Abstract

Throughout the development of III-nitride electronic and optoelectronic devices, electrically interfacing III-nitride semiconductors and metal schemes has been a long-standing issue that determines the contact resistance and operation voltage, which are tightly associated with the device performance and stability. Compared to the main research focus of the crystal quality of III-nitride semiconductors, the equally important contact interface between III-nitrides and metal schemes has received relatively less attention. Here, we demonstrate a comprehensive contact engineering strategy to realize low resistance to Al-rich n-AlGaN via pretreatment and metal scheme optimization. Prior to the metal deposition, the introduction of CHF3 treatment is conducive to the substantial resistance reduction, with the effect becoming more distinct by prolonging the treatment time. Furthermore, we compare different metal schemes, namely, Ti/Al/Ti/Au, Ti/Al/Ti/Pt/Au, and Cr/Ti/Al/Ti/Pt/Au, to form electrical contact on n-AlGaN. From microscale analysis based on multiple characterization methods, we reveal the correlation between electrical properties and the nature of the contact interface, attributing the contact improvement to the low-resistance Pt- and Cr-related alloy formation. Under the circumstance that no efforts have been devoted to optimizing the epitaxial growth, engineering the metal-semiconductor contact properties alone leads to a resistance value of 8.96 × 10-5 Ω·cm2. As a result, the fabricated deep-ultraviolet LEDs exhibit an ultralow forward voltage of 5.47 V at 30 A/cm2 and a 33% increase in the peak wall-plug efficiency.

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