Browsing by Author "Herrera, Daniel"
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- Sulfur Implanted GaSb for Non-Epitaxial Photovoltaic DevicesHerrera, Daniel (Virginia Tech, 2019-09-18)Gallium antimonide (GaSb) is a promising low-bandgap binary substrate for the fabrication of various infrared-based optoelectronic devices, particularly thermophotovoltaics (TPV). In order to make GaSb-based technologies like TPV more widely available, non-epitaxial dop- ing methods for GaSb must be pursued. Ion implantation is relatively unexplored for GaSb, and can offer advantages over the more common method of zinc diffusion, including higher flexibility with regards to substrate type and control over the resulting doping profile. Pre- vious work has shown beryllium (Be+) implantation to be a suitable method for fabricating a diode in an n-type GaSb substrate, opening the possibility for other ions to be considered for implanting into both n-type and p-type substrates. This work identifies sulfur (S+) as another species to investigate for this purpose. To do so, material and electrical characterization was done on S+ and beryllium implanted GaSb films grown onto a semi-insulating gallium arsenide (GaAs) substrate. X-ray Diffraction spectroscopy (XRD) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) indicate that the post-implant anneal of 600 for 10 s repaired the implant damage in the bulk material, but left behind a damaged surface layer composed of coalesced vacancies. While the beryllium implant resulted in moderate doping concentrations corresponding to an activation percentage near 15 %, Hall Effect data showed that implanting S+ ions induced a strongly p-type behavior, with hole concentrations above 1 × 19 cm^3 and sheet hole densities 3.5 times higher than the total implanted dose. This strong p-type behavior is attributed to the remaining lattice damage caused by the implant, which induces a large density of acceptor-like defect states near the valence band edge. This technique was used on an unintentionally-doped p-type GaSb substrate to create a + /p junction. The implant process succeeded in producing a potential barrier similar to that of a hole-majority camel diode with a thin delta-doped region suitable for collecting diffused carriers from the p-type substrate. A post-fabrication etching process had the effect of strongly increasing the short circuit current density to as high as 41.8 mA/cm^2 and the open circuit voltage as high as 0.21 V by simultaneously removing a high carrier recombination surface layer. This etching process resulted in a broadband spectral response, giving internal quantum efficiencies greater than 90 %.