AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores integrating gallium nitride (GaN) on silicon (Si) substrates for enhancing high-speed integrated photonics, utilizing techniques like wafer bonding and chemical mechanical polishing (CMP).
  • - The transferred GaN layer is thinned to 800 nm, showing significantly reduced surface roughness and mitigated stress in quantum wells, leading to an 8.8 nm blue shift in emission wavelength.
  • - Microcavities are created for optically-pumped green lasing at around 505.8 nm, demonstrating effective lasing performance and lower thermal effects compared to traditional designs, paving the way for efficient optoelectronic devices.

Article Abstract

Heterogeneous integration of nitrides on Si (100) is expected to open the door to the new possibilities for this material system in the fields of high-speed integrated photonics and information processing. In this work, GaN epitaxial layer grown on the patterned sapphire substrate is transferred onto Si (100) by a combination of wafer bonding, laser lift-off and chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) processes. The GaN epilayer transferred is uniformly thinned down to 800 nm with a root mean square surface roughness as low as 2.33 Å. The residual stress within the InGaN quantum wells transferred is mitigated by 79.4% after the CMP process. Accordingly, its emission wavelength exhibits a blue shift of 8.8 nm, revealing an alleviated quantum-confined Stark effect. Based on this platform, an array of microcavities with diverse geometrics and sizes are fabricated, by which optically-pumped green lasing at ∼505.8 nm is achieved with a linewidth of ∼0.48 nm from ∼12 µm microdisks. A spontaneous emission coupling factor of around 10 is roughly estimated based on the light output characteristics with increasing the pumping densities. Lasing behaviors beyond the threshold suggest that the microdisk suffers less thermal effects as compared to its undercut counterparts. The electrically-injected microdisks are also fabricated, with a turn-on voltage of ∼2.0 V and a leakage current as low as ∼2.4 pA at -5 V. Being compatible with traditional semiconductor processing techniques, this work provides a feasible solution to fabricate large-area heterogeneously integrated optoelectronic devices based on nitrides.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.462422DOI Listing

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