Title
Cubic ZnXMg1-XO And NiXMg1-XO Thin Films Grown By Molecular Beam Epitaxy For Deep-Uv Optoelectronic Applications
Keywords
Detectors; Molecular beam epitaxy; Oxide semiconductors; Solar blind; Zinc oxide
Abstract
Oxide based compounds have been of increasing interest for wide bandgap, deep ultraviolet optoelectronics. While high Al content AlGaN has enabled many UV-DUV technologies, it suffers inherent drawbacks including difficulty achieving increasing Al incorporation, high threading dislocation densities and challenges in bandgap engineering due to polarization and piezoelectric effects. Here we present two wide bandgap cubic oxide compounds, ZnMgO and NiMgO, that offer advantages over AlGaN for deep ultraviolet (DUV) applications. Ni xMg1-xO and ZnxMg1-xO are both direct band gap, cubic rocksalt (B1) semiconductors with bandgaps in the UV-DUV spectral regions, offering alternatives without the aforementioned drawbacks associated with AlGaN. Here we present NixMg1-xO and ZnxMg1-xO thin films grown by plasma-assisted MBE on lattice matched MgO substrates as a novel means by which to realize DUV detection devices. In both systems we have shown the films to exhibit abrupt, continuously tunable absorptions edges over their respective bandgap ranges. NixMg1-xO films were varied compositionally from x=0 to 1, realizing bandgaps from 3.5 to 7.8 eV. ZnxMg1-xO films were similarly varied over the entire B1 range of the ternary (0
Publication Date
5-7-2010
Publication Title
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Volume
7603
Number of Pages
-
Document Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.841327
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
77951757712 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/77951757712
STARS Citation
Mares, J. W.; Boutwell, C. R.; Scheurer, A.; Falanga, M.; and Schoenfeld, W. V., "Cubic ZnXMg1-XO And NiXMg1-XO Thin Films Grown By Molecular Beam Epitaxy For Deep-Uv Optoelectronic Applications" (2010). Scopus Export 2010-2014. 1129.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2010/1129