In GaAs(1-x)N(x), the band gap energy decreases very rapidly with x and the electron effective mass shows a quite unusual compositional dependence characterized by a sudden doubling for x congruent to 0.1%. In this work, we investigate the origin of this behavior by photoluminescence measurements under hydrostatic pressure in as-grown and hydrogenated GaAs(0.9989)N(0.0011) samples. First, we show that two nitrogen pair states emitting at 1.488 and 1.508 eV contribute mainly, but to a different extent, in determining the steep increase in the electron mass observed for x congruent to 0.1%. Tight-binding supercell calculations assign the 1.488 eV levels to isolated N pairs and the 1.508 eV states to N pairs perturbed by a nearby N atom, in disagreement with previous attributions but consistent with the electron mass data. Second, photoluminescence at high hydrostatic pressure discloses that these N pair states show quite different rates of passivation by hydrogen. By combining these findings with the calculated lattice energies associated with each N complex, we conclude that strain relaxation is a key mechanism driving the interaction of hydrogen with N atoms in GaAs(1-x)N(x).

Role of strain and properties of N clusters at the onset of the alloy limit in GaAs(1-x)N(x)

Pettinari G;
2008

Abstract

In GaAs(1-x)N(x), the band gap energy decreases very rapidly with x and the electron effective mass shows a quite unusual compositional dependence characterized by a sudden doubling for x congruent to 0.1%. In this work, we investigate the origin of this behavior by photoluminescence measurements under hydrostatic pressure in as-grown and hydrogenated GaAs(0.9989)N(0.0011) samples. First, we show that two nitrogen pair states emitting at 1.488 and 1.508 eV contribute mainly, but to a different extent, in determining the steep increase in the electron mass observed for x congruent to 0.1%. Tight-binding supercell calculations assign the 1.488 eV levels to isolated N pairs and the 1.508 eV states to N pairs perturbed by a nearby N atom, in disagreement with previous attributions but consistent with the electron mass data. Second, photoluminescence at high hydrostatic pressure discloses that these N pair states show quite different rates of passivation by hydrogen. By combining these findings with the calculated lattice energies associated with each N complex, we conclude that strain relaxation is a key mechanism driving the interaction of hydrogen with N atoms in GaAs(1-x)N(x).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/259021
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