We report on fundamental structural and optical properties of lateral polarity junctions in GaN. GaN with Ga- to N-polar junctions was grown on sapphire using an AlN buffer layer. Results from scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy measurements indicate a superior quality of the Ga-polar GaN. An extremely strong luminescence signal is observed at the inversion domain boundary (IDB). Temperature dependent micro photoluminescence measurements are used to reveal the recombination processes underlying this strong emission. At 5 K the emission mainly arises from a stripe along the inversion domain boundary with a thickness of 4-5 m. An increase of the temperature initially leads to a narrowing to below 2 m emission area width followed by a broadening at temperatures above 70 K. The relatively broad emission area at low temperatures is explained by a diagonal IDB. It is shown that all further changes in the emission area width are related to thermalization effects of carriers and defects attracted to the IDB. The results are successfully used to confirm a theoretical model for GaN based lateral polarity junctions. Due to the strong and pronounced emission of IDBs even at elevated temperatures, it is demonstrated that lateral polarity junctions exhibit a strong potential for future high efficiency devices. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Kirste, R., Collazo, R., Callsen, G., Wagner, M. R., Kure, T., Sebastian Reparaz, J., … Hoffmann, A. (2011). Temperature dependent photoluminescence of lateral polarity junctions of metal organic chemical vapor deposition grown GaN. Journal of Applied Physics, 110(9). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3656987
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