“…9, with the dashed line indicating the boundary between the non-Indroplets formation regime and In-droplets formation regime while annealing from 450 to 550 1C. Apparently, the annealing condition window for InN free of liquid indium is relatively small, compared with GaN, since the equilibrium vapor pressure of nitrogen over the InN is several orders higher than that of GaN [6], and also the desorption rate of indium atoms from the nitride surface is much smaller [8]. The results have confirmed that under the circumstance of high ramping rate and small input NH 3 partial pressure, InN will decompose fast enough to bring forth In-droplets, due to insufficient nitrogen radicals on the surface and large surface coverage of indium adatoms.…”