The role of Si during the metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy of GaN rods is investigated. Already a small amount of Si strongly enhances the vertical growth of GaN. Reactive ion etching experiments show that the inner volume of the rod is much more strongly etched than the m-plane surface layer. Transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy measurements reveal that Si is predominiantly incorporated in the surface layer of the m-plane sidewall facets of the rods. The formation of a SiN layer prevents growth on and etching of the m-planes and enhances the mobility of atoms promoting vertical growth. Annealing experiments demonstrate the extraordinary thermal resistivity in comparison to undoped GaN rod structures and GaN layers. The subsequent InGaN quantum well growth on the GaN rods reveals the antisurfactant effect of the SiN layer. A model based on the vapor-liquid-solid growth mode is proposed. The results help to understand the role of Si during growth of GaN rod structures to improve the performance of rod based light emitting and electronic devices
Vertically aligned hexagonal InN nanorods were grown mask-free by conventional metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy without any foreign catalyst. The In droplets on top of the nanorods indicate a self-catalytic vapor-liquid-solid growth mode. A systematic study on important growth parameters has been carried out for the optimization of nanorod morphology. The nanorod N-polarity, induced by high temperature nitridation of the sapphire substrate, is necessary to achieve vertical growth. Hydrogen, usually inapplicable during InN growth due to formation of metallic indium, and silane are needed to enhance the aspect ratio and to reduce parasitic deposition beside the nanorods on the sapphire surface. The results reveal many similarities between InN and GaN nanorod growth showing that the process despite the large difference in growth temperature is similar. Transmission electron microscopy, spatially resolved energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy have been performed to analyze the structural properties. Spatially resolved cathodoluminescence investigations are carried out to verify the optical activity of the InN nanorods. The InN nanorods are expected to be the material of choice for high-efficiency hot carrier solar cells.
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