US11095096B2 - Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) - Google Patents

Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US11095096B2
US11095096B2 US14/687,814 US201514687814A US11095096B2 US 11095096 B2 US11095096 B2 US 11095096B2 US 201514687814 A US201514687814 A US 201514687814A US 11095096 B2 US11095096 B2 US 11095096B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
region
layer
approximately
semiconductor
emitting device
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Active
Application number
US14/687,814
Other versions
US20150303655A1 (en
Inventor
Jung Han
Chia-Feng Lin
Danti Chen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Yale University
Original Assignee
Yale University
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Yale University filed Critical Yale University
Priority to US14/687,814 priority Critical patent/US11095096B2/en
Assigned to YALE UNIVERSITY reassignment YALE UNIVERSITY ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LIN, CHIA-FENG, HAN, JUNG, CHEN, Danti
Publication of US20150303655A1 publication Critical patent/US20150303655A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US11095096B2 publication Critical patent/US11095096B2/en
Active legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/30Structure or shape of the active region; Materials used for the active region
    • H01S5/34Structure or shape of the active region; Materials used for the active region comprising quantum well or superlattice structures, e.g. single quantum well [SQW] lasers, multiple quantum well [MQW] lasers or graded index separate confinement heterostructure [GRINSCH] lasers
    • H01S5/343Structure or shape of the active region; Materials used for the active region comprising quantum well or superlattice structures, e.g. single quantum well [SQW] lasers, multiple quantum well [MQW] lasers or graded index separate confinement heterostructure [GRINSCH] lasers in AIIIBV compounds, e.g. AlGaAs-laser, InP-based laser
    • H01S5/34333Structure or shape of the active region; Materials used for the active region comprising quantum well or superlattice structures, e.g. single quantum well [SQW] lasers, multiple quantum well [MQW] lasers or graded index separate confinement heterostructure [GRINSCH] lasers in AIIIBV compounds, e.g. AlGaAs-laser, InP-based laser with a well layer based on Ga(In)N or Ga(In)P, e.g. blue laser
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L21/00Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
    • H01L21/02Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof
    • H01L21/02104Forming layers
    • H01L21/02107Forming insulating materials on a substrate
    • H01L21/02109Forming insulating materials on a substrate characterised by the type of layer, e.g. type of material, porous/non-porous, pre-cursors, mixtures or laminates
    • H01L21/02203Forming insulating materials on a substrate characterised by the type of layer, e.g. type of material, porous/non-porous, pre-cursors, mixtures or laminates the layer being porous
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/04Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping, e.g. by electron beams
    • H01S5/042Electrical excitation ; Circuits therefor
    • H01S5/0425Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure
    • H01S5/04252Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure characterised by the material
    • H01S5/04253Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure characterised by the material having specific optical properties, e.g. transparent electrodes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/10Construction or shape of the optical resonator, e.g. extended or external cavity, coupled cavities, bent-guide, varying width, thickness or composition of the active region
    • H01S5/18Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities
    • H01S5/183Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL]
    • H01S5/18308Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL] having a special structure for lateral current or light confinement
    • H01S5/18311Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL] having a special structure for lateral current or light confinement using selective oxidation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/10Construction or shape of the optical resonator, e.g. extended or external cavity, coupled cavities, bent-guide, varying width, thickness or composition of the active region
    • H01S5/18Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities
    • H01S5/183Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL]
    • H01S5/18361Structure of the reflectors, e.g. hybrid mirrors
    • H01S5/18363Structure of the reflectors, e.g. hybrid mirrors comprising air layers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10HINORGANIC LIGHT-EMITTING SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES HAVING POTENTIAL BARRIERS
    • H10H20/00Individual inorganic light-emitting semiconductor devices having potential barriers, e.g. light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H10H20/80Constructional details
    • H10H20/81Bodies
    • H10H20/816Bodies having carrier transport control structures, e.g. highly-doped semiconductor layers or current-blocking structures
    • H10H20/8162Current-blocking structures
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10HINORGANIC LIGHT-EMITTING SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES HAVING POTENTIAL BARRIERS
    • H10H20/00Individual inorganic light-emitting semiconductor devices having potential barriers, e.g. light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H10H20/80Constructional details
    • H10H20/81Bodies
    • H10H20/817Bodies characterised by the crystal structures or orientations, e.g. polycrystalline, amorphous or porous
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10HINORGANIC LIGHT-EMITTING SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES HAVING POTENTIAL BARRIERS
    • H10H20/00Individual inorganic light-emitting semiconductor devices having potential barriers, e.g. light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H10H20/80Constructional details
    • H10H20/81Bodies
    • H10H20/822Materials of the light-emitting regions
    • H10H20/824Materials of the light-emitting regions comprising only Group III-V materials, e.g. GaP
    • H10H20/825Materials of the light-emitting regions comprising only Group III-V materials, e.g. GaP containing nitrogen, e.g. GaN
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/04Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping, e.g. by electron beams
    • H01S5/042Electrical excitation ; Circuits therefor
    • H01S5/0425Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure
    • H01S5/04256Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure characterised by the configuration
    • H01S5/04257Electrodes, e.g. characterised by the structure characterised by the configuration having positive and negative electrodes on the same side of the substrate
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/10Construction or shape of the optical resonator, e.g. extended or external cavity, coupled cavities, bent-guide, varying width, thickness or composition of the active region
    • H01S5/18Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities
    • H01S5/183Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL]
    • H01S5/18341Intra-cavity contacts
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/10Construction or shape of the optical resonator, e.g. extended or external cavity, coupled cavities, bent-guide, varying width, thickness or composition of the active region
    • H01S5/18Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities
    • H01S5/183Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL]
    • H01S5/18344Surface-emitting [SE] lasers, e.g. having both horizontal and vertical cavities having only vertical cavities, e.g. vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers [VCSEL] characterized by the mesa, e.g. dimensions or shape of the mesa
    • H01S5/18347Mesa comprising active layer

Definitions

  • the technology relates to methods and structures for making vertical-cavity light-emitting devices.
  • edge-emitting laser diodes are designed to emit radiation from an edge of a laser diode chip.
  • the direction or beam axis of the laser cavity and the direction of the emitted lasing beam are parallel to a “process” plane of the semiconductor substrate on which the edge-emitting lasers are formed.
  • the substrate is diced or cleaved to form a laser diode chip, the chip is packaged, a current is applied across the laser diode's junction, and laser radiation is emitted from an edge of the chip.
  • a vertical cavity surface emitting laser is a type of semiconductor laser that was conceptualized and developed in the 1980s and '90s.
  • VCSELs are characterized by the formation of a vertical laser cavity that is oriented perpendicular to the process plane of the substrate on which the laser is formed.
  • the laser cavity may be defined by two parallel optical reflectors sandwiching an active region of the laser diode.
  • VCSELs may also be diced from a substrate and packaged. Lasing radiation for a VCSEL is emitted in a direction that is out of the process plane of the chip, and is perpendicular to the direction of emission for an edge-emitting laser diode.
  • a VCSEL may have advantages of (1) on-wafer testing of device performance, (2) better beam profile and far-field patterns, (3) better mode stability and wider free spectral range due to a shorter cavity length, (4) possibility of a very low threshold current, (5) a generally higher manufacturing yield, (6) a higher packing density on a substrate and therefore lower cost, and (7) improved compatibility with planar microfabrication techniques.
  • VCSELs in the infrared and red spectral range are currently being used for telecommunication and industrial applications.
  • the methods may be used to fabricate VCSELs from III-nitride materials such as gallium nitride (GaN).
  • Conductivity-based electrochemical (EC) etching may be used during fabrication to form a semiconductor/air distributed Bragg reflector and a current-guiding structure on the bottom side of a vertical light-emitting device.
  • the current-guiding structure may enhance a spatial overlap between an active region of the device (where carrier recombination takes place) and a resonant cavity of the device.
  • the current-guiding structure may be formed from a portion of a semiconductor layer that is first converted to porous semiconductor, and then converted to a porous oxide.
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device comprises a substrate, an active region comprising semiconductor material, wherein the active region has a first area, a doped semiconductor region located between the active region and the substrate having a second area smaller than the first area, and a porous oxide extending around the doped semiconductor region and located between the active region and the substrate. At least a portion of the active region may be configured for carrier recombination and photon generation.
  • the active region and doped semiconductor region comprise III-nitride material.
  • the porous oxide may comprise gallium oxide, aluminum-gallium oxide, or indium-gallium oxide.
  • the porous oxide may be formed in and from a same layer of material as the doped semiconductor region.
  • the doped semiconductor region comprises n-type conductivity material.
  • the active region may be configured to produce photons when electrical current flows through the active region.
  • the active region comprises multiple quantum wells formed from layers of III-nitride material.
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a contact layer of semiconductor material formed between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate, wherein a doping density of the contact layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor region.
  • a doping density of the contact layer is between approximately 5 ⁇ 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 2 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 1 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate.
  • the first distributed Bragg reflector may comprise alternating layers of air and III-nitride material.
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device may further include at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector.
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a conductive layer having a doping density between approximately 5 ⁇ 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 2 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 located between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector, and an undoped semiconductor layer between the conductive layer and the first distributed Bragg reflector, wherein a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 1 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a second distributed Bragg reflector located on a side of the active region away from the substrate.
  • the second distributed Bragg reflector may comprise layers of dielectric material.
  • a method for making an integrated light-emitting device may comprise acts of forming a mesa on a substrate that comprises an active region of semiconductor material and a doped semiconductor layer located between the active region and substrate, etching a portion of the doped semiconductor layer to form a porous semiconductor region extending around a remaining doped and unetched semiconductor region, wherein the porous semiconductor region and doped semiconductor region are located between the active region and the substrate, and converting the porous semiconductor region to a porous oxide.
  • forming the doped semiconductor layer may comprise epitaxially growing an n-type conductivity layer of III-nitride material.
  • a method may further include forming a contact layer of semiconductor material adjacent the doped semiconductor layer, wherein a doping density of the contact layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor layer.
  • a method may further include forming the doped semiconductor layer and contact layer from III-nitride material, doping the contact layer with a doping density between approximately 5 ⁇ 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 2 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 , and doping the doped semiconductor layer with a doping density between approximately 3 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 1 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • the etching comprises electrochemical etching with a hydrofluoric-based etchant.
  • the etching may further comprise applying a bias between approximately 7 volts and approximately 20 volts between the semiconductor layer and an electrode in the etchant.
  • converting the porous semiconductor region comprises oxidizing the porous semiconductor to form gallium oxide.
  • a method for making an integrated light-emitting device may further comprise forming a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate.
  • the act of forming the first distributed Bragg reflector may comprise epitaxially growing one or more layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material and on or more layers of undoped III-nitride semiconductor material, etching a hole adjacent the mesa to expose sidewalls of the layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material, and electrochemically etching at least a portion of the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material to form at least one air gap between the mesa and the substrate.
  • the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material comprise GaN and have a doping density between approximately 8 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 5 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • the etching a portion of the doped semiconductor layer and electrochemically etching at least a portion of the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material may be performed in a same etching step.
  • a method for making an integrated light-emitting device may further comprise forming at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector.
  • a method may further comprise forming a second distributed Bragg reflector located on a side of the active region away from the substrate. Forming the second distributed Bragg reflector may comprise depositing layers of dielectric material.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view depicting a vertical-cavity light-emitting device, according to some embodiments
  • FIGS. 2A-2F depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments
  • FIG. 2G depicts, in plan view, contact pads for a vertical-cavity light-emitting device, according to some embodiments
  • FIGS. 2H-2J depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments
  • FIG. 2K-2L depict, in plan view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments
  • FIGS. 2M-2N depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments
  • FIGS. 3A-3B are scanning-electron micrographs showing lateral porosification of a GaN semiconductor layer
  • FIG. 3C is a scanning-electron micrograph showing porous GaN
  • FIG. 3D is a scanning-electron micrograph showing porous GaO x that has been formed from porous GaN;
  • FIG. 4 illustrates x-ray diffraction measurements associated with oxidation of porous GaN
  • FIG. 5 illustrates simulated (curve 510 ) and measured (curve 520 ) reflectance of an air/GaN distributed Bragg reflector.
  • top,” “bottom,” “upper,” “lower,” “vertical,” “horizontal,” and the like may be used.
  • “vertical” may be used to refer to a direction normal to the substrate surface
  • “horizontal” may be used to refer to a direction parallel to the substrate surface when referring to the drawings.
  • “Upper,” “top,” or “above” may be used to refer to a vertical direction away from the substrate
  • “lower,” “bottom,” or “below” may be used to refer to a vertical direction toward the substrate.
  • Such references are used for teaching purposes, and are not intended as absolute references for embodied devices.
  • An embodied device may be oriented spatially in any suitable manner that may be different from the orientations shown in the drawings.
  • a GaN VCSEL is expected to be an important new device configuration for high-end lighting applications such as automobile headlight, micro-projector, and low-droop, high-power lamps.
  • a GaN VCSEL can access the purple/blue spectral range (400-450 nm), which is useful for high-brightness white-light sources.
  • difficulties associated with fabricating vertical cavities in III-nitride systems have impeded the commercial realization of GaN VCSELs.
  • FIG. 1 depicts a simplified diagram of a vertical-cavity light-emitting device 100 .
  • a vertical-cavity light-emitting device 100 may be a VCSEL or a resonant-cavity light-emitting diode, and may be formed on a process plane 102 of a substrate 105 .
  • the process plane of a substrate may be a side or surface of the substrate on which layers are deposited and processed to form one or more integrated devices.
  • a light-emitting device 100 may include at least one n-side semiconductor layer 120 , at least one p-side semiconductor layer 140 , and an active region 130 in which photons are generated.
  • a light-emitting device may further include a bottom-side reflector (not shown) and top-side reflector 150 that may form a laser cavity.
  • a bottom-side reflector may be used to redirect light emission away from the substrate, e.g., to improve emission from a light-emitting diode (LED).
  • Electrical wires 170 , 175 or integrated interconnects may electrically connect to p- and n-side contacts for applying a bias across the device. When biased, recombining carriers in the active region 130 generate photons, and a beam of radiation 160 emits vertically from the device.
  • a vertical-cavity light-emitting device that is formed as a VCSEL may include bottom-side and top-side reflectors.
  • the principle of light amplification in a VCSEL is not very different from that in conventional laser diodes. Applying electrical bias across the laser diode's p- and n-type layers and active region causes the injection of electrons and holes from the n-type 120 and p-type 140 layers, respectively, into the active region 130 .
  • the electrons and holes recombine radiatively to create photons, or electromagnetic radiation.
  • the active region 130 can reach population inversion and photon amplification by stimulated emission can occur. If the cavity reflectors have a sufficiently high reflectance, round-trip gain in the laser cavity may equal round-trip loss so that continuous-wave lasing operation is sustained producing an output laser beam 160 .
  • a laser cavity for a VCSEL may be formed as a microcavity.
  • a microcavity may have a length L that has a value similar to or within a factor of 5 of the lasing wavelength for the VCSEL.
  • a length of a microcavity may be an integral number of half-wavelengths, according to some embodiments, where the length accounts for refractive indices of materials within the microcavity.
  • the cavity reflectors are effectively located at nodes of a standing optical wave that is amplified within the laser cavity.
  • a microcavity VCSEL may have a distance L between its cavity reflectors between approximately 80 nanometers and approximately 2 microns.
  • the behavior of electromagnetic waves inside a microcavity may be defined by allowable longitudinal optical modes of the microcavity. For example, photons in certain allowed modes will be amplified through stimulated emission, leading to highly efficient generation of coherent photons.
  • vertical-cavity light-emitting devices may include (1) forming an efficient active region for carrier-photon conversion, (2) forming integrated, high-quality reflectors on opposing sides of the active region, and (3) controlling spatial flow of current through the active region such that photon production by carrier recombination overlaps well with modes of a resonant cavity formed by the high-quality reflectors.
  • the inventors have observed that since 1999, there have been few demonstrations of VCSEL operation in III-nitride materials, and believe this is primarily due to fabrication challenges posed by the integrated reflectors (item 2), and more particularly the bottom-side reflector. Although their have been limited demonstrations of III-nitride VCSELs, these devices are not yet commercially available.
  • Nichia Chemical used a laser liftoff (LLO) technique to separate an InGaN/GaN p-n epitaxial structure from a sapphire substrate, and to expose the bottom side (n-side) for the deposition of a dielectric mirror.
  • LLO laser liftoff
  • this approach can avoid the complexity of a multi-layer epitaxial DBR reflector, the use of LLO adds other processing complexity, and it essentially voids the advantage of on-wafer testing.
  • LLO typically requires a relatively thick active region for the laser, which increases the cavity length and reduces the mode spacing for a laser. This can degrade the longitudinal mode quality of a VCSEL.
  • a dielectric current-blocking layer was employed on the p-side or top-side of the device.
  • the inventors have recognized and appreciated that current diffusion on the n-side or bottom-side could undermine device performance, and that implementing current blocking on the bottom-side poses fabrication challenges.
  • addition of an oxide blocking layer can disrupt epitaxial growth.
  • the inventors have conceived of methods and structures for fabricating vertical-cavity light-emitting devices that include bottom-side, wide-band, high-reflectance mirrors and bottom-side current-guiding structures that can prevent unwanted current spreading at the active region.
  • the methods and structures may be used for manufacturing III-nitride VCSEL devices with reduced complexity and allow for on-wafer testing.
  • a bottom-side or n-side reflector may be formed through lateral electrochemical (EC) etching as a GaN/air multilayer DBR.
  • a bottom-side current-guiding and blocking layer may be formed by lateral porosification of highly-doped GaN to a selected distance using EC etching, followed by a controlled oxidation to convert the nanoporous GaN to an insulating nanoporous gallium oxide.
  • III-nitride materials e.g., GaN and GaN alloys such as InGaN, AlGaN, InGaAlN, etc.
  • the conversion of nanoporous material may result in other oxides, e.g., indium-gallium oxide, aluminum-gallium oxide, indium-gallium-aluminum oxide, etc.
  • the processes may be extended to other semiconductor systems (e.g., Si, SiC, InP, GaAs, and their respective alloys) for which EC etching conditions are known.
  • FIG. 2A-2N depicts structures associated with process steps for manufacturing vertical-oriented light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments.
  • the processes and structures may be used to form VSCELs or vertical resonant-cavity LEDs, according to some embodiments.
  • some of the processes and structures may be used to form vertical-oriented LEDs with a bottom-side reflector, in some implementations.
  • the bottom-side reflectors, bottom-side current-guiding structures, and devices may be formed from III-nitride materials.
  • III-nitride materials Although the following description primarily identifies GaN as used for forming a VCSEL, other III-nitride materials may be used additionally or alternatively, e.g., (Al, In, Ga)N materials.
  • a vertical-oriented light-emitting device may be fabricated using a multilayer structure 201 comprising a substrate 105 , as depicted in FIG. 2A .
  • the substrate 105 may comprise a semiconductor (e.g., Si, SiC, GaN) in some embodiments, a crystalline material (e.g., Al 2 O 3 ) in some embodiments, a ceramic in some implementations, or any suitable substrate on which integrated-circuit grade, semiconductor layers may be formed or bonded.
  • the multilayer structure may include reflector layers 215 and device layers 235 formed adjacent the reflector layers. There may be one or more intervening layers between the reflector layers and adjacent device layers.
  • a base layer 210 may be epitaxially grown from the substrate 105 or from a buffer layer (e.g., AlN, SiC, Al 2 O 3 ) deposited on a substrate.
  • the base layer may be bonded to the substrate 105 .
  • the base layer may comprise a III-nitride material that is undoped, according to some embodiment.
  • the base layer 210 may comprise undoped or unintentionally-doped gallium nitride (u-GaN).
  • a doping density of the base layer may be less than 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • the base layer 210 may be between approximately 100 nm and approximately 2 microns thick.
  • the base layer may be grown to a thickness for which a density of defects (resulting from epitaxial growth of a lattice-mismatched semiconductor) reduces to levels acceptable for integrated-circuit devices.
  • a density of defects at a top surface of the base layer 210 may be less than about 10 9 defects cm ⁇ 2 in some embodiments, less than about 10 6 defects cm ⁇ 2 in some embodiments, less than about 10 4 defects cm ⁇ 2 in some embodiments, less than about 10 2 defects cm ⁇ 2 in some embodiments, and yet less than about 10 defects cm ⁇ 2 in some embodiments.
  • Reflector layers 215 may be formed (e.g., by epitaxial growth) over the base layer 210 .
  • the reflector layers may be formed using any suitable chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process (such as metalorganic chemical vapor deposition) or an atomic layer deposition (ALD) process.
  • the reflector layers may comprise one or more layer pairs of alternating conductivity.
  • a layer pair may comprise a first layer 222 of heavily doped (n ++ doping) n-type III-nitride material and a second layer 212 of undoped or unintentionally-doped III-nitride material.
  • a doping density of the heavily doped layers may be between approximately 8 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 5 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 , according to some embodiments. There may be between 1 and 10 reflector layer pairs for the bottom-side reflector. In some implementations, there may be four or five reflector layer pairs.
  • Thicknesses of the reflector layers 215 may be such that a respective layer corresponds to an odd number of quarter wavelengths (e.g., ⁇ /4, 3 ⁇ /4, 5 ⁇ /4, etc.) for a peak emission wavelength ⁇ (measured in air) that will be emitted by the finished light-emitting device.
  • the undoped layers 212 remain in a finished device, so that the refractive index of the layer should be taken into account when determining a thickness for the layers.
  • a layer thickness 3 ⁇ /4 may be reduced by the refractive index value n 212 for determining the thicknesses of the undoped layers 212 .
  • Portions of the heavily doped layers 222 may be removed in a finished device (at least adjacent an active area of the light-emitting device), so that the layer thickness may be an odd number of quarter wavelengths as measured in air.
  • an undoped highly resistive layer 214 may be formed over the reflector layers, e.g., by epitaxial growth.
  • the resistive layer may comprise a III-nitride material.
  • the resistive layer 214 electrically isolates the reflector layers and lower substrate from the device.
  • the resistive layer 214 may also provide a crystal template for subsequent growth of the device layers.
  • the undoped layer 214 may provide a spacing function. For example, the undoped layer 214 may be used to adjust an optical distance between the two cavity reflectors of a microcavity laser, so that the two reflectors are effectively located at nodes of a standing optical wave within the laser cavity.
  • Device layers 224 , 226 , 230 , 240 may all be formed over the resistive layer 214 .
  • Some device layers may be formed by epitaxial growth (e.g., using any suitable chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process or atomic layer deposition (ALD) process), during which dopants may be added to dope the layers to a selected doping density.
  • CVD chemical vapor deposition
  • ALD atomic layer deposition
  • a lightly doped (n ⁇ doping) n-side conductive layer 224 comprising III-nitride material may be formed adjacent the resistive layer 214 .
  • a dopant density for the conductive layer may be between approximately 5 ⁇ 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 2 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • the conductive layer 224 may have n-type conductivity and be used in a finished device for external electrical connection, for example, through a contact pad, wire 175 , or conductive interconnect formed to contact the conductive layer.
  • a thickness of the conductive layer may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
  • a highly doped (n + doping) current-guiding layer 226 comprising III-nitride material may be formed adjacent the conductive layer 224 .
  • a dopant density for the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 3 ⁇ 10 18 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 1 ⁇ 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • the conductivity of the current-guiding layer 226 may be n-type.
  • a resistivity of the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 5 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 4 ohm-cm and approximately 0.01 ohm-cm, in some embodiments.
  • a thickness of the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
  • the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 100 nm and approximately 250 nm thick.
  • An active layer 230 may then be formed adjacent the current-guiding layer 226 .
  • the active layer may be configured to generate photons through carrier recombination.
  • the active layer may comprise a p-n or p-i-n junction for a light-emitting diode.
  • the active layer 230 comprises multiple thin layers of alternating heterogeneous III-nitride materials that form a multiple quantum well (MQW) structure.
  • MQW structure may comprise alternating layers of InGaN and GaN, according to some embodiments.
  • an MQW structure may comprise AlInGaN and GaN layers. There may be between two and twenty such layer pairs in an MQW structure.
  • a thickness of the active layer 230 may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 200 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some cases.
  • a p-side conductive layer 240 is formed adjacent the active layer.
  • the p-side conductive layer may be formed from a III-nitride material (e.g., p-GaN:Mg), and have a doping density between approximately 10 15 cm ⁇ 3 and approximately 10 19 cm ⁇ 3 .
  • a thickness of the p-side conductive layer 240 may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
  • the resistive layer 214 , conductive layer 224 , current-guiding layer 226 and p-side conductive layer 240 all comprise device-quality GaN semiconductor material. In other implementations, other materials may be used. In some implementations, combinations of III-nitride materials may be used in a device. For example, some layers may comprise GaN whereas other layers may comprise AlGaN and/or InGaN.
  • a current-blocking insulator 250 may be patterned on the p-side or top-side conductive layer 240 .
  • the current-blocking insulator may comprise an oxide or insulating nitride, and may be deposited by a physical deposition process (e.g., e-beam evaporation) or other suitable deposition process (e.g., plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (PECVD)).
  • PECVD plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition
  • a thickness of the insulator may be between approximately 20 nm and approximately 100 nm, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in other embodiments.
  • a via 252 may be patterned in the current-blocking insulator 250 using any suitable lithography process (e.g., photolithography).
  • a lithograph process may comprise depositing a resist, patterning the resist to remove a portion where the via 252 is to be formed, etching the via through the insulating layer 250 , and removing the remaining resist.
  • the etching may comprise a dry etch (e.g., reactive ion etching (RIE)) or a wet etch.
  • RIE reactive ion etching
  • the via 252 may define the location of a vertical cavity for a light-emitting device, and provide a path for vertical current flow.
  • a transparent conductor 260 may be deposited over the layers as depicted in FIG. 2C .
  • the transparent conductor may comprise indium tin oxide (ITO), according to some embodiments, though other transparent conductors may be used, such as fluorine doped tin oxide (FTO), aluminum doped zinc oxide, and gallium doped zinc oxide.
  • ITO indium tin oxide
  • FTO fluorine doped tin oxide
  • the transparent conductor may be deposited by any suitable physical or chemical deposition process, and may have a thickness between approximately 20 nm and approximately 100 nm, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
  • the transparent conductor may allow current spreading on the p-side, contact area of the device and provide a contact layer for external electrical connection (e.g., through a contact pad, wire 175 , or conductive interconnect) to the p-side of the light-emitting device.
  • a resist 270 may be patterned over the transparent conductor, and a sequence of etching steps may be executed to form a mesa structure 205 , as depicted in FIG. 2D .
  • the resist may be a hard resist (e.g. a metal or inorganic material) or a soft resist (e.g., a polymeric resist such as photoresist).
  • the etching steps may comprise anisotropic dry etching processes (e.g., RIE) that use etchants selected for removal of the different materials in the layers.
  • GaN or III-nitride layers may be etched using chlorine-based etchants and the oxide layers may be etched using fluorine-based etchants, although other etchants may be used additionally or alternatively for the different materials.
  • inert gases such as argon may be added to the etchants.
  • the etching may proceed at least to the n-side conductive layer 224 .
  • etching may continue at least partially into the n-side conductive layer, so that the highly-doped current guiding layer 226 is removed from the surface of the conducting layer 224 around the mesa.
  • the etching exposes side surfaces of the highly-doped layer 226 .
  • the height of the mesa may be between approximately 200 nm and approximately 800 nm, in some embodiments. In other embodiments, a mesa 205 may be shorter or taller.
  • Lateral electrochemical (EC) etching may then be used to convert at least a portion of the highly-doped layer 226 to a porous semiconductor material 228 , as depicted in FIG. 2E .
  • the porous semiconductor material may be nanoporous material having a range of pore sizes less than about one micron.
  • a resistivity of the NP semiconductor material 228 may be between approximately 10 ⁇ 3 ohm-cm and approximately 0.1 ohm-cm, according to some embodiments.
  • Nanoporous (NP) GaN for example, has a fibrous microstructure that is mechanically stable. At the same time the porous nature allows deep permeation of gaseous and liquid species, so that reactions may occur deep underneath a surface of the material.
  • the lateral EC etching may be timed so that the nanoporous region extends partway into the mesa 205 , but leaves a central region 227 of the highly-doped semiconductor layer 226 unetched, so that electrical current may flow through the central region.
  • the EC etching and porosification extends between approximately 5 microns and approximately 15 microns from and edge of the mesa 205 into a the current-guiding layer.
  • the remaining unetched region may have a lateral dimension or diameter between approximately 1 micron and approximately 50 microns, according to some embodiments. Smaller or larger diameters may be implemented in other embodiments.
  • the electrochemical etching may use a hydrofluoric-based etchant, though other etchants (e.g., oxalic acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrochloric acid, potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, nitric acid, or sodium chloride) may be used in other embodiments.
  • etchants e.g., oxalic acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrochloric acid, potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, nitric acid, or sodium chloride
  • the acid or base solutions may be non-aqueous.
  • Electrochemical etching or “EC etching” is used consistently with its recognized meaning in the field of microfabrication to refer to a process in which a material is etched in an etchant bath while applying a bias voltage between the etchant (also referred to as electrolyte) and the material to be etched.
  • Electrochemical etching differs from photoelectrochemical (PEC) etching in that PEC etching requires illumination of the material for etching to occur, whereas EC etching does not require illumination of the material for etching to occur. Accordingly, EC etching is recognized in the field of microfabrication as a different process from PEC etching.
  • An advantage of EC etching is that it is not susceptible to etch-rate variations that can arise from non-uniform illumination of a material.
  • An additional advantage of EC etching is that etching can occur in buried regions or regions that may not be illuminated by external light.
  • a bias voltage may be applied between the etchant and the mesa and may have a value between approximately 5 volts and approximately 60 volts, in some embodiments. In some cases, a bias voltage may be between 1 volt and approximately 60 volts.
  • the inventors have found that the applied bias voltage may depend upon the etchant used and the doping density of the layer to be etched. Depending upon the etching parameters (doping density, etchant, temperature, and bias voltage) a III-nitride material may be either (1) not etched or etched slowly, (2) porosified, or (3) completely removed. Therefore careful control of the etching conditions is maintained to porosify a portion of the current-guiding layer 226 .
  • the light-emitting structure may subsequently be exposed to an oxidation process that converts the nanoporous region 228 into a porous oxide region 229 , as depicted in FIG. 2E .
  • nanoporous gallium nitride which conducts electricity, may be converted into a nanoporous gallium oxide, which is an insulating or highly resistive material.
  • the oxidation process may comprise subjecting the structure to a wet environment (e.g., H 2 O ambient) or an O 2 ambient at elevated temperatures for a duration between approximately 1 hour and approximately 30 hours. The temperature may be between approximately 600° C. and approximately 1000° C.
  • a photo-electrochemical (PEC) oxidation process may be used.
  • the resulting structure may include an unetched, highly-doped, semiconductor region 227 at a center of the mesa 205 , and a region of nanoporous, insulating oxide 229 that may extend partly or all around the highly-doped semiconductor region 227 .
  • the nanoporous oxide 229 may prevent current spreading on the n-side or bottom-side of the light-emitting structure, and help confine and guide electrical current through a central part of the device's active region 230 .
  • a resistivity of the nanoporous oxide 229 may be greater than approximately 10 3 ohm-cm in some implementations, and greater than approximately 10 4 ohm-cm in some embodiments.
  • contact pads or contact features may be formed on p-side and n-side conducting layers of the light-emitting structure, as depicted in FIGS. 2F-2G .
  • a first contact pad 274 may be formed on a p-side of the device (e.g., at a top of the mesa 205 ).
  • An insulating layer e.g., an oxide
  • an insulated second mesa and connecting bridge may be formed adjacent the device mesa 205 , so that a p-side contact pad 274 may extend across to the second mesa.
  • An n-side contact pad 272 may be formed on conductive layer 224 to connect with an n-side or bottom-side of the device. The n-side contact pad 272 may be formed near a base of the mesa 205 .
  • a contact pad may extend fully around a peripheral region of the mesa.
  • a contact pad may extend a portion of a way around a peripheral region of the mesa.
  • the contact pads may have any suitable shape and may include larger features (e.g., larger rectangular, polygonal, or elliptical pads) that may be used to connect to other elements of a circuit.
  • the contact pads 272 , 274 may connect to larger conductive bonding pads for wire bonding or solder bonding, for example.
  • Contact pads to the n-side and p-side layers may be formed by any suitable lithographic process.
  • One method for forming contact pads is to use a lift-off process. This may entail depositing a photoresist over the light-emitting structure, patterning the photoresist using photolithography to open up regions where the contacts will be formed, performing a metal deposition, and then dissolving any remaining photoresist and overlying metal to lift off excess metal and leave the contacts on the n-side and p-side layers of the device.
  • contacts may be formed from a metal that may be deposited during a metallization level.
  • a p-side or top-side reflector 280 may then be formed over the light-emitting structure, according to some embodiments.
  • a p-side reflector may not be used.
  • a p-side reflector may comprise one or more dielectric layers that are deposited by any suitable physical or vapor deposition process.
  • the layers of the top-side reflector may be deposited by e-beam evaporation steps.
  • the dielectric layers may have alternating values of refractive index and form a dielectric mirror.
  • the p-side reflector may comprise layers of a dielectric material alternating with layers of metal.
  • a p-side reflector may comprise a metallic layer having a thickness that reflects most of the radiation incident from the laser cavity, but transmits a small amount as the output beam 160 .
  • the metallic layer may also provide a p-side electrical contact to the device.
  • a p-side reflector may be formed using a lift-off process, according to some embodiments.
  • a resist may be patterned over the light-emitting structure, and one or multiple depositions of layers for the reflector 280 may be carried out. Subsequently, the resist may be dissolved to remove reflector material from everywhere except for a top region of the mesa 205 .
  • a resist 290 may be deposited over the light-emitting structure and a hole 292 may be patterned in the resist adjacent the mesa 205 , as depicted in FIG. 2I .
  • the hole in the resist may expose a surface area of the conducting layer 224 .
  • An etching step may then be carried out to form a via 294 into the multilayer structure.
  • the via 294 may extend through the reflector layers 215 , so as to expose edge surfaces of the heavily doped semiconductor layers 222 .
  • the etching used to form the via 294 may comprise an anisotropic dry etching process, such as RIE using chlorine-based etching chemistry.
  • the hole 292 and via 294 may have any suitable shape, e.g., circular, elliptical, square, rectangular, or polygonal.
  • a via may be formed using a laser drilling process and without the use of a resist 290 .
  • a laser beam may be focused on the substrate and the intensity varied in time to optically drill into the semiconductor layers.
  • a lateral EC etching step may then be carried out to remove portions of the highly doped layers 222 , as depicted in FIG. 2J .
  • Complete removal of the heavily doped material can be achieved under correct and controlled etching conditions.
  • a hydrofluoric-based etchant may be used and a bias between approximately 20 volts and approximately 60 volts may be applied.
  • the etching may be timed so that an etching front 295 extends partway or all the way across the mesa 205 , as depicted in FIG. 2K .
  • the removal of the heavily doped material 222 forms a semiconductor/air distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) on the bottom-side or n-side of the light-emitting device.
  • DBR distributed Bragg reflector
  • This DBR structure can provide a wide-bandwidth, high-reflectance mirror with only about four layer pairs. In some implementations, fewer layer pairs may be used.
  • the bottom-side DBR and top-side reflector 280 may form a vertical, optical resonant cavity for the light-emitting device.
  • the length of the resonant cavity may be between approximately 150 nm and approximately 5 microns, according to some embodiments.
  • the resonant cavity comprises an optical microcavity that has a length on the order of up to a few wavelengths of radiation produced in the device's active region.
  • electrical current is confined and flows centrally through the resonant cavity due to the oxide 250 and porous current-guiding region 229 .
  • FIGS. 2J-2K depict lateral etching from a single via 294 to form the semiconductor/air DBR on the bottom-side of the light-emitting device
  • multiple vias may be formed in other embodiments to carry out lateral etching from multiple points and removal of the heavily doped layers 222 .
  • FIG. 2L depicts an embodiment where two vias 294 are formed adjacent the mesa 205 .
  • Etching fronts 295 may extend from each via 294 toward a center of the mesa 205 to remove the heavily doped material 222 below the mesa.
  • regions may provide structural support near a base of the mesa, and they may be distributed evenly around the mesa.
  • the regions 297 may extend under an edge of the mesa in some embodiments, or may extend to within 50 microns or less from the edge of the mesa in some implementations.
  • the regions 297 may help mechanically stabilize the bottom-side DBR structure and maintain a longitudinal cavity length of the light-emitting device.
  • three or more vias 294 may be formed adjacent the mesa 205 , which may create additions regions 297 around the base of the mesa.
  • FIG. 2M depicts, in elevation view, an embodiment of a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser that may be manufactured according to the foregoing processes.
  • Wire bonds 170 , 175 or other external electrical connections may be connected to the contacts 274 , 272 , and used to apply an electrical bias between the p- and n-side of the light-emitting device.
  • the current-guiding oxide 250 at the p-side of the device confines electrical current to a central active region of the device.
  • the porous current-guiding oxide 229 at the n-side of the device helps confine current within the central active region, and prevents current spreading on the n-side of the device.
  • electrical current passes primarily through a central area of the device's active layer 230 , so that photons are generated in a region that spatially overlaps well with one or more cavity modes of the light-emitting device. Improved overlap between the photon generation region and the cavity modes can improve the efficiency of the light-emitting device.
  • a light-emitting device includes an n-region of the device on the bottom-side and a p-region of the device on the top-side
  • other implementations may have the n-region and p-region inverted compared to what is shown in the drawings.
  • a bottom-side reflector may be associated with a p-side of the device
  • a top-side reflector 280 may be associated with an n-side of the device.
  • FIG. 2N An alternative embodiment of a light-emitting device is depicted in FIG. 2N .
  • a trench 297 may be etched into the multilayer structure to define the device's mesa 205 , leaving device layers surrounding the mesa. This process removes less total material of the device layers while still forming a mesa.
  • an isolation trench 254 may be formed around the mesa to electrically isolate the light-emitting device from other regions of the substrate.
  • the isolation trench 254 may subsequently be filled with a field oxide 255 , and an n-side contact may be formed to extend over the field oxide 255 , as depicted in the drawing.
  • two lateral EC etching steps are used to form a bottom-side, porous, current-guiding region 229 and a bottom-side air/semiconductor DBR. In some implementations, these steps are carried out separately. In some embodiments, the steps may be carried out at a same time. For example, the doping density of the heavily doped layers 222 and current-guiding layer 226 may be selected such that complete removal of the heavily doped layers and porosification of the current-guiding layer occurs in a same etchant under a same bias. Additionally, dopant densities in the two layers and device dimensions may be tailored such that the desired etching distances are achieved for lateral porosification and material removal during a same etching time.
  • a dopant density in the heavily-doped layer may be selected to give a higher etching rate than the etching rate in the current guiding layer 226 .
  • Some examples of etchants, doping density ranges, bias voltages, and etching characteristics for GaN are listed in Table 1.
  • Example process steps were carried out for fabricating a vertical light-emitting device.
  • a layer of n-doped GaN (approximately 5 microns thick) was laterally EC etched from the edge of a mesa to create a porous region between two III-nitride layers.
  • the electrochemical etchant was 1:1 HF:H 2 O, and EC etching was carried out at room temperature and bias voltages ranging between 7 V and 20 V.
  • the rate of lateral porosification varied from about 1 micron/minute to about 10 microns/min, depending on the bias voltage used.
  • FIG. 3A represents a cross-sectional scanning-electron micrograph of a mesa structure having an n-type GaN layer 228 .
  • the layer has been laterally etched to form a porous semiconductor region between two III-nitride semiconductor layers 310 , 312 that bound the bottom and top of the porous region. Because of their different doping densities, the adjacent III-nitride layers have not been porosified.
  • the porous region comprises single-crystalline nanoporous (NP) GaN.
  • NP nanoporous
  • FIG. 3B shows a plan-view, microscope image of a laterally-porosified semiconductor region 315 that lies between the two unetched layers of FIG. 3A .
  • a square-shaped mesa structure measuring about 300 microns on a side was subjected to a timed lateral EC etching process. The etch was stopped to leave a highly-doped semiconductor region 320 (dark polygon) at the center of the mesa.
  • the highly-doped region may provide a vertical current path for a light-emitting device.
  • Lateral porosification extends for up to or more than 100 microns into the mesa.
  • Oxidation of NP GaN was carried out, and the resulting oxidized structure was compared the microstructure before oxidation.
  • a portion of the nanoporous structure before oxidation is shown in FIG. 3C .
  • pore sizes of a laterally porosified region 315 range between about 200 nm down to about 20 nm.
  • the oxidation took place at about 900° C. in air for 4 hours.
  • the microstructure after oxidation portion shown in FIG. 3D remained largely unchanged, but the fibrous nanostructure was converted from conductive GaN to GaO x an insulator.
  • FIG. 4 shows the x-ray diffraction curves (2 ⁇ - ⁇ scans) from a porosified GaN sample before, during, and after oxidation.
  • the as-porosified GaN sample shows a strong (002) peak from GaN at about 34.6°. After 4 hours of oxidation, the sample shows the emergence of a (311) peak due to the formation of monoclinic GaO x at around 38.2°.
  • the as-porosified NP GaN exhibited a carrier concentration of 7 ⁇ 10 17 cm ⁇ 3 and a mobility of approximately 30 cm 2 /V-sec. After oxidation, the fibrous structure becomes highly resistive.
  • the resistivity of the porous oxide is measured to be greater than 10 4 ohm-cm, which is an increase by at least six orders of magnitude compared to the unetched GaN layer.
  • a porous, oxidized, current-guiding region 229 can then prevent current spreading on the bottom-side of a light-emitting device, and improve VCSEL performance.
  • An n-side or bottom side DBR was formed from four layer pairs of alternating heavily-doped and undoped GaN layers. The heavily doped layers were completely removed by lateral EC etching to produce four air/GaN layer pairs for the DBR structure. The formation of air-gaps was confirmed by scanning electron microscopy. Micro-reflectance measurements (curve 520 ) were made and the results are plotted against simulated results 510 for the DBR structure, as shown in FIG. 5 . The results show that over 98% peak reflectance with a stopband of over 150 nm can be achieved with just four pairs of GaN/air layers.
  • Methods and structures described above for fabricating III-nitride vertical light-emitting devices may have certain advantages over conventional methods for fabricating VCSELs, for example.
  • the fabrication of GaN/air-gap DBRs (with only a few layer pairs needed) may be an easier manufacturing process than the epitaxial growth of tens of layer pairs for AlGaN/GaN DBRs.
  • the techniques for forming bottom-side reflectors can avoid wafer or laser lift-off (LLO) processes and may be compatible with conventional and mature LED processing.
  • the use of GaN/air-gap DBRs enables true microcavity fabrication with a cavity length on the order of the lasing wavelength, which may not be possible with epitaxial of DBR structures having tens of semiconductor/semiconductor layers or with laser lift-off structures.
  • the use of porosification and oxidation processes can enable the creation of a current-guiding layer on the n-side of a vertical light-emitting device, which can improve device efficiency and performance.
  • the methods and structures exhibit substrate-independence.
  • the methods may be implemented with sapphire, GaN, Si, or SiC substrates, whereas conventional lift-off techniques for GaN devices may only be possible with sapphire substrates.
  • the use of conductivity-based electrochemical (EC) etching may be easier during manufacture than photo-electrochemical (PEC) etching processes that can require difficult growth and etching steps needing uniform illumination.
  • the terms “approximately” and “about” may be used to mean within ⁇ 20% of a target dimension in some embodiments, within ⁇ 10% of a target dimension in some embodiments, within ⁇ 5% of a target dimension in some embodiments, and yet within ⁇ 2% of a target dimension in some embodiments.
  • the terms “approximately” and “about” may include the target dimension.
  • Selective etching comprises subjecting a substrate to an etchant that preferentially etches at least one material at a faster rate than a second material.
  • the second material may be formed as a hard mask (e.g., an inorganic material such as an oxide, nitride, metal, or the like) or soft mask (e.g., a photoresist or polymer).
  • the second material may be part of a device structure that has different material characteristics than the first material (e.g., doping density, material composition, or crystal structure).
  • the etch may be a dry etch or wet etch.
  • the technology described herein may be embodied as a method, of which at least one example has been provided.
  • the acts performed as part of the method may be ordered in any suitable way. Accordingly, embodiments may be constructed in which acts are performed in an order different than illustrated, which may include performing some acts simultaneously, even though shown as sequential acts in illustrative embodiments. Additionally, a method may include more acts than those illustrated, in some embodiments, and fewer acts than those illustrated in other embodiments.
  • a light-emitting device fabricated according to the present teachings may be formed in an integrated circuit in large numbers and at high densities.
  • the light-emitting devices may be used in consumer electronic devices such as smart phones, tablets, PDA's, computers, televisions, sensors, lighting, projectors, displays, as well as application-specific integrated circuits.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Semiconductor Lasers (AREA)

Abstract

Methods and structures for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices are described. An n-side or bottom-side layer may be laterally etched to form a porous semiconductor region and converted to a porous oxide. The porous oxide can provide a current-blocking and guiding layer that aids in directing bias current through an active area of the light-emitting device. Distributed Bragg reflectors may be fabricated on both sides of the active region to form a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser. The light-emitting devices may be formed from III-nitride materials.

Description

RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional Application Ser. No. 61/980,313, titled “A Method for a GaN Vertical Microcavity Surface Emitting Laser (VCSEL),” filed on Apr. 16, 2014. The entire disclosure of the foregoing application is incorporated herein by reference.
GOVERNMENT FUNDING
This invention was made with government support under Grant No. CMMI-1129964 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in the invention.
BACKGROUND
Technical Field
The technology relates to methods and structures for making vertical-cavity light-emitting devices.
Discussion of the Related Art
Early types of semiconductor laser diodes that are still in use today, known as edge-emitting laser diodes, are designed to emit radiation from an edge of a laser diode chip. In these devices, the direction or beam axis of the laser cavity and the direction of the emitted lasing beam are parallel to a “process” plane of the semiconductor substrate on which the edge-emitting lasers are formed. Typically, after the laser diodes are formed, the substrate is diced or cleaved to form a laser diode chip, the chip is packaged, a current is applied across the laser diode's junction, and laser radiation is emitted from an edge of the chip.
A vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) is a type of semiconductor laser that was conceptualized and developed in the 1980s and '90s. VCSELs are characterized by the formation of a vertical laser cavity that is oriented perpendicular to the process plane of the substrate on which the laser is formed. The laser cavity may be defined by two parallel optical reflectors sandwiching an active region of the laser diode. VCSELs may also be diced from a substrate and packaged. Lasing radiation for a VCSEL is emitted in a direction that is out of the process plane of the chip, and is perpendicular to the direction of emission for an edge-emitting laser diode.
Compared with conventional edge-emitting laser diodes, a VCSEL may have advantages of (1) on-wafer testing of device performance, (2) better beam profile and far-field patterns, (3) better mode stability and wider free spectral range due to a shorter cavity length, (4) possibility of a very low threshold current, (5) a generally higher manufacturing yield, (6) a higher packing density on a substrate and therefore lower cost, and (7) improved compatibility with planar microfabrication techniques. VCSELs in the infrared and red spectral range are currently being used for telecommunication and industrial applications.
SUMMARY
Methods and structures associated with fabricating vertical light-emitting devices such as VCSELs are described. The methods may be used to fabricate VCSELs from III-nitride materials such as gallium nitride (GaN). Conductivity-based electrochemical (EC) etching may be used during fabrication to form a semiconductor/air distributed Bragg reflector and a current-guiding structure on the bottom side of a vertical light-emitting device. The current-guiding structure may enhance a spatial overlap between an active region of the device (where carrier recombination takes place) and a resonant cavity of the device. The current-guiding structure may be formed from a portion of a semiconductor layer that is first converted to porous semiconductor, and then converted to a porous oxide.
According to some embodiments, a semiconductor light-emitting device comprises a substrate, an active region comprising semiconductor material, wherein the active region has a first area, a doped semiconductor region located between the active region and the substrate having a second area smaller than the first area, and a porous oxide extending around the doped semiconductor region and located between the active region and the substrate. At least a portion of the active region may be configured for carrier recombination and photon generation.
According to some aspects, the active region and doped semiconductor region comprise III-nitride material. In some implementations, the porous oxide may comprise gallium oxide, aluminum-gallium oxide, or indium-gallium oxide. In some aspects, the porous oxide may be formed in and from a same layer of material as the doped semiconductor region. In some implementations, the doped semiconductor region comprises n-type conductivity material. In some aspects, the active region may be configured to produce photons when electrical current flows through the active region. According to some implementations, the active region comprises multiple quantum wells formed from layers of III-nitride material.
In some aspects, a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a contact layer of semiconductor material formed between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate, wherein a doping density of the contact layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor region. In some implementations, a doping density of the contact layer is between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3 and a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
In some implementations, a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate. The first distributed Bragg reflector may comprise alternating layers of air and III-nitride material. In some aspects, a semiconductor light-emitting device may further include at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector. In some cases, a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a conductive layer having a doping density between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3 located between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector, and an undoped semiconductor layer between the conductive layer and the first distributed Bragg reflector, wherein a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
According to some implementations, a semiconductor light-emitting device may further comprise a second distributed Bragg reflector located on a side of the active region away from the substrate. In some aspects, the second distributed Bragg reflector may comprise layers of dielectric material.
The foregoing aspects, implementations, and features may be included in any suitable combination in an embodiment of a semiconductor light-emitting device, and may be included in any suitable combination in one or more of the following method embodiments for making an integrated light-emitting device.
According to some embodiments, a method for making an integrated light-emitting device may comprise acts of forming a mesa on a substrate that comprises an active region of semiconductor material and a doped semiconductor layer located between the active region and substrate, etching a portion of the doped semiconductor layer to form a porous semiconductor region extending around a remaining doped and unetched semiconductor region, wherein the porous semiconductor region and doped semiconductor region are located between the active region and the substrate, and converting the porous semiconductor region to a porous oxide.
In some aspects, forming the doped semiconductor layer may comprise epitaxially growing an n-type conductivity layer of III-nitride material. A method may further include forming a contact layer of semiconductor material adjacent the doped semiconductor layer, wherein a doping density of the contact layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor layer. In some implementations, a method may further include forming the doped semiconductor layer and contact layer from III-nitride material, doping the contact layer with a doping density between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3, and doping the doped semiconductor layer with a doping density between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
According to some implementations, the etching comprises electrochemical etching with a hydrofluoric-based etchant. The etching may further comprise applying a bias between approximately 7 volts and approximately 20 volts between the semiconductor layer and an electrode in the etchant. In some aspects, converting the porous semiconductor region comprises oxidizing the porous semiconductor to form gallium oxide.
In some implementations, a method for making an integrated light-emitting device may further comprise forming a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate. The act of forming the first distributed Bragg reflector may comprise epitaxially growing one or more layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material and on or more layers of undoped III-nitride semiconductor material, etching a hole adjacent the mesa to expose sidewalls of the layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material, and electrochemically etching at least a portion of the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material to form at least one air gap between the mesa and the substrate.
In some implementations, the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material comprise GaN and have a doping density between approximately 8×1018 cm−3 and approximately 5×1019 cm−3. The etching a portion of the doped semiconductor layer and electrochemically etching at least a portion of the layer or layers of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material may be performed in a same etching step. A method for making an integrated light-emitting device may further comprise forming at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector.
In some implementations, a method may further comprise forming a second distributed Bragg reflector located on a side of the active region away from the substrate. Forming the second distributed Bragg reflector may comprise depositing layers of dielectric material.
The foregoing and other aspects, embodiments, and features of the present teachings can be more fully understood from the following description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The skilled artisan will understand that the figures, described herein, are for illustration purposes only. It is to be understood that in some instances various aspects of the embodiments may be shown exaggerated or enlarged to facilitate an understanding of the embodiments. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the teachings. In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to like features, functionally similar and/or structurally similar elements throughout the various figures. Where the drawings relate to microfabrication of integrated devices, only one device may be shown to simplify the drawings. In practice, a large plurality of devices may be fabricated in parallel. The drawings are not intended to limit the scope of the present teachings in any way.
FIG. 1 is a perspective view depicting a vertical-cavity light-emitting device, according to some embodiments;
FIGS. 2A-2F depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments;
FIG. 2G depicts, in plan view, contact pads for a vertical-cavity light-emitting device, according to some embodiments;
FIGS. 2H-2J depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments;
FIG. 2K-2L depict, in plan view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments;
FIGS. 2M-2N depict, in elevation view, structures associated with processes for forming vertical-cavity light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments;
FIGS. 3A-3B are scanning-electron micrographs showing lateral porosification of a GaN semiconductor layer;
FIG. 3C is a scanning-electron micrograph showing porous GaN;
FIG. 3D is a scanning-electron micrograph showing porous GaOx that has been formed from porous GaN;
FIG. 4 illustrates x-ray diffraction measurements associated with oxidation of porous GaN; and
FIG. 5 illustrates simulated (curve 510) and measured (curve 520) reflectance of an air/GaN distributed Bragg reflector.
When referring to the drawings in the following detailed description, spatial references “top,” “bottom,” “upper,” “lower,” “vertical,” “horizontal,” and the like may be used. For example, “vertical” may be used to refer to a direction normal to the substrate surface, and “horizontal” may be used to refer to a direction parallel to the substrate surface when referring to the drawings. “Upper,” “top,” or “above” may be used to refer to a vertical direction away from the substrate, whereas “lower,” “bottom,” or “below” may be used to refer to a vertical direction toward the substrate. Such references are used for teaching purposes, and are not intended as absolute references for embodied devices. An embodied device may be oriented spatially in any suitable manner that may be different from the orientations shown in the drawings.
The features and advantages of the embodiments will become more apparent from the detailed description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Among the various types of vertical-cavity light-emitting devices possible with the processes described herein, a GaN VCSEL is expected to be an important new device configuration for high-end lighting applications such as automobile headlight, micro-projector, and low-droop, high-power lamps. A GaN VCSEL can access the purple/blue spectral range (400-450 nm), which is useful for high-brightness white-light sources. Currently, difficulties associated with fabricating vertical cavities in III-nitride systems have impeded the commercial realization of GaN VCSELs.
FIG. 1 depicts a simplified diagram of a vertical-cavity light-emitting device 100. A vertical-cavity light-emitting device 100 may be a VCSEL or a resonant-cavity light-emitting diode, and may be formed on a process plane 102 of a substrate 105. The process plane of a substrate may be a side or surface of the substrate on which layers are deposited and processed to form one or more integrated devices. A light-emitting device 100 may include at least one n-side semiconductor layer 120, at least one p-side semiconductor layer 140, and an active region 130 in which photons are generated. A light-emitting device may further include a bottom-side reflector (not shown) and top-side reflector 150 that may form a laser cavity. In some implementations, only a bottom-side reflector may be used to redirect light emission away from the substrate, e.g., to improve emission from a light-emitting diode (LED). Electrical wires 170, 175 or integrated interconnects may electrically connect to p- and n-side contacts for applying a bias across the device. When biased, recombining carriers in the active region 130 generate photons, and a beam of radiation 160 emits vertically from the device.
A vertical-cavity light-emitting device that is formed as a VCSEL may include bottom-side and top-side reflectors. The principle of light amplification in a VCSEL is not very different from that in conventional laser diodes. Applying electrical bias across the laser diode's p- and n-type layers and active region causes the injection of electrons and holes from the n-type 120 and p-type 140 layers, respectively, into the active region 130. The electrons and holes recombine radiatively to create photons, or electromagnetic radiation. Under a sufficiently high level of current injection, the active region 130 can reach population inversion and photon amplification by stimulated emission can occur. If the cavity reflectors have a sufficiently high reflectance, round-trip gain in the laser cavity may equal round-trip loss so that continuous-wave lasing operation is sustained producing an output laser beam 160.
In some implementations, a laser cavity for a VCSEL may be formed as a microcavity. A microcavity may have a length L that has a value similar to or within a factor of 5 of the lasing wavelength for the VCSEL. A length of a microcavity may be an integral number of half-wavelengths, according to some embodiments, where the length accounts for refractive indices of materials within the microcavity. For example, the cavity reflectors are effectively located at nodes of a standing optical wave that is amplified within the laser cavity. In some embodiments, a microcavity VCSEL may have a distance L between its cavity reflectors between approximately 80 nanometers and approximately 2 microns. The behavior of electromagnetic waves inside a microcavity may be defined by allowable longitudinal optical modes of the microcavity. For example, photons in certain allowed modes will be amplified through stimulated emission, leading to highly efficient generation of coherent photons.
The inventors have recognized and appreciated that successful fabrication of vertical-cavity light-emitting devices may include (1) forming an efficient active region for carrier-photon conversion, (2) forming integrated, high-quality reflectors on opposing sides of the active region, and (3) controlling spatial flow of current through the active region such that photon production by carrier recombination overlaps well with modes of a resonant cavity formed by the high-quality reflectors. The inventors have observed that since 1999, there have been few demonstrations of VCSEL operation in III-nitride materials, and believe this is primarily due to fabrication challenges posed by the integrated reflectors (item 2), and more particularly the bottom-side reflector. Although their have been limited demonstrations of III-nitride VCSELs, these devices are not yet commercially available.
Two teams (Tokyo University and Sandia Labs/Brown University) demonstrated the use of epitaxial AlGaN/GaN distributed Bragg reflectors (DBR) as the bottom-side reflectors with dielectric oxide stacks as the top-side reflectors. This hybrid configuration led to the first demonstration of an electrically-injected VCSEL in 2008. However, the inventors recognize that preparation of the bottom DBRs by epitaxy is very difficult. A large number (40 to 60) of AlGaN/GaN pairs are required to achieve a high reflectivity (R˜99%) due to the very low contrast of index of refraction between AlGaN and GaN layers. Also, the control of strain induced by epitaxial growth of the different layers is another significant challenge for that reflector structure. Further, the AlGaN/GaN multi-layer reflector has a very narrow bandwidth (˜15 nm), which makes it difficult to fabricate the structure to match allowed lasing wavelengths for the VCSEL.
In another approach, Nichia Chemical used a laser liftoff (LLO) technique to separate an InGaN/GaN p-n epitaxial structure from a sapphire substrate, and to expose the bottom side (n-side) for the deposition of a dielectric mirror. Although this approach can avoid the complexity of a multi-layer epitaxial DBR reflector, the use of LLO adds other processing complexity, and it essentially voids the advantage of on-wafer testing. Further, LLO typically requires a relatively thick active region for the laser, which increases the cavity length and reduces the mode spacing for a laser. This can degrade the longitudinal mode quality of a VCSEL.
In both of these approaches for fabricating VCSELs, a dielectric current-blocking layer was employed on the p-side or top-side of the device. The inventors have recognized and appreciated that current diffusion on the n-side or bottom-side could undermine device performance, and that implementing current blocking on the bottom-side poses fabrication challenges. For example, addition of an oxide blocking layer can disrupt epitaxial growth.
The inventors have conceived of methods and structures for fabricating vertical-cavity light-emitting devices that include bottom-side, wide-band, high-reflectance mirrors and bottom-side current-guiding structures that can prevent unwanted current spreading at the active region. In some embodiments, the methods and structures may be used for manufacturing III-nitride VCSEL devices with reduced complexity and allow for on-wafer testing. According to some embodiments, a bottom-side or n-side reflector may be formed through lateral electrochemical (EC) etching as a GaN/air multilayer DBR. Because of the refractive index contrast for the semiconductor/air DBR, the bottom-side reflector exhibits a wider bandwidth (˜150 nm) with only four layer pairs than conventional AlGaN/GaN DBR structures having 40 to 60 layer pairs. Additionally, a bottom-side current-guiding and blocking layer may be formed by lateral porosification of highly-doped GaN to a selected distance using EC etching, followed by a controlled oxidation to convert the nanoporous GaN to an insulating nanoporous gallium oxide.
The processes described below may be used with various types of III-nitride materials (e.g., GaN and GaN alloys such as InGaN, AlGaN, InGaAlN, etc.) When other III-nitride materials are used, the conversion of nanoporous material may result in other oxides, e.g., indium-gallium oxide, aluminum-gallium oxide, indium-gallium-aluminum oxide, etc. In other implementations, the processes may be extended to other semiconductor systems (e.g., Si, SiC, InP, GaAs, and their respective alloys) for which EC etching conditions are known.
FIG. 2A-2N depicts structures associated with process steps for manufacturing vertical-oriented light-emitting devices, according to some embodiments. The processes and structures may be used to form VSCELs or vertical resonant-cavity LEDs, according to some embodiments. Alternatively, some of the processes and structures may be used to form vertical-oriented LEDs with a bottom-side reflector, in some implementations. The bottom-side reflectors, bottom-side current-guiding structures, and devices may be formed from III-nitride materials. Although the following description primarily identifies GaN as used for forming a VCSEL, other III-nitride materials may be used additionally or alternatively, e.g., (Al, In, Ga)N materials.
According to some embodiments, a vertical-oriented light-emitting device may be fabricated using a multilayer structure 201 comprising a substrate 105, as depicted in FIG. 2A. The substrate 105 may comprise a semiconductor (e.g., Si, SiC, GaN) in some embodiments, a crystalline material (e.g., Al2O3) in some embodiments, a ceramic in some implementations, or any suitable substrate on which integrated-circuit grade, semiconductor layers may be formed or bonded. The multilayer structure may include reflector layers 215 and device layers 235 formed adjacent the reflector layers. There may be one or more intervening layers between the reflector layers and adjacent device layers.
According to some embodiments, a base layer 210 may be epitaxially grown from the substrate 105 or from a buffer layer (e.g., AlN, SiC, Al2O3) deposited on a substrate. In some embodiments, the base layer may be bonded to the substrate 105. The base layer may comprise a III-nitride material that is undoped, according to some embodiment. For example, the base layer 210 may comprise undoped or unintentionally-doped gallium nitride (u-GaN). A doping density of the base layer may be less than 1017 cm−3.
In some implementations, the base layer 210 may be between approximately 100 nm and approximately 2 microns thick. The base layer may be grown to a thickness for which a density of defects (resulting from epitaxial growth of a lattice-mismatched semiconductor) reduces to levels acceptable for integrated-circuit devices. For example, a density of defects at a top surface of the base layer 210 may be less than about 109 defects cm−2 in some embodiments, less than about 106 defects cm−2 in some embodiments, less than about 104 defects cm−2 in some embodiments, less than about 102 defects cm−2 in some embodiments, and yet less than about 10 defects cm−2 in some embodiments.
Reflector layers 215 may be formed (e.g., by epitaxial growth) over the base layer 210. The reflector layers may be formed using any suitable chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process (such as metalorganic chemical vapor deposition) or an atomic layer deposition (ALD) process. The reflector layers may comprise one or more layer pairs of alternating conductivity. In some embodiments, a layer pair may comprise a first layer 222 of heavily doped (n++ doping) n-type III-nitride material and a second layer 212 of undoped or unintentionally-doped III-nitride material. A doping density of the heavily doped layers may be between approximately 8×1018 cm−3 and approximately 5×1019 cm−3, according to some embodiments. There may be between 1 and 10 reflector layer pairs for the bottom-side reflector. In some implementations, there may be four or five reflector layer pairs.
Thicknesses of the reflector layers 215 may be such that a respective layer corresponds to an odd number of quarter wavelengths (e.g., λ/4, 3λ/4, 5λ/4, etc.) for a peak emission wavelength λ (measured in air) that will be emitted by the finished light-emitting device. In some embodiments, the undoped layers 212 remain in a finished device, so that the refractive index of the layer should be taken into account when determining a thickness for the layers. For example, a layer thickness 3λ/4 may be reduced by the refractive index value n212 for determining the thicknesses of the undoped layers 212. Portions of the heavily doped layers 222 may be removed in a finished device (at least adjacent an active area of the light-emitting device), so that the layer thickness may be an odd number of quarter wavelengths as measured in air.
In some implementations, an undoped highly resistive layer 214 (e.g., a layer having a resistivity greater than approximately 103 ohm-cm) may be formed over the reflector layers, e.g., by epitaxial growth. The resistive layer may comprise a III-nitride material. In some implementations, the resistive layer 214 electrically isolates the reflector layers and lower substrate from the device. The resistive layer 214 may also provide a crystal template for subsequent growth of the device layers. In some embodiments, the undoped layer 214 may provide a spacing function. For example, the undoped layer 214 may be used to adjust an optical distance between the two cavity reflectors of a microcavity laser, so that the two reflectors are effectively located at nodes of a standing optical wave within the laser cavity.
Device layers 224, 226, 230, 240, may all be formed over the resistive layer 214. Some device layers may be formed by epitaxial growth (e.g., using any suitable chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process or atomic layer deposition (ALD) process), during which dopants may be added to dope the layers to a selected doping density. According to some embodiments, a lightly doped (n doping) n-side conductive layer 224 comprising III-nitride material may be formed adjacent the resistive layer 214. A dopant density for the conductive layer may be between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3. The conductive layer 224 may have n-type conductivity and be used in a finished device for external electrical connection, for example, through a contact pad, wire 175, or conductive interconnect formed to contact the conductive layer. A thickness of the conductive layer may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
A highly doped (n+ doping) current-guiding layer 226 comprising III-nitride material may be formed adjacent the conductive layer 224. According to some embodiments, a dopant density for the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3. The conductivity of the current-guiding layer 226 may be n-type. A resistivity of the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 5×10−4 ohm-cm and approximately 0.01 ohm-cm, in some embodiments. A thickness of the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments. In some implementations, the current-guiding layer may be between approximately 100 nm and approximately 250 nm thick.
An active layer 230 may then be formed adjacent the current-guiding layer 226. The active layer may be configured to generate photons through carrier recombination. In some embodiments, the active layer may comprise a p-n or p-i-n junction for a light-emitting diode. In some implementations, the active layer 230 comprises multiple thin layers of alternating heterogeneous III-nitride materials that form a multiple quantum well (MQW) structure. For example, an MQW structure may comprise alternating layers of InGaN and GaN, according to some embodiments. In some aspects, an MQW structure may comprise AlInGaN and GaN layers. There may be between two and twenty such layer pairs in an MQW structure. A thickness of the active layer 230 may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 200 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some cases.
In some implementations, a p-side conductive layer 240 is formed adjacent the active layer. The p-side conductive layer may be formed from a III-nitride material (e.g., p-GaN:Mg), and have a doping density between approximately 1015 cm−3 and approximately 1019 cm−3. A thickness of the p-side conductive layer 240 may be between approximately 50 nm and approximately 500 nm, according to some embodiments, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments.
In some implementations, the resistive layer 214, conductive layer 224, current-guiding layer 226 and p-side conductive layer 240 all comprise device-quality GaN semiconductor material. In other implementations, other materials may be used. In some implementations, combinations of III-nitride materials may be used in a device. For example, some layers may comprise GaN whereas other layers may comprise AlGaN and/or InGaN.
Referring to FIG. 2B and according to some embodiments, a current-blocking insulator 250 may be patterned on the p-side or top-side conductive layer 240. The current-blocking insulator may comprise an oxide or insulating nitride, and may be deposited by a physical deposition process (e.g., e-beam evaporation) or other suitable deposition process (e.g., plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (PECVD)). A thickness of the insulator may be between approximately 20 nm and approximately 100 nm, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in other embodiments. A via 252 may be patterned in the current-blocking insulator 250 using any suitable lithography process (e.g., photolithography). A lithograph process may comprise depositing a resist, patterning the resist to remove a portion where the via 252 is to be formed, etching the via through the insulating layer 250, and removing the remaining resist. The etching may comprise a dry etch (e.g., reactive ion etching (RIE)) or a wet etch. The via 252 may define the location of a vertical cavity for a light-emitting device, and provide a path for vertical current flow.
A transparent conductor 260 may be deposited over the layers as depicted in FIG. 2C. The transparent conductor may comprise indium tin oxide (ITO), according to some embodiments, though other transparent conductors may be used, such as fluorine doped tin oxide (FTO), aluminum doped zinc oxide, and gallium doped zinc oxide. The transparent conductor may be deposited by any suitable physical or chemical deposition process, and may have a thickness between approximately 20 nm and approximately 100 nm, though smaller or greater thicknesses may be used in some embodiments. The transparent conductor may allow current spreading on the p-side, contact area of the device and provide a contact layer for external electrical connection (e.g., through a contact pad, wire 175, or conductive interconnect) to the p-side of the light-emitting device.
According to some embodiments, a resist 270 may be patterned over the transparent conductor, and a sequence of etching steps may be executed to form a mesa structure 205, as depicted in FIG. 2D. The resist may be a hard resist (e.g. a metal or inorganic material) or a soft resist (e.g., a polymeric resist such as photoresist). The etching steps may comprise anisotropic dry etching processes (e.g., RIE) that use etchants selected for removal of the different materials in the layers. For example, GaN or III-nitride layers may be etched using chlorine-based etchants and the oxide layers may be etched using fluorine-based etchants, although other etchants may be used additionally or alternatively for the different materials. In some implementations, inert gases such as argon may be added to the etchants. The etching may proceed at least to the n-side conductive layer 224. In some implementations, etching may continue at least partially into the n-side conductive layer, so that the highly-doped current guiding layer 226 is removed from the surface of the conducting layer 224 around the mesa. In various embodiments, the etching exposes side surfaces of the highly-doped layer 226. The height of the mesa may be between approximately 200 nm and approximately 800 nm, in some embodiments. In other embodiments, a mesa 205 may be shorter or taller.
Lateral electrochemical (EC) etching may then be used to convert at least a portion of the highly-doped layer 226 to a porous semiconductor material 228, as depicted in FIG. 2E. The porous semiconductor material may be nanoporous material having a range of pore sizes less than about one micron. A resistivity of the NP semiconductor material 228 may be between approximately 10−3 ohm-cm and approximately 0.1 ohm-cm, according to some embodiments. Nanoporous (NP) GaN, for example, has a fibrous microstructure that is mechanically stable. At the same time the porous nature allows deep permeation of gaseous and liquid species, so that reactions may occur deep underneath a surface of the material.
The lateral EC etching may be timed so that the nanoporous region extends partway into the mesa 205, but leaves a central region 227 of the highly-doped semiconductor layer 226 unetched, so that electrical current may flow through the central region. According to some embodiments, the EC etching and porosification extends between approximately 5 microns and approximately 15 microns from and edge of the mesa 205 into a the current-guiding layer. The remaining unetched region may have a lateral dimension or diameter between approximately 1 micron and approximately 50 microns, according to some embodiments. Smaller or larger diameters may be implemented in other embodiments. In some embodiments, the electrochemical etching may use a hydrofluoric-based etchant, though other etchants (e.g., oxalic acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrochloric acid, potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, nitric acid, or sodium chloride) may be used in other embodiments. In some implementations, the acid or base solutions may be non-aqueous.
The phrase “electrochemical etching” or “EC etching” is used consistently with its recognized meaning in the field of microfabrication to refer to a process in which a material is etched in an etchant bath while applying a bias voltage between the etchant (also referred to as electrolyte) and the material to be etched. Electrochemical etching differs from photoelectrochemical (PEC) etching in that PEC etching requires illumination of the material for etching to occur, whereas EC etching does not require illumination of the material for etching to occur. Accordingly, EC etching is recognized in the field of microfabrication as a different process from PEC etching. An advantage of EC etching is that it is not susceptible to etch-rate variations that can arise from non-uniform illumination of a material. An additional advantage of EC etching is that etching can occur in buried regions or regions that may not be illuminated by external light.
During EC etching of the highly-doped current-guiding layer 226, a bias voltage may be applied between the etchant and the mesa and may have a value between approximately 5 volts and approximately 60 volts, in some embodiments. In some cases, a bias voltage may be between 1 volt and approximately 60 volts. The inventors have found that the applied bias voltage may depend upon the etchant used and the doping density of the layer to be etched. Depending upon the etching parameters (doping density, etchant, temperature, and bias voltage) a III-nitride material may be either (1) not etched or etched slowly, (2) porosified, or (3) completely removed. Therefore careful control of the etching conditions is maintained to porosify a portion of the current-guiding layer 226.
The light-emitting structure may subsequently be exposed to an oxidation process that converts the nanoporous region 228 into a porous oxide region 229, as depicted in FIG. 2E. For example, nanoporous gallium nitride, which conducts electricity, may be converted into a nanoporous gallium oxide, which is an insulating or highly resistive material. The oxidation process may comprise subjecting the structure to a wet environment (e.g., H2O ambient) or an O2 ambient at elevated temperatures for a duration between approximately 1 hour and approximately 30 hours. The temperature may be between approximately 600° C. and approximately 1000° C. In some embodiments, a photo-electrochemical (PEC) oxidation process may be used. The resulting structure may include an unetched, highly-doped, semiconductor region 227 at a center of the mesa 205, and a region of nanoporous, insulating oxide 229 that may extend partly or all around the highly-doped semiconductor region 227. The nanoporous oxide 229 may prevent current spreading on the n-side or bottom-side of the light-emitting structure, and help confine and guide electrical current through a central part of the device's active region 230. A resistivity of the nanoporous oxide 229 may be greater than approximately 103 ohm-cm in some implementations, and greater than approximately 104 ohm-cm in some embodiments.
According to some embodiments, contact pads or contact features may be formed on p-side and n-side conducting layers of the light-emitting structure, as depicted in FIGS. 2F-2G. In some embodiments, a first contact pad 274 may be formed on a p-side of the device (e.g., at a top of the mesa 205). An insulating layer (e.g., an oxide) may be deposited before forming the top-side contact pad to prevent unwanted shorting of device layers along the edge of the mesa, in some embodiments. In some implementations, an insulated second mesa and connecting bridge (not shown) may be formed adjacent the device mesa 205, so that a p-side contact pad 274 may extend across to the second mesa. An n-side contact pad 272 may be formed on conductive layer 224 to connect with an n-side or bottom-side of the device. The n-side contact pad 272 may be formed near a base of the mesa 205. In some embodiments, a contact pad may extend fully around a peripheral region of the mesa. In some implementations, a contact pad may extend a portion of a way around a peripheral region of the mesa. The contact pads may have any suitable shape and may include larger features (e.g., larger rectangular, polygonal, or elliptical pads) that may be used to connect to other elements of a circuit. In some embodiments, the contact pads 272, 274 may connect to larger conductive bonding pads for wire bonding or solder bonding, for example.
Contact pads to the n-side and p-side layers may be formed by any suitable lithographic process. One method for forming contact pads is to use a lift-off process. This may entail depositing a photoresist over the light-emitting structure, patterning the photoresist using photolithography to open up regions where the contacts will be formed, performing a metal deposition, and then dissolving any remaining photoresist and overlying metal to lift off excess metal and leave the contacts on the n-side and p-side layers of the device. According to some embodiments, contacts may be formed from a metal that may be deposited during a metallization level.
Referring to FIG. 2H, a p-side or top-side reflector 280 may then be formed over the light-emitting structure, according to some embodiments. In some embodiments, a p-side reflector may not be used. A p-side reflector may comprise one or more dielectric layers that are deposited by any suitable physical or vapor deposition process. In some embodiments, the layers of the top-side reflector may be deposited by e-beam evaporation steps. In some cases, the dielectric layers may have alternating values of refractive index and form a dielectric mirror. In some aspects, the p-side reflector may comprise layers of a dielectric material alternating with layers of metal. In other implementations, a p-side reflector may comprise a metallic layer having a thickness that reflects most of the radiation incident from the laser cavity, but transmits a small amount as the output beam 160. In some embodiments, the metallic layer may also provide a p-side electrical contact to the device.
A p-side reflector may be formed using a lift-off process, according to some embodiments. For example, a resist may be patterned over the light-emitting structure, and one or multiple depositions of layers for the reflector 280 may be carried out. Subsequently, the resist may be dissolved to remove reflector material from everywhere except for a top region of the mesa 205.
According to some embodiments, a resist 290 may be deposited over the light-emitting structure and a hole 292 may be patterned in the resist adjacent the mesa 205, as depicted in FIG. 2I. The hole in the resist may expose a surface area of the conducting layer 224. An etching step may then be carried out to form a via 294 into the multilayer structure. In various embodiments, the via 294 may extend through the reflector layers 215, so as to expose edge surfaces of the heavily doped semiconductor layers 222. The etching used to form the via 294 may comprise an anisotropic dry etching process, such as RIE using chlorine-based etching chemistry. The hole 292 and via 294 may have any suitable shape, e.g., circular, elliptical, square, rectangular, or polygonal.
In some embodiments, a via may be formed using a laser drilling process and without the use of a resist 290. For example, a laser beam may be focused on the substrate and the intensity varied in time to optically drill into the semiconductor layers.
After formation of the via 294, a lateral EC etching step may then be carried out to remove portions of the highly doped layers 222, as depicted in FIG. 2J. Complete removal of the heavily doped material can be achieved under correct and controlled etching conditions. For example, a hydrofluoric-based etchant may be used and a bias between approximately 20 volts and approximately 60 volts may be applied. The etching may be timed so that an etching front 295 extends partway or all the way across the mesa 205, as depicted in FIG. 2K. The removal of the heavily doped material 222 forms a semiconductor/air distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) on the bottom-side or n-side of the light-emitting device. This DBR structure can provide a wide-bandwidth, high-reflectance mirror with only about four layer pairs. In some implementations, fewer layer pairs may be used.
The bottom-side DBR and top-side reflector 280 may form a vertical, optical resonant cavity for the light-emitting device. The length of the resonant cavity may be between approximately 150 nm and approximately 5 microns, according to some embodiments. In some embodiments, the resonant cavity comprises an optical microcavity that has a length on the order of up to a few wavelengths of radiation produced in the device's active region. In some implementations, electrical current is confined and flows centrally through the resonant cavity due to the oxide 250 and porous current-guiding region 229.
Although FIGS. 2J-2K depict lateral etching from a single via 294 to form the semiconductor/air DBR on the bottom-side of the light-emitting device, multiple vias may be formed in other embodiments to carry out lateral etching from multiple points and removal of the heavily doped layers 222. FIG. 2L depicts an embodiment where two vias 294 are formed adjacent the mesa 205. Etching fronts 295 may extend from each via 294 toward a center of the mesa 205 to remove the heavily doped material 222 below the mesa. For this embodiment, there may be regions 297 adjacent the mesa where the heavily doped material is not removed. These regions may provide structural support near a base of the mesa, and they may be distributed evenly around the mesa. For example, the regions 297 may extend under an edge of the mesa in some embodiments, or may extend to within 50 microns or less from the edge of the mesa in some implementations. The regions 297 may help mechanically stabilize the bottom-side DBR structure and maintain a longitudinal cavity length of the light-emitting device. In other embodiments, three or more vias 294 may be formed adjacent the mesa 205, which may create additions regions 297 around the base of the mesa.
FIG. 2M depicts, in elevation view, an embodiment of a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser that may be manufactured according to the foregoing processes. Wire bonds 170, 175 or other external electrical connections may be connected to the contacts 274, 272, and used to apply an electrical bias between the p- and n-side of the light-emitting device. According to some embodiments, the current-guiding oxide 250 at the p-side of the device confines electrical current to a central active region of the device. Additionally, the porous current-guiding oxide 229 at the n-side of the device helps confine current within the central active region, and prevents current spreading on the n-side of the device. As a result, electrical current passes primarily through a central area of the device's active layer 230, so that photons are generated in a region that spatially overlaps well with one or more cavity modes of the light-emitting device. Improved overlap between the photon generation region and the cavity modes can improve the efficiency of the light-emitting device.
Although the foregoing description of a light-emitting device includes an n-region of the device on the bottom-side and a p-region of the device on the top-side, other implementations may have the n-region and p-region inverted compared to what is shown in the drawings. In such embodiments, a bottom-side reflector may be associated with a p-side of the device, and a top-side reflector 280 may be associated with an n-side of the device.
An alternative embodiment of a light-emitting device is depicted in FIG. 2N. For this embodiment, a trench 297 may be etched into the multilayer structure to define the device's mesa 205, leaving device layers surrounding the mesa. This process removes less total material of the device layers while still forming a mesa. According to some embodiments, an isolation trench 254 may be formed around the mesa to electrically isolate the light-emitting device from other regions of the substrate. The isolation trench 254 may subsequently be filled with a field oxide 255, and an n-side contact may be formed to extend over the field oxide 255, as depicted in the drawing.
As described above, two lateral EC etching steps are used to form a bottom-side, porous, current-guiding region 229 and a bottom-side air/semiconductor DBR. In some implementations, these steps are carried out separately. In some embodiments, the steps may be carried out at a same time. For example, the doping density of the heavily doped layers 222 and current-guiding layer 226 may be selected such that complete removal of the heavily doped layers and porosification of the current-guiding layer occurs in a same etchant under a same bias. Additionally, dopant densities in the two layers and device dimensions may be tailored such that the desired etching distances are achieved for lateral porosification and material removal during a same etching time. For example, a dopant density in the heavily-doped layer may be selected to give a higher etching rate than the etching rate in the current guiding layer 226. Some examples of etchants, doping density ranges, bias voltages, and etching characteristics for GaN are listed in Table 1.
TABLE 1
bias
etchant doping range (cm−3) range (V) characteristic
0.03-0.3M oxalic acid 1 × 1018-1 × 1019 5-25 porosification
0.03-0.3M oxalic acid 1 × 1018-5 × 1019 15-60  removal
25%-50% HF acid 1 × 1018-1 × 1019 7-55 porosification
25%-50% HF acid 8 × 1018-5 × 1019 20-60  removal
Examples
Example process steps were carried out for fabricating a vertical light-emitting device. In one process, a layer of n-doped GaN (approximately 5 microns thick) was laterally EC etched from the edge of a mesa to create a porous region between two III-nitride layers. The electrochemical etchant was 1:1 HF:H2O, and EC etching was carried out at room temperature and bias voltages ranging between 7 V and 20 V. The rate of lateral porosification varied from about 1 micron/minute to about 10 microns/min, depending on the bias voltage used.
A result of the etching is shown in FIG. 3A, which represents a cross-sectional scanning-electron micrograph of a mesa structure having an n-type GaN layer 228. The layer has been laterally etched to form a porous semiconductor region between two III-nitride semiconductor layers 310, 312 that bound the bottom and top of the porous region. Because of their different doping densities, the adjacent III-nitride layers have not been porosified. The porous region comprises single-crystalline nanoporous (NP) GaN. The rate of advancing the porosification of the current-guiding layer 228 from the edge of a mesa can be controlled without impacting the adjacent device layers.
FIG. 3B shows a plan-view, microscope image of a laterally-porosified semiconductor region 315 that lies between the two unetched layers of FIG. 3A. A square-shaped mesa structure measuring about 300 microns on a side (outlined by the dashed line) was subjected to a timed lateral EC etching process. The etch was stopped to leave a highly-doped semiconductor region 320 (dark polygon) at the center of the mesa. The highly-doped region may provide a vertical current path for a light-emitting device. Lateral porosification extends for up to or more than 100 microns into the mesa.
Oxidation of NP GaN was carried out, and the resulting oxidized structure was compared the microstructure before oxidation. A portion of the nanoporous structure before oxidation is shown in FIG. 3C. As may be seen in FIG. 3C, pore sizes of a laterally porosified region 315 range between about 200 nm down to about 20 nm. The oxidation took place at about 900° C. in air for 4 hours. The microstructure after oxidation (portion shown in FIG. 3D) remained largely unchanged, but the fibrous nanostructure was converted from conductive GaN to GaOx an insulator.
FIG. 4 shows the x-ray diffraction curves (2θ-ω scans) from a porosified GaN sample before, during, and after oxidation. The as-porosified GaN sample (lower trace) shows a strong (002) peak from GaN at about 34.6°. After 4 hours of oxidation, the sample shows the emergence of a (311) peak due to the formation of monoclinic GaOx at around 38.2°. From a Hall measurement, the as-porosified NP GaN exhibited a carrier concentration of 7×1017 cm−3 and a mobility of approximately 30 cm2/V-sec. After oxidation, the fibrous structure becomes highly resistive. The resistivity of the porous oxide is measured to be greater than 104 ohm-cm, which is an increase by at least six orders of magnitude compared to the unetched GaN layer. A porous, oxidized, current-guiding region 229 can then prevent current spreading on the bottom-side of a light-emitting device, and improve VCSEL performance.
An n-side or bottom side DBR was formed from four layer pairs of alternating heavily-doped and undoped GaN layers. The heavily doped layers were completely removed by lateral EC etching to produce four air/GaN layer pairs for the DBR structure. The formation of air-gaps was confirmed by scanning electron microscopy. Micro-reflectance measurements (curve 520) were made and the results are plotted against simulated results 510 for the DBR structure, as shown in FIG. 5. The results show that over 98% peak reflectance with a stopband of over 150 nm can be achieved with just four pairs of GaN/air layers.
CONCLUSION
Methods and structures described above for fabricating III-nitride vertical light-emitting devices may have certain advantages over conventional methods for fabricating VCSELs, for example. In some implementations, the fabrication of GaN/air-gap DBRs (with only a few layer pairs needed) may be an easier manufacturing process than the epitaxial growth of tens of layer pairs for AlGaN/GaN DBRs. The techniques for forming bottom-side reflectors can avoid wafer or laser lift-off (LLO) processes and may be compatible with conventional and mature LED processing. In some embodiments, the use of GaN/air-gap DBRs enables true microcavity fabrication with a cavity length on the order of the lasing wavelength, which may not be possible with epitaxial of DBR structures having tens of semiconductor/semiconductor layers or with laser lift-off structures. Further, the use of porosification and oxidation processes can enable the creation of a current-guiding layer on the n-side of a vertical light-emitting device, which can improve device efficiency and performance. It should also be noted that the methods and structures exhibit substrate-independence. For example, the methods may be implemented with sapphire, GaN, Si, or SiC substrates, whereas conventional lift-off techniques for GaN devices may only be possible with sapphire substrates. According to some embodiments, the use of conductivity-based electrochemical (EC) etching may be easier during manufacture than photo-electrochemical (PEC) etching processes that can require difficult growth and etching steps needing uniform illumination.
The terms “approximately” and “about” may be used to mean within ±20% of a target dimension in some embodiments, within ±10% of a target dimension in some embodiments, within ±5% of a target dimension in some embodiments, and yet within ±2% of a target dimension in some embodiments. The terms “approximately” and “about” may include the target dimension.
Selective etching, as used herein, comprises subjecting a substrate to an etchant that preferentially etches at least one material at a faster rate than a second material. In some cases, the second material may be formed as a hard mask (e.g., an inorganic material such as an oxide, nitride, metal, or the like) or soft mask (e.g., a photoresist or polymer). In some embodiments, the second material may be part of a device structure that has different material characteristics than the first material (e.g., doping density, material composition, or crystal structure). The etch may be a dry etch or wet etch.
The technology described herein may be embodied as a method, of which at least one example has been provided. The acts performed as part of the method may be ordered in any suitable way. Accordingly, embodiments may be constructed in which acts are performed in an order different than illustrated, which may include performing some acts simultaneously, even though shown as sequential acts in illustrative embodiments. Additionally, a method may include more acts than those illustrated, in some embodiments, and fewer acts than those illustrated in other embodiments.
Although the drawings typically depict one light-emitting device, it will be appreciated that a large number of such devices can be fabricated in parallel on a substrate. A light-emitting device fabricated according to the present teachings may be formed in an integrated circuit in large numbers and at high densities. In some embodiments, the light-emitting devices may be used in consumer electronic devices such as smart phones, tablets, PDA's, computers, televisions, sensors, lighting, projectors, displays, as well as application-specific integrated circuits.
Having thus described at least one illustrative embodiment of the invention, various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description is by way of example only and is not intended as limiting. The invention is limited only as defined in the following claims and the equivalents thereto.

Claims (30)

What is claimed is:
1. A semiconductor light-emitting device comprising:
a substrate;
an active region comprising semiconductor material, wherein the active region has a first area and at least a portion of the active region is configured for carrier recombination;
a doped semiconductor region comprising a first portion of a layer having a thickness and located between the active region and the substrate, the doped semiconductor region having a second area smaller than the first area; and
a porous oxide region formed from a second portion of the layer and extending around the doped semiconductor region and located between the active region and the substrate, wherein the porous oxide comprises pores extending laterally into the second portion of the layer, and wherein the porous oxide is porous gallium oxide.
2. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the active region and doped semiconductor region comprise III-nitride material.
3. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 2, wherein the active region is configured to produce photons when electrical current flows through the active region.
4. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the porous oxide region is formed in and from a same layer of material as the doped semiconductor region.
5. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the doped semiconductor region comprises n-type conductivity material.
6. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the active region comprises multiple quantum wells formed from layers of III-nitride material.
7. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, further comprising a conductive layer of semiconductor material formed between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate, wherein a doping density of the conductive layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor region.
8. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 7, further comprising an undoped semiconductor layer between the conductive layer of semiconductor material and the substrate.
9. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 7, wherein a doping density of the conductive layer is between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3 and a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
10. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, further comprising a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate.
11. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 10, wherein the first distributed Bragg reflector comprises alternating layers of air and III-nitride material.
12. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 10, further comprising at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector.
13. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 10, further comprising:
a conductive layer having a doping density between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3 located between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector; and
an undoped semiconductor layer between the conductive layer and the first distributed Bragg reflector, wherein a doping density of the doped semiconductor region is between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
14. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 10, further comprising a second distributed Bragg reflector located on a side of the active region away from the substrate.
15. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 14, wherein the second distributed Bragg reflector comprises layers of dielectric material.
16. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the porous oxide region has pore sizes less than approximately one micron.
17. The semiconductor light-emitting device of claim 1, wherein the porous oxide region has a range of pore sizes between approximately 20 nm and approximately 200 nm.
18. A method for making an integrated light-emitting device, the method comprising:
forming a mesa on a substrate that comprises an active region comprising semiconductor material, wherein the active region has a first area and at least a portion of the active region is configured for carrier recombination, and a doped semiconductor region comprising a first portion of a layer having a thickness and located between the active region and the substrate, the doped semiconductor region having a second area smaller than the first area;
forming a porous oxide region from a second portion of the layer extending around the doped semiconductor region and located between the active region and the substrate, wherein the porous oxide comprises pores extending laterally into the second portion of the layer, and wherein the porous oxide is porous gallium oxide,
wherein forming the porous oxide region comprises:
etching the layer to form a porous region; and
converting the porous region to porous oxide.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein forming the doped semiconductor region comprises epitaxially growing an n-type conductivity layer of III-nitride material.
20. The method of claim 18, further comprising forming a conductive layer of semiconductor material adjacent the doped semiconductor region, wherein a doping density of the conductive layer is less than a doping density of the doped semiconductor region.
21. The method of claim 20, further comprising:
forming the doped semiconductor region and conductive layer from III-nitride material;
doping the conductive layer with a doping density between approximately 5×1017 cm−3 and approximately 2×1018 cm−3; and
doping the doped semiconductor region with a doping density between approximately 3×1018 cm−3 and approximately 1×1019 cm−3.
22. The method of claim 18, wherein the etching comprises electrochemical etching with a hydrofluoric-based etchant.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein the etching further comprises applying a bias between approximately 7 volts and approximately 20 volts between the doped semiconductor region and an electrode in the etchant.
24. The method of claim 18, wherein the active region is configured to produce photons when electrical current flows through the active region.
25. The method of claim 24, wherein forming the active region comprises forming multiple quantum wells from layers of III-nitride material.
26. The method of claim 18, further comprising forming a first distributed Bragg reflector located between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate.
27. The method of claim 26, wherein forming the first distributed Bragg reflector comprises:
epitaxially growing at least one layer of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material and at least one layer of undoped III-nitride semiconductor material;
etching a hole adjacent the mesa to expose sidewalls of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material; and
electrochemically etching at least a portion of the at least one layer of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material to form at least one air gap between the doped semiconductor region and the substrate.
28. The method of claim 27, wherein the at least one layer of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material comprises GaN and have a doping density between approximately 8×1018 cm−3 and approximately 5×1019 cm−3.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein etching the layer and electrochemically etching at least a portion of the at least one layer of n-type III-nitride semiconductor material are performed in a same etching step.
30. The method of claim 26, further comprising forming at least one undoped semiconductor layer between the doped semiconductor region and the first distributed Bragg reflector.
US14/687,814 2014-04-16 2015-04-15 Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) Active US11095096B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US14/687,814 US11095096B2 (en) 2014-04-16 2015-04-15 Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201461980313P 2014-04-16 2014-04-16
US14/687,814 US11095096B2 (en) 2014-04-16 2015-04-15 Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL)

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20150303655A1 US20150303655A1 (en) 2015-10-22
US11095096B2 true US11095096B2 (en) 2021-08-17

Family

ID=54322791

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/687,814 Active US11095096B2 (en) 2014-04-16 2015-04-15 Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL)

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US11095096B2 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20210384706A1 (en) * 2018-10-18 2021-12-09 Stanley Electric Co., Ltd. Vertical cavity surface emitting device
KR20220156973A (en) * 2017-09-27 2022-11-28 캠브리지 엔터프라이즈 리미티드 Method for porosifying a material and semiconductor structure
US11631782B2 (en) 2018-01-26 2023-04-18 Cambridge Enterprise Limited Method for electrochemically etching a semiconductor structure

Families Citing this family (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
KR20130007557A (en) 2010-01-27 2013-01-18 예일 유니버시티 Conductivity based selective etch for gan devices and applications thereof
WO2016054232A1 (en) 2014-09-30 2016-04-07 Yale University A METHOD FOR GaN VERTICAL MICROCAVITY SURFACE EMITTING LASER (VCSEL)
US11018231B2 (en) 2014-12-01 2021-05-25 Yale University Method to make buried, highly conductive p-type III-nitride layers
JP6961225B2 (en) 2015-05-19 2021-11-05 イェール ユニバーシティーYale University Methods and Devices for High Confinement Coefficient III Nitride End Face Emitting Laser Diodes with Lattice Matched Clad Layers
DE102015108876B3 (en) * 2015-06-04 2016-03-03 Otto-Von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, Ttz Patentwesen Group III nitride light-emitting device
ITUB20155862A1 (en) 2015-11-24 2017-05-24 St Microelectronics Srl NORMALLY OFF TYPE TRANSISTOR WITH REDUCED RESISTANCE IN THE STATE ON AND RELATIVE MANUFACTURING METHOD
JP6743436B2 (en) * 2016-03-17 2020-08-19 株式会社リコー Surface emitting laser array and laser device
CN106848838B (en) * 2017-04-06 2019-11-29 中国科学院半导体研究所 GaN base VCSEL chip and preparation method based on porous DBR
CN107046071A (en) 2017-04-06 2017-08-15 中国科学院半导体研究所 InGaN based resonant cavity enhanced detector chips based on porous DBR
CN108736315A (en) * 2017-04-13 2018-11-02 光环科技股份有限公司 Vertical resonant cavity surface emitting laser structure and manufacturing method thereof
US10217895B2 (en) * 2017-06-22 2019-02-26 Epistar Corporation Method of forming a light-emitting device
EP3673545B1 (en) * 2017-08-22 2024-01-03 Princeton Optronics, Inc. Multilayer conductor interconnects for high density light emitter arrays
EP3741015B1 (en) * 2018-01-18 2023-06-07 IQE plc Porous distributed bragg reflectors for laser applications
CN111192820A (en) 2018-11-15 2020-05-22 维耶尔公司 Self-aligned vertical solid state device fabrication and integration methods
US11764199B2 (en) * 2018-11-15 2023-09-19 Vuereal Inc. Self-aligned vertical solid state devices fabrication and integration methods
CN109873297B (en) * 2019-04-26 2020-06-30 山东大学 GaN-based vertical cavity surface emitting laser and preparation method thereof
EP4451488A3 (en) * 2020-01-08 2025-02-26 Stanley Electric Co. Ltd. Vertical cavity light-emitting element
EP3926769B1 (en) * 2020-06-18 2023-01-18 TRUMPF Photonic Components GmbH Method of producing a vertical cavity surface emitting laser
CN114336282B (en) * 2020-10-10 2024-08-06 中国科学院宁波材料技术与工程研究所 GaN-based vertical cavity surface emitting laser with conductive DBR structure and manufacturing method thereof
WO2022235615A1 (en) * 2021-05-03 2022-11-10 Yale University Multilayer structures made of indium phosphide or gallium arsenide
CN119895678A (en) * 2022-08-30 2025-04-25 华为技术有限公司 Low Coherence Surface Emitting Laser (LCSEL)
FR3144413A1 (en) * 2022-12-21 2024-06-28 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Et Aux Energies Alternatives MESA POROSIFICATION PROCESS FACILITATING CONTACT RESETTING
WO2024155528A1 (en) * 2023-01-17 2024-07-25 Snap Inc. Resonant cavity micro-led fabrication

Citations (117)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5262021A (en) 1992-01-29 1993-11-16 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method of manufacturing a perforated workpiece
US5307361A (en) 1992-11-05 1994-04-26 Eastman Kodak Company Ridge waveguide laser diode with a depressed-index cladding layer
US5502787A (en) 1995-05-22 1996-03-26 At&T Corp. Article comprising a semiconductor waveguide structure
US5509026A (en) 1994-02-03 1996-04-16 Nec Corporation Multiple quantum well semiconductor laser
US5644156A (en) 1994-04-14 1997-07-01 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Porous silicon photo-device capable of photoelectric conversion
JPH10135500A (en) 1996-03-18 1998-05-22 Sony Corp Manufacture of thin film semiconductor, solar cell and light emission element
US5818861A (en) 1996-07-19 1998-10-06 Hewlett-Packard Company Vertical cavity surface emitting laser with low band gap highly doped contact layer
US5919430A (en) 1996-06-19 1999-07-06 Degussa Aktiengesellschaft Preparation of crystalline microporous and mesoporous metal silicates, products produced thereby and use thereof
JPH11195562A (en) 1997-12-26 1999-07-21 Sony Corp Semiconductor substrate, thin film semiconductor member, and method of manufacturing the same
JP2000124552A (en) 1998-10-16 2000-04-28 Agilent Technol Inc Nitride semiconductor laser device
KR20000038997A (en) 1998-12-10 2000-07-05 윤종용 Method for manufacturing optic device having gan based distributed bragg reflector having high reflection rate
JP2000349267A (en) 1999-03-26 2000-12-15 Canon Inc Method of fabricating semiconductor member
US6233267B1 (en) 1998-01-21 2001-05-15 Brown University Research Foundation Blue/ultraviolet/green vertical cavity surface emitting laser employing lateral edge overgrowth (LEO) technique
JP2001188264A (en) 2000-01-05 2001-07-10 Toshiba Corp Electrochromic display device
JP2001223165A (en) 2000-02-10 2001-08-17 Hitachi Cable Ltd Nitride semiconductor and manufacturing method thereof
US6306672B1 (en) 1997-07-24 2001-10-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Group III-V complex vertical cavity surface emitting laser diode and method for manufacturing the same
US6320206B1 (en) 1999-02-05 2001-11-20 Lumileds Lighting, U.S., Llc Light emitting devices having wafer bonded aluminum gallium indium nitride structures and mirror stacks
US20020036295A1 (en) 2000-09-22 2002-03-28 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Optical device, surface emitting type device and method for manufacturing the same
US20020070125A1 (en) 2000-12-13 2002-06-13 Nova Crystals, Inc. Method for lift-off of epitaxially grown semiconductors by electrochemical anodic etching
US20020075929A1 (en) * 2000-12-19 2002-06-20 Cunningham John E. Vertical cavity surface emitting laser (vcsel)
US20020158265A1 (en) * 2001-04-26 2002-10-31 Motorola, Inc. Structure and method for fabricating high contrast reflective mirrors
US6537838B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2003-03-25 Limileds Lighting, U.S., Llc Forming semiconductor structures including activated acceptors in buried p-type III-V layers
US6597017B1 (en) 1999-03-26 2003-07-22 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Semiconductor device, surface emitting semiconductor laser and edge emitting semiconductor laser
US6597490B2 (en) 1995-09-29 2003-07-22 Coretek, Inc. Electrically tunable fabry-perot structure utilizing a deformable multi-layer mirror and method of making the same
US20030180980A1 (en) 2001-12-21 2003-09-25 Tal Margalith Implantation for current confinement in nitride-based vertical optoelectronics
US20030178633A1 (en) 2002-03-25 2003-09-25 Flynn Jeffrey S. Doped group III-V nitride materials, and microelectronic devices and device precursor structures comprising same
US20030189963A1 (en) * 1996-11-12 2003-10-09 Deppe Dennis G. Low threshold microcavity light emitter
US20040021147A1 (en) 2002-05-15 2004-02-05 Akihiko Ishibashi Semiconductor light emitting device and fabrication method thereof
JP2004055611A (en) 2002-07-16 2004-02-19 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Semiconductor light-emitting device
US20040104398A1 (en) 2002-11-25 2004-06-03 Schang-Jing Hon Gallium nitride based light-emitting device
US20050029224A1 (en) 2001-04-13 2005-02-10 Bernard Aspar Detachable substrate or detachable structure and method for the production thereof
WO2005066612A2 (en) 2003-12-29 2005-07-21 Intel Corporation (A Delaware Corporation) Detection of biomolecules using porous biosensors and raman spectroscopy
US20050184307A1 (en) 2003-09-30 2005-08-25 Cree, Inc. Light emitting diode with porous sic substrate and method for fabricating
JP2005244089A (en) 2004-02-27 2005-09-08 Canon Inc Anode forming device, treatment method, and manufacturing method of semiconductor substrate
US20050224816A1 (en) 2004-03-30 2005-10-13 Kim Sun W Nitride based semiconductor having improved external quantum efficiency and fabrication method thereof
US20050242365A1 (en) 2004-04-28 2005-11-03 Yoo Myung C Vertical structure semiconductor devices
US6990132B2 (en) 2003-03-20 2006-01-24 Xerox Corporation Laser diode with metal-oxide upper cladding layer
US20060046513A1 (en) 2004-09-02 2006-03-02 Shea Kevin R Selective etching of oxides to metal nitrides and metal oxides
US20060081832A1 (en) 2004-10-20 2006-04-20 Genesis Photonics Inc. Light-emitting element with porous light-emitting layers
US20060110926A1 (en) 2004-11-02 2006-05-25 The Regents Of The University Of California Control of photoelectrochemical (PEC) etching by modification of the local electrochemical potential of the semiconductor structure relative to the electrolyte
US20060199353A1 (en) 2002-07-12 2006-09-07 The Government Of The Usa, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Naval Research Laboratory Wafer bonding of thinned electronic materials and circuits to high performance substrate
JP2006332595A (en) 2005-04-28 2006-12-07 Canon Inc Vertical cavity surface emitting laser device
US20070007241A1 (en) 2005-04-20 2007-01-11 University Of Rochester Methods of making and modifying porous devices for biomedical applications
US20070040162A1 (en) 2005-08-19 2007-02-22 Song June-O Highly efficient III-nitride-based top emission type light emitting device having large area and high capacity and method of manufacturing the same
JP2007073945A (en) 2005-08-11 2007-03-22 Canon Inc Surface emission laser and manufacturing method of two-dimensional photonic crystal therein
US20070085100A1 (en) 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 The Regents Of The University Of California Photonic structures for efficient light extraction and conversion in multi-color light emitting devices
US20070111345A1 (en) 2005-11-14 2007-05-17 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Method for controlling the structure and surface qualities of a thin film and product produced thereby
US20070194330A1 (en) 2006-02-23 2007-08-23 Cree, Inc. High efficiency LEDs with tunnel junctions
US20070284607A1 (en) 2006-06-09 2007-12-13 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc Semiconductor Light Emitting Device Including Porous Layer
US20080029773A1 (en) 2006-08-06 2008-02-07 Jorgenson Robbie J III-nitride light-emitting devices with one or more resonance reflectors and reflective engineered growth templates for such devices, and methods
US20080067532A1 (en) 2004-11-11 2008-03-20 Watson Ian M Semiconductor Materials and Devices
US20080179605A1 (en) 2007-01-29 2008-07-31 Yuji Takase Nitride semiconductor light emitting device and method for fabricating the same
JP2008226974A (en) 2007-03-09 2008-09-25 Canon Inc Multifilm structure, surface-emitting laser composed of multifilm structure, and manufacturing method therefor
US20080280140A1 (en) 2007-04-27 2008-11-13 Mauro Ferrari Porous particles and methods of making thereof
US20080285610A1 (en) * 2005-10-19 2008-11-20 Douglas Hall Monolithically-pumped erbium-doped waveguide amplifiers and lasers
US20080298419A1 (en) 2005-04-28 2008-12-04 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Vertical cavity surface emitting laser device
US20080296173A1 (en) 2007-05-29 2008-12-04 Transphorm, Inc. Electrolysis transistor
US20090001416A1 (en) 2007-06-28 2009-01-01 National University Of Singapore Growth of indium gallium nitride (InGaN) on porous gallium nitride (GaN) template by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD)
JP2009055056A (en) 2008-10-17 2009-03-12 Hitachi Cable Ltd Manufacturing method of nitride semiconductor
JP2009067658A (en) 2007-09-18 2009-04-02 Hitachi Cable Ltd Nitride semiconductor base substrate, nitride semiconductor multilayer substrate, nitride semiconductor free-standing substrate, and method for manufacturing nitride semiconductor base substrate
WO2009048265A1 (en) 2007-10-12 2009-04-16 Industry Foundation Of Chonnam National University Method of selectively etching semiconductor region, separation method of semiconductor layer and separation method of semiconductor device from substrate
JP2009094360A (en) 2007-10-10 2009-04-30 Rohm Co Ltd Semiconductor laser diode
US20090117675A1 (en) 2005-09-29 2009-05-07 Sumitomo Chemical Company, Limited Method for Producing Group 3-5 Nitride Semiconductor and Method for Producing Light-Emitting Device
CN101443887A (en) 2006-03-10 2009-05-27 Stc.Unm公司 Pulsed growth of GAN nanowires and applications in group III nitride semiconductor substrate materials and devices
US20090140274A1 (en) 2007-12-04 2009-06-04 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc III-Nitride Light Emitting Device Including Porous Semiconductor Layer
US20090143227A1 (en) 2004-02-02 2009-06-04 Nanosys, Inc. Porous substrates, articles, systems and compositions comprising nanofibers and methods of their use and production
US20090168819A1 (en) * 2006-06-06 2009-07-02 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser diode device
US20090173373A1 (en) 2008-01-07 2009-07-09 Wladyslaw Walukiewicz Group III-Nitride Solar Cell with Graded Compositions
JP2009231833A (en) 2008-02-27 2009-10-08 Sumitomo Electric Ind Ltd Nitride semiconductor wafer
JP2009239034A (en) 2008-03-27 2009-10-15 Dowa Electronics Materials Co Ltd Semiconductor light-emitting element and method for manufacturing the same
US20100142576A1 (en) 2008-05-30 2010-06-10 The Regents Of The University Of California (Al,Ga,In)N DIODE LASER FABRICATED AT REDUCED TEMPERATURE
US7750234B2 (en) 2002-11-27 2010-07-06 The University Of Toledo Integrated photoelectrochemical cell and system having a liquid electrolyte
US7751455B2 (en) 2004-12-14 2010-07-06 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Blue and green laser diodes with gallium nitride or indium gallium nitride cladding laser structure
US20100195689A1 (en) 2006-03-14 2010-08-05 The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Surface emitting laser element array
JP2010218510A (en) 2009-03-19 2010-09-30 Yamatake Corp System and method for monitoring of condition
US20100246625A1 (en) 2009-03-27 2010-09-30 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Nitride semiconductor laser
US20100270649A1 (en) 2008-02-27 2010-10-28 Sunitomo Electric Industries, Ltd Nitride semiconductor wafer
US20100317132A1 (en) 2009-05-12 2010-12-16 Rogers John A Printed Assemblies of Ultrathin, Microscale Inorganic Light Emitting Diodes for Deformable and Semitransparent Displays
WO2011013621A1 (en) 2009-07-31 2011-02-03 日亜化学工業株式会社 Nitride-semiconductor laser diode
US20110076854A1 (en) 2009-09-30 2011-03-31 Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Method of manufacturing vertical-cavity surface emitting laser
US7923275B2 (en) 2006-12-20 2011-04-12 International Business Machines Corporation Surface emitting laser and manufacturing method thereof
US20110101391A1 (en) 2008-03-13 2011-05-05 Showa Denko K.K. Group iii nitride semiconductor device and method for manufacturing the same, group iii nitride semiconductor light-emitting device and method for manufacturing the same, and lamp
US7989323B2 (en) 2009-06-19 2011-08-02 Rohm And Haas Electronic Materials Llc Doping method
WO2011094391A1 (en) 2010-01-27 2011-08-04 Yale University Conductivity based selective etch for gan devices and applications thereof
US20110188528A1 (en) 2010-02-04 2011-08-04 Ostendo Technologies, Inc. High Injection Efficiency Polar and Non-Polar III-Nitrides Light Emitters
US20120018753A1 (en) 2009-03-31 2012-01-26 Xidian University Ultraviolet light emitting diode devices and methods for fabricating the same
US20120025231A1 (en) 2008-11-06 2012-02-02 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Series connected flip chip leds with growth substrate removed
JP2012049292A (en) 2010-08-26 2012-03-08 Panasonic Corp Surface-emitting semiconductor laser element and method of manufacturing the same
US20120068214A1 (en) 2010-09-21 2012-03-22 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20120205665A1 (en) 2009-10-16 2012-08-16 Korea Polytechnic University Industry Academic Cooperation Foundation High-quality non-polar/semi-polar semiconductor device on porous nitride semiconductor and manufacturing method thereof
US8344409B2 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-01-01 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US8343788B2 (en) 2011-04-19 2013-01-01 Epistar Corporation Light emitting device and manufacturing method thereof
JP2013038394A (en) 2011-07-14 2013-02-21 Rohm Co Ltd Semiconductor laser element
US20130050686A1 (en) 2011-08-25 2013-02-28 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Gap distributed bragg reflectors
WO2013050686A1 (en) 2011-10-04 2013-04-11 Verdol Device for reducing the tension of yarn between a system for transforming said yarn and a system for winding said yarn
US20130134457A1 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-05-30 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130140517A1 (en) 2011-06-29 2013-06-06 Purdue Research Foundation Thin and Flexible Gallium Nitride and Method of Making the Same
US8497171B1 (en) 2012-07-05 2013-07-30 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. FinFET method and structure with embedded underlying anti-punch through layer
US8507925B2 (en) 2010-12-02 2013-08-13 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130210180A1 (en) 2010-07-26 2013-08-15 Seren Photonics Limited Light emitting diodes
US20130207237A1 (en) 2010-10-15 2013-08-15 The Regents Of The University Of California Method for producing gallium nitride substrates for electronic and optoelectronic devices
US8519430B2 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-08-27 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130248911A1 (en) 2012-03-22 2013-09-26 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Light-emitting device including nitride-based semiconductor omnidirectional reflector
US20130328102A1 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-12-12 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130334555A1 (en) 2011-02-18 2013-12-19 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20140003458A1 (en) 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Yale University Lateral electrochemical etching of iii-nitride materials for microfabrication
US20140064313A1 (en) 2004-06-11 2014-03-06 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Surface-emission laser diode and fabrication process thereof
WO2014061174A1 (en) 2012-10-19 2014-04-24 パナソニック株式会社 Semiconductor light emitting element
CN103762286A (en) 2013-08-09 2014-04-30 青岛杰生电气有限公司 LED with high light extraction efficiency
US20140191369A1 (en) 2013-01-08 2014-07-10 Hitachi Metals, Ltd. Nitride semicondutor device
US20140203292A1 (en) 2013-01-24 2014-07-24 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Semiconductor light emitting device
US20140339566A1 (en) 2011-12-14 2014-11-20 Seoul Viosys Co., Ltd. Semiconductor device and method of fabricating the same
CN104205369A (en) 2012-03-19 2014-12-10 皇家飞利浦有限公司 Light emitting device grown on a silicon substrate
US9356187B2 (en) 2012-02-06 2016-05-31 Seoul Viosys Co., Ltd. Method for separating semiconductor devices using nanoporous structure
US20160197151A1 (en) 2014-12-01 2016-07-07 Yale University Method to make buried, highly conductive p-type iii-nitride layers
US20170237234A1 (en) 2014-09-30 2017-08-17 Yale University A method for gan vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (vcsel)
US20180152003A1 (en) 2015-05-19 2018-05-31 Yale University A method and device concerning iii-nitride edge emitting laser diode of high confinement factor with lattice matched cladding layer

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH11295031A (en) * 1998-04-08 1999-10-29 Canon Inc Positioning stage device, method for measuring its position, exposure device with positioning stage device, and method for manufacturing device
US9679077B2 (en) * 2012-06-29 2017-06-13 Mmodal Ip Llc Automated clinical evidence sheet workflow

Patent Citations (137)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH05315316A (en) 1992-01-29 1993-11-26 Siemens Ag Method for manufacturing porous parts
US5262021A (en) 1992-01-29 1993-11-16 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method of manufacturing a perforated workpiece
US5307361A (en) 1992-11-05 1994-04-26 Eastman Kodak Company Ridge waveguide laser diode with a depressed-index cladding layer
US5509026A (en) 1994-02-03 1996-04-16 Nec Corporation Multiple quantum well semiconductor laser
US5644156A (en) 1994-04-14 1997-07-01 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Porous silicon photo-device capable of photoelectric conversion
US5502787A (en) 1995-05-22 1996-03-26 At&T Corp. Article comprising a semiconductor waveguide structure
US6597490B2 (en) 1995-09-29 2003-07-22 Coretek, Inc. Electrically tunable fabry-perot structure utilizing a deformable multi-layer mirror and method of making the same
JPH10135500A (en) 1996-03-18 1998-05-22 Sony Corp Manufacture of thin film semiconductor, solar cell and light emission element
US5919430A (en) 1996-06-19 1999-07-06 Degussa Aktiengesellschaft Preparation of crystalline microporous and mesoporous metal silicates, products produced thereby and use thereof
US5818861A (en) 1996-07-19 1998-10-06 Hewlett-Packard Company Vertical cavity surface emitting laser with low band gap highly doped contact layer
US20030189963A1 (en) * 1996-11-12 2003-10-09 Deppe Dennis G. Low threshold microcavity light emitter
US6306672B1 (en) 1997-07-24 2001-10-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Group III-V complex vertical cavity surface emitting laser diode and method for manufacturing the same
US6759310B2 (en) 1997-12-26 2004-07-06 Sony Corporation Method for making a semiconductor substrate comprising a variant porous layer
JPH11195562A (en) 1997-12-26 1999-07-21 Sony Corp Semiconductor substrate, thin film semiconductor member, and method of manufacturing the same
US20020153595A1 (en) 1997-12-26 2002-10-24 Hiroshi Tayanaka Semiconductor substrate and thin-film semiconductive member, and method for making thereof
US6233267B1 (en) 1998-01-21 2001-05-15 Brown University Research Foundation Blue/ultraviolet/green vertical cavity surface emitting laser employing lateral edge overgrowth (LEO) technique
JP2000124552A (en) 1998-10-16 2000-04-28 Agilent Technol Inc Nitride semiconductor laser device
KR20000038997A (en) 1998-12-10 2000-07-05 윤종용 Method for manufacturing optic device having gan based distributed bragg reflector having high reflection rate
KR100480764B1 (en) 1998-12-10 2005-06-16 삼성전자주식회사 A method for manufacturing a optical device having DBR based on GaN system material
US6320206B1 (en) 1999-02-05 2001-11-20 Lumileds Lighting, U.S., Llc Light emitting devices having wafer bonded aluminum gallium indium nitride structures and mirror stacks
JP2000349267A (en) 1999-03-26 2000-12-15 Canon Inc Method of fabricating semiconductor member
US6597017B1 (en) 1999-03-26 2003-07-22 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Semiconductor device, surface emitting semiconductor laser and edge emitting semiconductor laser
JP2001188264A (en) 2000-01-05 2001-07-10 Toshiba Corp Electrochromic display device
JP2001223165A (en) 2000-02-10 2001-08-17 Hitachi Cable Ltd Nitride semiconductor and manufacturing method thereof
US20020036295A1 (en) 2000-09-22 2002-03-28 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Optical device, surface emitting type device and method for manufacturing the same
US20020070125A1 (en) 2000-12-13 2002-06-13 Nova Crystals, Inc. Method for lift-off of epitaxially grown semiconductors by electrochemical anodic etching
US20020075929A1 (en) * 2000-12-19 2002-06-20 Cunningham John E. Vertical cavity surface emitting laser (vcsel)
US20050029224A1 (en) 2001-04-13 2005-02-10 Bernard Aspar Detachable substrate or detachable structure and method for the production thereof
US20020158265A1 (en) * 2001-04-26 2002-10-31 Motorola, Inc. Structure and method for fabricating high contrast reflective mirrors
US6537838B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2003-03-25 Limileds Lighting, U.S., Llc Forming semiconductor structures including activated acceptors in buried p-type III-V layers
US20030180980A1 (en) 2001-12-21 2003-09-25 Tal Margalith Implantation for current confinement in nitride-based vertical optoelectronics
US20030178633A1 (en) 2002-03-25 2003-09-25 Flynn Jeffrey S. Doped group III-V nitride materials, and microelectronic devices and device precursor structures comprising same
US20040021147A1 (en) 2002-05-15 2004-02-05 Akihiko Ishibashi Semiconductor light emitting device and fabrication method thereof
US20060199353A1 (en) 2002-07-12 2006-09-07 The Government Of The Usa, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Naval Research Laboratory Wafer bonding of thinned electronic materials and circuits to high performance substrate
JP2004055611A (en) 2002-07-16 2004-02-19 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Semiconductor light-emitting device
US20040104398A1 (en) 2002-11-25 2004-06-03 Schang-Jing Hon Gallium nitride based light-emitting device
US7750234B2 (en) 2002-11-27 2010-07-06 The University Of Toledo Integrated photoelectrochemical cell and system having a liquid electrolyte
US6990132B2 (en) 2003-03-20 2006-01-24 Xerox Corporation Laser diode with metal-oxide upper cladding layer
US20050184307A1 (en) 2003-09-30 2005-08-25 Cree, Inc. Light emitting diode with porous sic substrate and method for fabricating
WO2005066612A2 (en) 2003-12-29 2005-07-21 Intel Corporation (A Delaware Corporation) Detection of biomolecules using porous biosensors and raman spectroscopy
JP2007518075A (en) 2003-12-29 2007-07-05 インテル・コーポレーション Detection of biomolecules using porous biosensors and Raman spectroscopy
US20090143227A1 (en) 2004-02-02 2009-06-04 Nanosys, Inc. Porous substrates, articles, systems and compositions comprising nanofibers and methods of their use and production
JP2005244089A (en) 2004-02-27 2005-09-08 Canon Inc Anode forming device, treatment method, and manufacturing method of semiconductor substrate
US20050224816A1 (en) 2004-03-30 2005-10-13 Kim Sun W Nitride based semiconductor having improved external quantum efficiency and fabrication method thereof
US20050242365A1 (en) 2004-04-28 2005-11-03 Yoo Myung C Vertical structure semiconductor devices
US20140064313A1 (en) 2004-06-11 2014-03-06 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Surface-emission laser diode and fabrication process thereof
US20060046513A1 (en) 2004-09-02 2006-03-02 Shea Kevin R Selective etching of oxides to metal nitrides and metal oxides
US20060081832A1 (en) 2004-10-20 2006-04-20 Genesis Photonics Inc. Light-emitting element with porous light-emitting layers
US7271417B2 (en) 2004-10-20 2007-09-18 Genesis Photonics Light-emitting element with porous light-emitting layers
US20060110926A1 (en) 2004-11-02 2006-05-25 The Regents Of The University Of California Control of photoelectrochemical (PEC) etching by modification of the local electrochemical potential of the semiconductor structure relative to the electrolyte
US20080067532A1 (en) 2004-11-11 2008-03-20 Watson Ian M Semiconductor Materials and Devices
US7751455B2 (en) 2004-12-14 2010-07-06 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Blue and green laser diodes with gallium nitride or indium gallium nitride cladding laser structure
US20070007241A1 (en) 2005-04-20 2007-01-11 University Of Rochester Methods of making and modifying porous devices for biomedical applications
JP2006332595A (en) 2005-04-28 2006-12-07 Canon Inc Vertical cavity surface emitting laser device
US20080298419A1 (en) 2005-04-28 2008-12-04 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Vertical cavity surface emitting laser device
JP2007073945A (en) 2005-08-11 2007-03-22 Canon Inc Surface emission laser and manufacturing method of two-dimensional photonic crystal therein
US20070040162A1 (en) 2005-08-19 2007-02-22 Song June-O Highly efficient III-nitride-based top emission type light emitting device having large area and high capacity and method of manufacturing the same
US20090117675A1 (en) 2005-09-29 2009-05-07 Sumitomo Chemical Company, Limited Method for Producing Group 3-5 Nitride Semiconductor and Method for Producing Light-Emitting Device
US20070085100A1 (en) 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 The Regents Of The University Of California Photonic structures for efficient light extraction and conversion in multi-color light emitting devices
US20080285610A1 (en) * 2005-10-19 2008-11-20 Douglas Hall Monolithically-pumped erbium-doped waveguide amplifiers and lasers
US20070111345A1 (en) 2005-11-14 2007-05-17 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Method for controlling the structure and surface qualities of a thin film and product produced thereby
US20070194330A1 (en) 2006-02-23 2007-08-23 Cree, Inc. High efficiency LEDs with tunnel junctions
CN101443887A (en) 2006-03-10 2009-05-27 Stc.Unm公司 Pulsed growth of GAN nanowires and applications in group III nitride semiconductor substrate materials and devices
US20100195689A1 (en) 2006-03-14 2010-08-05 The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Surface emitting laser element array
US20090168819A1 (en) * 2006-06-06 2009-07-02 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser diode device
US20070284607A1 (en) 2006-06-09 2007-12-13 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc Semiconductor Light Emitting Device Including Porous Layer
JP2007335879A (en) 2006-06-09 2007-12-27 Philips Lumileds Lightng Co Llc Semiconductor light emitting device comprising a porous layer
US8174025B2 (en) 2006-06-09 2012-05-08 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc Semiconductor light emitting device including porous layer
US20080029773A1 (en) 2006-08-06 2008-02-07 Jorgenson Robbie J III-nitride light-emitting devices with one or more resonance reflectors and reflective engineered growth templates for such devices, and methods
US7923275B2 (en) 2006-12-20 2011-04-12 International Business Machines Corporation Surface emitting laser and manufacturing method thereof
US20080179605A1 (en) 2007-01-29 2008-07-31 Yuji Takase Nitride semiconductor light emitting device and method for fabricating the same
JP2008226974A (en) 2007-03-09 2008-09-25 Canon Inc Multifilm structure, surface-emitting laser composed of multifilm structure, and manufacturing method therefor
US20080280140A1 (en) 2007-04-27 2008-11-13 Mauro Ferrari Porous particles and methods of making thereof
US20080296173A1 (en) 2007-05-29 2008-12-04 Transphorm, Inc. Electrolysis transistor
US20090001416A1 (en) 2007-06-28 2009-01-01 National University Of Singapore Growth of indium gallium nitride (InGaN) on porous gallium nitride (GaN) template by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD)
JP2009067658A (en) 2007-09-18 2009-04-02 Hitachi Cable Ltd Nitride semiconductor base substrate, nitride semiconductor multilayer substrate, nitride semiconductor free-standing substrate, and method for manufacturing nitride semiconductor base substrate
JP2009094360A (en) 2007-10-10 2009-04-30 Rohm Co Ltd Semiconductor laser diode
WO2009048265A1 (en) 2007-10-12 2009-04-16 Industry Foundation Of Chonnam National University Method of selectively etching semiconductor region, separation method of semiconductor layer and separation method of semiconductor device from substrate
US20090140274A1 (en) 2007-12-04 2009-06-04 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc III-Nitride Light Emitting Device Including Porous Semiconductor Layer
US7928448B2 (en) 2007-12-04 2011-04-19 Philips Lumileds Lighting Company, Llc III-nitride light emitting device including porous semiconductor layer
US20090173373A1 (en) 2008-01-07 2009-07-09 Wladyslaw Walukiewicz Group III-Nitride Solar Cell with Graded Compositions
JP2009231833A (en) 2008-02-27 2009-10-08 Sumitomo Electric Ind Ltd Nitride semiconductor wafer
US20100270649A1 (en) 2008-02-27 2010-10-28 Sunitomo Electric Industries, Ltd Nitride semiconductor wafer
US20110101391A1 (en) 2008-03-13 2011-05-05 Showa Denko K.K. Group iii nitride semiconductor device and method for manufacturing the same, group iii nitride semiconductor light-emitting device and method for manufacturing the same, and lamp
JP2009239034A (en) 2008-03-27 2009-10-15 Dowa Electronics Materials Co Ltd Semiconductor light-emitting element and method for manufacturing the same
US20100142576A1 (en) 2008-05-30 2010-06-10 The Regents Of The University Of California (Al,Ga,In)N DIODE LASER FABRICATED AT REDUCED TEMPERATURE
JP2009055056A (en) 2008-10-17 2009-03-12 Hitachi Cable Ltd Manufacturing method of nitride semiconductor
US20120025231A1 (en) 2008-11-06 2012-02-02 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Series connected flip chip leds with growth substrate removed
JP2010218510A (en) 2009-03-19 2010-09-30 Yamatake Corp System and method for monitoring of condition
US20100246625A1 (en) 2009-03-27 2010-09-30 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Nitride semiconductor laser
US20120018753A1 (en) 2009-03-31 2012-01-26 Xidian University Ultraviolet light emitting diode devices and methods for fabricating the same
US20100317132A1 (en) 2009-05-12 2010-12-16 Rogers John A Printed Assemblies of Ultrathin, Microscale Inorganic Light Emitting Diodes for Deformable and Semitransparent Displays
US7989323B2 (en) 2009-06-19 2011-08-02 Rohm And Haas Electronic Materials Llc Doping method
WO2011013621A1 (en) 2009-07-31 2011-02-03 日亜化学工業株式会社 Nitride-semiconductor laser diode
US20120189030A1 (en) 2009-07-31 2012-07-26 Nichia Corporation Nitride semiconductor laser diode
US20110076854A1 (en) 2009-09-30 2011-03-31 Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Method of manufacturing vertical-cavity surface emitting laser
US20120205665A1 (en) 2009-10-16 2012-08-16 Korea Polytechnic University Industry Academic Cooperation Foundation High-quality non-polar/semi-polar semiconductor device on porous nitride semiconductor and manufacturing method thereof
US20130011656A1 (en) 2010-01-27 2013-01-10 Yale University Conductivity Based on Selective Etch for GaN Devices and Applications Thereof
CN102782818A (en) 2010-01-27 2012-11-14 耶鲁大学 Conductivity based selective etch for gan devices and applications thereof
US20160153113A1 (en) 2010-01-27 2016-06-02 Yale University Conductivity based on selective etch for gan devices and applications thereof
US9206524B2 (en) 2010-01-27 2015-12-08 Yale University Conductivity based on selective etch for GaN devices and applications thereof
WO2011094391A1 (en) 2010-01-27 2011-08-04 Yale University Conductivity based selective etch for gan devices and applications thereof
JP2013518447A (en) 2010-01-27 2013-05-20 イェイル ユニヴァーシティ Conductivity-based selective etching for GaN devices and applications thereof
CN102823089A (en) 2010-02-04 2012-12-12 奥斯坦多科技公司 High Injection Efficiency Polar and Nonpolar III-Nitride Optical Emitters
US20110188528A1 (en) 2010-02-04 2011-08-04 Ostendo Technologies, Inc. High Injection Efficiency Polar and Non-Polar III-Nitrides Light Emitters
US20130210180A1 (en) 2010-07-26 2013-08-15 Seren Photonics Limited Light emitting diodes
JP2012049292A (en) 2010-08-26 2012-03-08 Panasonic Corp Surface-emitting semiconductor laser element and method of manufacturing the same
US20120068214A1 (en) 2010-09-21 2012-03-22 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130207237A1 (en) 2010-10-15 2013-08-15 The Regents Of The University Of California Method for producing gallium nitride substrates for electronic and optoelectronic devices
US8344409B2 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-01-01 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130328102A1 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-12-12 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US8519430B2 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-08-27 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US20130134457A1 (en) 2010-10-29 2013-05-30 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US8507925B2 (en) 2010-12-02 2013-08-13 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
JP2014507069A (en) 2011-02-18 2014-03-20 晶元光▲電▼股▲ふん▼有限公司 Photoelectric device and manufacturing method thereof
US20130334555A1 (en) 2011-02-18 2013-12-19 Epistar Corporation Optoelectronic device and method for manufacturing the same
US8343788B2 (en) 2011-04-19 2013-01-01 Epistar Corporation Light emitting device and manufacturing method thereof
US20140048830A1 (en) 2011-04-19 2014-02-20 Epistar Corporation Light emitting device and manufacturing method thereof
US20130140517A1 (en) 2011-06-29 2013-06-06 Purdue Research Foundation Thin and Flexible Gallium Nitride and Method of Making the Same
JP2013038394A (en) 2011-07-14 2013-02-21 Rohm Co Ltd Semiconductor laser element
US20130050686A1 (en) 2011-08-25 2013-02-28 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Gap distributed bragg reflectors
WO2013050686A1 (en) 2011-10-04 2013-04-11 Verdol Device for reducing the tension of yarn between a system for transforming said yarn and a system for winding said yarn
US20140339566A1 (en) 2011-12-14 2014-11-20 Seoul Viosys Co., Ltd. Semiconductor device and method of fabricating the same
US9356187B2 (en) 2012-02-06 2016-05-31 Seoul Viosys Co., Ltd. Method for separating semiconductor devices using nanoporous structure
CN104205369A (en) 2012-03-19 2014-12-10 皇家飞利浦有限公司 Light emitting device grown on a silicon substrate
US20130248911A1 (en) 2012-03-22 2013-09-26 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Light-emitting device including nitride-based semiconductor omnidirectional reflector
US20140003458A1 (en) 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Yale University Lateral electrochemical etching of iii-nitride materials for microfabrication
US20170133826A1 (en) 2012-06-28 2017-05-11 Yale University Lateral electrochemical etching of iii-nitride materials for microfabrication
US9583353B2 (en) 2012-06-28 2017-02-28 Yale University Lateral electrochemical etching of III-nitride materials for microfabrication
US8497171B1 (en) 2012-07-05 2013-07-30 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. FinFET method and structure with embedded underlying anti-punch through layer
WO2014061174A1 (en) 2012-10-19 2014-04-24 パナソニック株式会社 Semiconductor light emitting element
US20140191369A1 (en) 2013-01-08 2014-07-10 Hitachi Metals, Ltd. Nitride semicondutor device
US20140203292A1 (en) 2013-01-24 2014-07-24 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Semiconductor light emitting device
CN103762286A (en) 2013-08-09 2014-04-30 青岛杰生电气有限公司 LED with high light extraction efficiency
US20170237234A1 (en) 2014-09-30 2017-08-17 Yale University A method for gan vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (vcsel)
US20160197151A1 (en) 2014-12-01 2016-07-07 Yale University Method to make buried, highly conductive p-type iii-nitride layers
US20180152003A1 (en) 2015-05-19 2018-05-31 Yale University A method and device concerning iii-nitride edge emitting laser diode of high confinement factor with lattice matched cladding layer

Non-Patent Citations (111)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Al-Heuseen et al., Effect of different electrolytes on porous GaN using photo-electrochemical etching. Applied surface science. May 1, 2011;257(14):6197-201.
Amano et al., I. P-type conduction in Mg-doped GaN treated with low-energy electron beam irradiation (LEEBI). Japanese Journal of Applied Physics. Dec. 1989;28(12A):L2112.
Amano et al., P-Type Conduction in Mg-Doped GaN Treated with Low-Energy Electron Beam Irradiation (LEEBI). Jpn J Appl Phys. 1989;28:L2112-4.
Beale et al., An experimental and theoretical study of the formation and micro structure of porous silicon. Journal of Crystal Growth, Dec. 1985 l;73(3):622-36.
Beale et al., Microstructure and formation mechanism of porous silicon. Applied Physics Letters. Jan. 1, 1985;46(1):86-8.
Bernardini et al., Spontaneous polarization and piezoelectric constants of III-V nitrides. Phys. Rev. B. 1997;56(16):R10024-7.
Bisi et al., Porous silicon: a quantum sponge structure for silicon based optoelectronics. Surface science reports. Apr. 1, 2000;38(1-3):1-126.
Bour et al., AIGaInN MQW Laser Diodes. III-V Nitride Semiconductors Applications and Devices. E.T. Yu (Ed.). Taylor and Francis Books, Inc., New York, NY, vol. 16, Chapter 10. 2003.
Bour et al., Design and performance of asymmetric waveguide nitride laser diodes. IEEE J Quantum Electron. 2000;36(2):184-191. doi: 10.1109/3.823464.
Chen et al., Flexible, Compliant GaN Nanomembranes for Photonic Applications. 10th International Conference on Nitride Semiconductors. Abstract. Aug. 25, 2013. 2 pages.
Chen et al., High reflectance membrane-based distributed Bragg reflectors for GaN photonics. Appl Phys Lett. 2012;101:221104.
Chen et al., High-Q, Low-Threshold Monolithic Perovskite Thin-Film Vertical-Cavity Lasers. Advanced Materials. Apr. 2017;29(16): 1604781.
Chen et al., Nanopores in GaN by electrochemical anodization in hydrofluoric acid: Formatio and mechanism. J Appl Physics. 2012;112:064303.
Chichibu et al., Origin of defect-insensitive emission probability in In-containing (A1, In, Ga) N alloy semiconductors. Nature materials. Oct. 2006;5(10):810-6.
Choquette et al., Selective Oxidation of Buried AIGaAs for Fabrication of Vertical-Cavity Lasers. Conference: Spring meeting of the Materials Research Society (MRS), San Francisco, CA, Apr. 8-12, 1996. OSTI 244633. Jun. 1996. 10 pages.
Choquette et al., Vertical-cavity surface emitting lasers: moving from research to manufacturing. Proceedings of the IEEE, Nov. 1997;85(11): 1730-9.
Chung et al., Effect of Oxygen on the Activation of Mg Acceptor in GaN Epilayers Grown by Metalorganic Chemical Vapor Deposition. Jpn J Appl Phys. 2000;39(1,8):4749-50.
Cullis et al., The structural and luminescence properties of porous silicon. Journal of applied physics. Aug. 1, 1997;82(3):909-65.
Davis et al., Ordered porous materials for emerging applications. Nature. Jun. 2002;417(6891):813-21.
Dorsaz et al., Selective oxidation of AllnN layers for current confinement in Ill-nitride devices. Appl Phys Lett. 2005;87:072102.
Eiting et al., Growth of low resistivity p-type GaN by metal organic chemical vapour deposition. Electron Lett. Nov. 6, 1997;33(23):1987-1989. doi: 10.1049/e1.19971257.
Extended European Search Report for European Application No. 11737629.3, dated Oct. 12, 2017.
Extended European Search Report for European Application No. 15846362.0, dated Apr. 24, 2018.
Extended European Search Report for European Application No. 16797298.3, dated Dec. 3, 2018
Feng et al., Genetic history of Xinjiang's Uyghurs suggests bronze age multiple-way contacts in Eurasia. Molecular Biology and Evolution, Oct. 1, 2017;34(10):2572-82.
Föll et al., Macroporous semiconductors. Materials. May 2010;3(5):3006-76.
Gautier et al., Observations of Macroporous Gallium Nitride Electrochemically Etched from High Doped Single Crystal Wafers in HF Based Electrolytes. ECS J of Solid State Science and Technology. 2013;2(4):P146-P148.
Gautier et al., Porous silicon in microelectronics: From academic studies to industry. ECS Transactions. Sep. 18, 2015;69(2):123.
Hamaguchi et al., Milliwatt-class GaN-based blue vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers fabricated by epitaxial lateral overgrowth, physica status solidi (a). May 2016;213(5):1170-6.
Han et al., Single-Crystalline, Nanoporous Gallium Nitride Films With Fine Tuning of Pore Size for Stem Cell Engineering. Journal of Nanotechnology in Engineering and Medicine. Nov. 1, 2014;5(4):040903-1.
Higuchi et al., Room-Temperature CW Lasing of a GaN-Based Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser by Current Injection. Appl Phys Express. 2008;1(12):121102. doi: 10.1143/APEX.1.121102.
Holder et al., Demonstration of nonpolar GaN-based vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers. Proc SPIE 8639, Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers XVII, 863906. Mar. 13, 2013;doi:10.1117/12.2008277.
Huang et al., Mechanical properties of nanoporous GaN and its application for separation and transfer of GaN thin films. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. Nov. 13, 2013;5(21):11074-9.
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for International Application No. PCT/US2013/046852, dated Jan. 8, 2015.
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for International Application No. PCT/US2015/053254, dated Apr. 13, 2017.
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for International Application No. PCT/US2016/033270, dated Nov. 30, 2017.
International Preliminary Report on Patentability, dated Aug. 9, 2012 for Application No. PCT/US2011/022701.
International Search Report and Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2011/022701, dated Apr. 8, 2011.
International Search Report and Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2013/046852, dated Oct. 29, 2013.
International Search Report and Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2015/053254, dated Dec. 29, 2015.
International Search Report and Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2016/033270, dated Aug. 25, 2016.
Jasim et al., The Size Effect in Small Aperture Confined Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser. AIP Conference Proceedings. Jun. 1, 2009;1136(1):103-7.
Jeon et al., Investigation of Mg doping in high-Al content p-type Al x Ga 1-x N (0.3<x<0.5). Appl Phys Lett. 2005;86:082107. doi: 10.1063/1.1867565.
Jiang et al., Semiconduct or lasers: Expanding into blue and green. Nat Photon. 2011;5:521-2.
Kamiura et al., Photo-Enhanced Activation of Hydrogen-Passivated Magnesium in P-Type GaN Films. Jpn J Appl Phys. 1998;37(2,8B):L970-1.
Kasahara et al., Demonstration of Blue and Green GaN-Based Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers by Current Injection at Room Temperature. Appl Phys Express. 2011;4(7):072103. doi: 10.1143/APEX.4.072103.
Kiefer et al., Si/Ge junctions formed by nanomembrane bonding. ACS Nano. Feb. 22, 2011;5(2): 1179-89. doi: 10.1021/nnl03149c. Epub Jan. 19, 2011. 11 pages.
Kim et al., Reactivation of Mg acceptor in Mg-doped GaN by nitrogen plasma treatment. Appl Phys Lett. May 22, 2000;76(21):3079-81.
Kozodoy et al., Enhanced Mg doping efficiency in Al 0.2 Ga 0.8 N/GaN superlattices. Appl Phys Lett. 1999;74:3681. doi: 10.1063/1.123220.
Krishnamoorthy et al., InGaN/GaN tunnel junctions for hole injection in GaN light emitting diodes. Appl Phys Lett. Jun. 10, 2014; 105(14): 141104. doi: 10.1063/1.4897342. 16 pages.
Kuramoto et al., Enhancement of slope efficiency and output power in GaN-based verticalcavity surface-emitting lasers with a SiO2-buried lateral index guide. Applied Physics Letters. Mar. 12, 2018;112(11):111104.
Kurokawa et al., Multijunction GalnN-based solar cells using a tunnel junction. Appl Phys Express. Mar. 3, 2014;7(3):034104.1-4.
Kuwano et al., Lateral hydrogen diffusion at p-GaN layers in nitride-based light emitting diodes with tunnel junctions. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics. Aug. 20, 2013;52(8S):08JK12.
Kuwano et al., Lateral Hydrogen Diffusion at p-GaN Layers in Nitride-Based Light Emitting Diodes with Tunnel Junctions. Jpn J Appl Phys. Aug. 20, 2013;52(8S):08JK12.1-3.
Laino et al., Substrate Modes of (Al,In)GaN Semiconductor Laser Diodes on SiC and GaN Substrates. IEEE J Quantum Electron. 2007:43(1):16-24. doi: 10.1109/JQE.2006.884769.
Langa et al., Waveguide structures based on porous indium phosphide. Electrochemical and Solid State Letters. Dec. 23, 2004;8(2):C30.
Lee et al., Enhanced performance of InGaN/GaN multiple-quantum-well light-emitting diodes grown on nanoporous GaN layers. Optics Express. Jun. 30, 2014;22(104):A1164-73.
Lee et al., Fast fabrication of long-range ordered porous alumina membranes by hard anodization. Nature materials. Sep. 2006;5(9):741-7.
Lee et al., Optically pumped GaN vertical cavity surface emitting laser with high index-contrast nanoporous distributed Bragg reflector. Optics express. May 4, 2015;23(9): 11023-30.
Lin et al., Current steering effect of GaN nanoporous structure. Thin Solid Films. Nov. 2014;570(Part B):293-7.
Lin et al., Fabrication of current confinement aperture structure by transforming a conductive GaN: Si epitaxial layer into an insulating GaOx layer. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. Dec. 24, 2014;6(24):22235-42.
Lu et al., CW lasing of current injection blue GaN-based vertical cavity surface emitting laser. Applied Physics Lett. 2008;92:141102.
Myers et al., Diffusion, release, and uptake of hydrogen in magnesium-doped gallium nitride: Theory and experiment. J Appl Phys. Mar. 15, 2001;89(6):3195-202.
Mynbaeva et al., Strain relaxation in GaN layers grown on porous GaN sublayers. Materials Research Society Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research, 1999;4(1).
Mynbaeva et al., Structural characterization and strain relaxation in porous GaN layers. Applied Physics Letters. Feb. 28, 2000;76(9):1113-5.
Nagahama et al., High-Power and Long-Lifetime InGaN Multi-Quantum-Well Laser Diodes Grown on Low-Dislocation-Density GaN Substrates. Jpn J Appl Phys. 2000;39, part 2(7a):L647. doi: 10.1143/JJAP.39.L647.
Nakamura et al., Hole Compensation Mechanism of P-Type GaN Films. Jpn J Appl Phys. May 1992;31(1,5A):1258-66.
Nakamura et al., The Blue Laser Diode: The Complete Story. Springer. 2000. pp. 27, 238.
Nakayama et al., Electrical Transport Properties of p-GaN. Jpn J Appl Phys. 1996;35, Part 2(3A):L282. doi: 10.1143/JJAP.35.L282.
Okamoto et al., Pure Blue Laser Diodes Based on Nonpolar m-Plane Gallium Nitride with InGaN Waveguiding Layers. Jpn J Appl Phys. 2007;46:L820. doi: 10.1143/JJAP.46.L820.
Pandey et al. ("Formation of self-organized anodic oxide from metallic gallium", Langmuir, 2012, 28 (38), pp. 13705-13711) (Year: 2012). *
Park et al., Doping selective lateral electrochemical etching of GaN for chemical lift-off. Jun. 5, 2009. Applied Physics Letters. AIP Publishing LLC, US. Vol. 94(22) pp. 221907-1-221907-3.
Park et al., High Diffuse Reflectivity of Nanoporous GaN Distributed Bragg Reflector Formed by Electrochemical Etching. Applied Physics Express. Jun. 14, 2013;6(7):072201-1-4.
Paskiewicz et al., Defect-free single-crystal SiGe: a new material from nanomembrane strain engineering. ACS Nano. Jul. 26, 2011;5(7):5814-22. doi: 10.1021/nn201547k. Epub Jun. 16, 2011.
Piprek, Blue light emitting diode exceeding 100% quantum efficiency. Phys Status Solidi RRL. 8, No. 5, Feb. 4, 2014 (Year: 2014). *
Piprek, Efficiency droop in nitride-based light-emitting diodes. Physica Status Solidi A. Oct. 2010;207(10):2217-25.
Pourhashemi et al., High-power blue laser diodes with indium tin oxide cladding on semipolar (202-1-) GaN substrates. Appl Phys Lett. 2015;106:111105.
Rogers et al., Synthesis, assembly and applications of semiconductor nanomembranes. Nature. Aug. 31, 2011;477(7362):45-53. doi: 10.1038/nature10381.
Ruoyuan et al. ("Wet oxidation of AlGaAs/GaAs distributed Bragg reflectors", Chinese Journal of semiconductors, vol. 26, No. 8, Aug. 2005). *
Sarzynski et al., Elimination of AlGaN epilayer cracking by spatially patterned AlN mask. Appl Phys Lett. 2006;88:121124.
Schwab et al., Aligned mesopore arrays in GaN by anodic etching and photoelectrochemical surface etching. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C. Aug. 22, 2013;117(33): 16890-5.
Searson et al., Pore morphology and the mechanism of pore formation in n-type silicon. Journal of applied physics. Jul. 1, 1992;72(1):253-8.
Sharizal et al., Effect of oxide aperture on the performance of 850 nm vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers. Optik, Jan. 1, 2009;120(3):121-6.
Smith et al., A theoretical model of the formation morphologies of porous silicon. Journal of Electronic Materials. Nov. 1, 1988;17(6):533-41.
Smith et al., Porous silicon formation mechamsms. Journal of Applied Physics. Apr. 15, 1992;71(8):R1-22.
Someya et al., Room temperature lasing at blue wavelengths in gallium nitride microcavities. Science. Sep. 17, 1999;285(5435):1905-6.
Sundararajan et al., Gallium nitride: Method of defect characterization by wet oxidation in an oxalic acid electrolytic cell. J Vac Sci Tech B. Sep. 27, 2002;20(4):1339-41.
Tanaka et al., p-type conduction in Mg-doped GaN and A10.08Ga0.92N grown by metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy. Appl Phys Lett. 1994;65:593. doi: 10.1063/1.112309.
Todt et al. ("Oxidation kinetics and microstructure of wet-oxidized MBE-grown short-period AlGaAs superlattices", Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc, vol. 692, 2002). *
U.S. Appl. No. 14/929,015 filed +Oct. 30, 2015, Zhang et al.
U.S. Appl. No. 14/954,195 filed +Nov. 30, 2015, Han et al.
U.S. Appl. No. 15/515,302 filed /Mar. 29, 2017, Zhang et al.
U.S. Appl. No. 15/574,739 filed +Nov. 16, 2017, Han et al.
Vajpeyi et al., High Optical Quality Nanoporous GaN Prepared by Photoelectrochemical Etching. Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters. 2005;8(4):G85-8.
Waldrip et al., Stress engineering during metalorganic chemical vapor deposition of AIGaN/GaN distributed Bragg Reflectors. Appl Phys Lett. 2001;78:3205.
Wang et al., Fabrication and properties of nanoporous GaN films. Applied physics letters. Aug. 2, 2004;85(5):816-8.
Wierer et al., Comparison between blue lasers and light-emitting diodes for future solid-state lighting. Laser Photonics Rev. Nov. 2013;7(6):963-93.
Yam et al., Porous GaN prepared by UV assisted electrochemical etching. Thin Solid Films. Elsevier, Amsterdam, NL, Feb. 15, 2007; vol. 515(7-8), pp. 3469-3474.
Yam et al., Structural and optical characteristics of porous GaN generated by electroless chemical etching. Mater Lett. 2008;63:724-7.
Yang et al., Improving light output power of InGaN-based light emitting diodes with pattern-nanoporous p-type GaN: Mg surfaces. Applied Physics Letters. Nov. 17, 2008;93(20):203103.
Yerino et al., Shape transformation of nanoporous GaN by annealing: From buried cavities to nanomembranes. Appl Phys Lett. Jun. 2011;98(25):251910.1-3. doi: 10.1063/1.3601861.
Yuan et al., Optical engineering of modal gain in a III-nitride laser with nanoporous GaN. ACS Photonics. Sep. 21, 2016;3(9): 1604-10.
Zhang et al., A conductivity-based selective etching for next generation GaN devices. Physica Status Solidi B. Jul. 2010;247(7):1713-6. doi: 10.1002/pssb.200983650.
Zhang et al., A resonant-cavity blue-violet light-emitting diode with conductive nanoporous distributed Bragg reflector, physica status solidi (a). Aug. 2017;214(8): 1600866.
Zhang et al., Confinement factor and absorption loss of AllnGaN based laser diodes emitting from ultraviolet to green. J Appl Phys. 2009;105:023104.
Zhang et al., Mesoporous GaN for Photonic Engineering—Highly Reflective GaN Mirrors as an Example. ACS Photonics. 2015;2(7):980-6.
Zhang et al., Toward quantitative electrochemical nanomachining of III-nitrides. Journal of The Electrochemical Society. Jul. 28, 2018;165(10):E513-20.
Zhang, Mechanism of pore formation on n-type silicon. Journal of the Electrochemical Society. Dec. 1, 1991;138(12):3750-6.
Zhang, Nanoporous GaN and Its Application in Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers. Yale University PhD Dissertation, May 2019:248 pages.
Zheng et al., Synthesis of Ultra-Long and Highly Oriented Silicon Oxide Nanowires from Liquid Alloys. Adv Mater. Jan. 2002;14(2):122-4.
Zhou et al., Near ultraviolet optically pumped vertical cavity laser. Electron Lett. 2000;36:1777-9.

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
KR20220156973A (en) * 2017-09-27 2022-11-28 캠브리지 엔터프라이즈 리미티드 Method for porosifying a material and semiconductor structure
US11651954B2 (en) * 2017-09-27 2023-05-16 Cambridge Enterprise Ltd Method for porosifying a material and semiconductor structure
KR102591874B1 (en) 2017-09-27 2023-10-20 캠브리지 엔터프라이즈 리미티드 Method for porosifying a material and semiconductor structure
US11631782B2 (en) 2018-01-26 2023-04-18 Cambridge Enterprise Limited Method for electrochemically etching a semiconductor structure
US20210384706A1 (en) * 2018-10-18 2021-12-09 Stanley Electric Co., Ltd. Vertical cavity surface emitting device
US12218486B2 (en) * 2018-10-18 2025-02-04 Stanley Electric Co., Ltd. Vertical cavity surface emitting device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20150303655A1 (en) 2015-10-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US11095096B2 (en) Method for a GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL)
US11043792B2 (en) Method for GaN vertical microcavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL)
US11133652B2 (en) Optical devices and methods of manufacture and operation
CN107710381B (en) Methods and devices involving high confinement factor III-nitride edge-emitting laser diodes with lattice-matched cladding layers
KR101944893B1 (en) Heterostructure including anodic aluminum oxide layer
WO2018184288A1 (en) Porous dbr- and gan-based vcsel chip, and manufacturing method
KR20200057073A (en) Method and semiconductor structure for porous material
KR20120104985A (en) Superluminescent diodes by crystallographic etching
JP2007053369A (en) Nitride semiconductor vertical cavity surface-emitting laser
CN103107482A (en) Single-mode photonic crystal vertical cavity surface emitting laser and preparation method thereof
US10847950B2 (en) Vertical cavity surface emitting laser, method for fabricating vertical cavity surface emitting laser
JP2020505762A (en) Nitride semiconductor light emitting device and method of manufacturing the same
CN113471814A (en) Nitride semiconductor vertical cavity surface emitting laser, and manufacturing method and application thereof
KR101550200B1 (en) light-emitting diode including DBR layer pattern and manufacturing method thereof
Holder et al. Demonstration of nonpolar GaN-based vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers
KR20150089548A (en) Vertical light emitting diode including porous GaN layer and method for thereof
KR101067296B1 (en) Manufacturing method of nitride based light emitting device
US20230109404A1 (en) Semiconductor Light-Emitting Device And Preparation Method Thereof
Zhang Nanoporous GaN and Its Application in Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers
WO2024044567A2 (en) Iii-nitride-based vertical cavity surface emitting laser (vcsel) with a dielectric p-side lens and an activated tunnel junction
WO2025035077A1 (en) Chemical etch assembly for uniform iii-nitride based etching

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: YALE UNIVERSITY, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:HAN, JUNG;LIN, CHIA-FENG;CHEN, DANTI;SIGNING DATES FROM 20140515 TO 20140518;REEL/FRAME:035431/0858

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE AFTER FINAL ACTION FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE MAILED -- APPLICATION RECEIVED IN OFFICE OF PUBLICATIONS

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE MAILED -- APPLICATION RECEIVED IN OFFICE OF PUBLICATIONS

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE TO NON-FINAL OFFICE ACTION ENTERED AND FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NOTICE OF ALLOWANCE MAILED -- APPLICATION RECEIVED IN OFFICE OF PUBLICATIONS

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: PUBLICATIONS -- ISSUE FEE PAYMENT RECEIVED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: PUBLICATIONS -- ISSUE FEE PAYMENT VERIFIED

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YR, SMALL ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M2551); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: SMALL ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 4

OSZAR »