Abstract

The epitaxial growth of heavily Ge‐doped GaN films using pulsed sputtering deposition (PSD) on AlN (0001)/sapphire substrates is presented and the correlations among their structural, electrical, and optical properties are investigated. High‐quality Ge‐doped PSD‐GaN films are grown with electron concentrations of 0.33–4.4 × 1020 cm−3. Notably, cathode luminescence spectra reveal the absence of defect‐induced emissions associated with Ga vacancies (2.3–2.4 eV), consistent with the high electron mobilities of the films. As the electron concentration increases, the optical bandgap also increases. This correlation can be explained by combining the theoretical formulas for the Burstein–Moss shift and the bandgap renormalization effects. Remarkably, the optical bandgap reaches 3.84 eV at 4.4 × 1020 cm−3 carrier concentration, marking the highest value reported for the optical bandgap of GaN. These results indicate the potential of heavy Ge doping in GaN via PSD for applications in highly transparent conductive layers and tunneling junctions within GaN‐based optoelectronic devices.

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