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Origin of Grown-in Dislocations in III-V Compound Semiconductor Epitaxial Layers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2011

S. Nakahara
Affiliation:
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
S. N. G. Chu
Affiliation:
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
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Abstract

A transmission electron microscope was used to study the origin of grown-in dislocations observed in quaternary InGaAsP layers grown by vapor phase epitaxy on (001) InP substrates. Many of the grown-in dislocations were found to exist as dislocation dipoles and were connected to particles formed at the lnGaAsP/lnP interface. X-ray micro-analysis has indicated that the particles are quaternary alloys having chemical compositions slightly richer in both Ga and P than that of the lattice-matched InGaAsP layer. In some cases, this compositional deviation led to a significant lattice mismatch. As the particle grows larger, a strain relaxation occurs by generating misfit dislocations around the particle in the form of a dislocation half loop. If these dislocation half loops do not develop into a complete loop by totally surrounding the particle, they leave two unclosed dislocation segments (a dislocation dipole), which are replicated by the quaternary overlayer along the substrate normal direction, i.e., [001]. These dislocations eventually become a source for grown-in dislocations.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1986

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References

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