Abstract

The available publications concerned with fabrication and study of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) intended for operation in the 1.6–4.4 μm spectral range; based on GaSb substrates; and grown by liquid-phase epitaxy, which makes it possible to form fairly thick layers lattice-matched to GaSb, are reviewed. In these studies, the active region consists of the GaInAsSb compound in LEDs for the spectral ranges 1.8–2.4 and 3.4–4.4 μm and the AlGaAsSb compound for the spectral region 1.6–1.8 μm. The wide-gap AlGaAsSb confining layers contain up to 64% of Al, which is an unprecedentedly high content for liquid-phase epitaxy. Asymmetric (GaSb/GaInAsSb/AlGaAsSb) and symmetric (AlGaAsSb/GaInAsSb/AlGaAsSb) heterostructures have been fabricated and studied. Various types of designs that make it possible to improve the yield of radiation generated in the active region have been developed. The measured external quantum yield of emission is as high as 6.0% at 300 K for the LEDs operating at the wavelengths 1.9–2.2 μm. A pulsed optical-radiation power of 7 mW at a current of 300 mA with a duty factor of 0.5 and 190 mW at a current of 1.4 A with a duty factor of 0.005 have been obtained. The external quantum emission yield of ∼1% has been obtained for LEDs that emit in the spectral range 3.4–4.4 μm; this yield exceeds that obtained for the known InAsSb/InAsSbP heterostructure grown on an InAs substrate by a factor of 3. The measured lifetime of minority charge carriers (5–0 ns) is close to the theoretical lifetime if only the radiative recombination and impact CHCC bulk recombination are taken into account. The impact recombination is prevalent at temperatures higher than 200 K for LEDs operating in the spectral range 3.4–4.4 μm and at temperatures higher than 300 K for LEDs operating in the spectral range 1.6–2.4 μm.

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