Abstract

ABSTRACTIn the liquid phase epitaxy on indium phosphide, the substrate,just prior to the growth of the first epitaxial layer, is commonly etched back with an indium melt to remove any thermallydegraded surface and to ensure uniform and consistent wetting.This procedure, however, often produces defects which degrade both planar and buried heterostructure devices. For planar edgeemitters and lasers, the resulting rippled surface morphology degrades device performance by scattering light. For buried heterostructures, the meltback in the regrowth step leads to indium-rich inclusions. The effects of meltback on material quality are presented, and a new multiple meltback procedure which maintains flat surface morphology and eliminates inclusions is described.

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