor films
US3751310A (en) * 1971-03-25 1973-08-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Germanium doped epitaxial films by the molecular beam method

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3615931A (en) * 1968-12-27 1971-10-26 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Technique for growth of epitaxial compound semiconductor films
US3751310A (en) * 1971-03-25 1973-08-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Germanium doped epitaxial films by the molecular beam method

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3974002A (en) * 1974-06-10 1976-08-10 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated MBE growth: gettering contaminants and fabricating heterostructure junction lasers
US3929527A (en) * 1974-06-11 1975-12-30 Us Army Molecular beam epitaxy of alternating metal-semiconductor films
US4058430A (en) * 1974-11-29 1977-11-15 Tuomo Suntola Method for producing compound thin films
US3941624A (en) * 1975-03-28 1976-03-02 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Sn-Doped group III(a)-v(a) Ga-containing layers grown by molecular beam epitaxy
US4126930A (en) * 1975-06-19 1978-11-28 Varian Associates, Inc. Magnesium doping of AlGaAs
US4281029A (en) * 1977-03-10 1981-07-28 Toshinori Takagi Method of coating with a stoichiometric compound
FR2387514A1 (en) * 1977-04-13 1978-11-10 Philips Nv SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE AND ITS MANUFACTURING PROCESS
US4218271A (en) * 1977-04-13 1980-08-19 U.S. Philips Corporation Method of manufacturing semiconductor devices utilizing a sure-step molecular beam deposition
FR2414367A1 (en) * 1978-01-16 1979-08-10 Western Electric Co MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY PROCESS WITH PRE-MIX
US4233092A (en) * 1978-09-22 1980-11-11 U.S. Philips Corporation Utilizing lead compounds of sulphur, selenium and tellurium as dopant sources
US4239584A (en) * 1978-09-29 1980-12-16 International Business Machines Corporation Molecular-beam epitaxy system and method including hydrogen treatment
US4447276A (en) * 1981-06-15 1984-05-08 The Post Office Molecular beam epitaxy electrolytic dopant source
US4523051A (en) * 1983-09-27 1985-06-11 The Boeing Company Thin films of mixed metal compounds
US4553022A (en) * 1984-06-04 1985-11-12 The Perkin-Elmer Corporation Effusion cell assembly
US4518846A (en) * 1984-06-11 1985-05-21 International Business Machines Corporation Heater assembly for molecular beam epitaxy furnace
US5025751A (en) * 1988-02-08 1991-06-25 Hitachi, Ltd. Solid film growth apparatus
US4944246A (en) * 1988-03-30 1990-07-31 Rohm Co., Ltd. Molecular beam epitaxy apparatus
US5164040A (en) * 1989-08-21 1992-11-17 Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for rapidly growing films on substrates using pulsed supersonic jets
US5096533A (en) * 1990-03-20 1992-03-17 Fujitsu Limited Molecular beam epitaxial growth device and molecular beam control method therein for exactly controlling thickness and composition of epitaxial film
US5147461A (en) * 1990-03-20 1992-09-15 Fujitsu Limited Molecular beam epitaxial growth device and molecular beam control method therein for exactly controlling thickness and composition of epitaxial film
US5169485A (en) * 1991-03-07 1992-12-08 Bell Communications Research, Inc. Method for the preparation of epitaxial ferromagnetic manganese aluminum magnetic memory element
US5544618A (en) * 1991-12-04 1996-08-13 Emcore Corp Apparatus for depositing a coating on a substrate
US5419787A (en) * 1994-06-24 1995-05-30 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Stress reduced insulator
WO1996019597A1 (en) * 1994-12-22 1996-06-27 Northrop Grumman Corporation A method and apparatus for varying the flux of a molecular beam produced by a molecular beam epitaxy cell
US5616180A (en) * 1994-12-22 1997-04-01 Northrop Grumman Corporation Aparatus for varying the flux of a molecular beam
US5714008A (en) * 1994-12-22 1998-02-03 Northrop Grumman Corporation Molecular beam epitaxy source cell

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3839084A (en) Molecular beam epitaxy method for fabricating magnesium doped thin films of group iii(a)-v(a) compounds
Lopez-Otero Hot wall epitaxy
US3751310A (en) Germanium doped epitaxial films by the molecular beam method
US3974002A (en) MBE growth: gettering contaminants and fabricating heterostructure junction lasers
Wieder Intermetallic Semiconducting Films: International Series of Monographs in Semiconductors
US3619283A (en) Method for epitaxially growing thin films
JPH0688871B2 (en) Chemical beam deposition method
US4383872A (en) Method of growing a doped III-V alloy layer by molecular beam epitaxy utilizing a supplemental molecular beam of lead
US4948751A (en) Moelcular beam epitaxy for selective epitaxial growth of III - V compound semiconductor
US4233613A (en) Compound semiconductor wafer
US4426237A (en) Volatile metal oxide suppression in molecular beam epitaxy systems
Larkins et al. Quality gaas and aigaas
US4592927A (en) Growth of oxide thin films using solid oxygen sources
Knodle et al. Molecular beam epitaxy: Equipment and practice
Hughes et al. Reflection high-energy electron diffraction studies of wurtzite GaN grown by molecular beam epitaxy
Gant et al. Anion inclusions in III‐V semiconductors
Tateishi et al. Graded-bandgap III-V ternary compound films by molecular beam epitaxy
Uchida et al. Extremely high Be doped Ga0. 47In0. 53As growth by chemical beam epitaxy
Herman et al. Molecular beam epitaxy
WO1994016459A1 (en) Semiconductor expitaxial substrate
GB2066299A (en) Growing doped III-V alloy layers by molecular beam epitaxy
Cho Growth and properties of III-V semiconductors by molecular beam epitaxy
JPH03135013A (en) Manufacture of compound for doping and doping method
Kasper et al. Molecular beam epitaxy of silicon, silicon alloys, and metals
US5976958A (en) Method for growth of in situ p-type semiconductor films using a group V flux