Abstract

We investigate the sub-bandgap optical absorption (SOA) in 300-nm-thick Al1−xInxN alloys used in cladding layers of edge-emitting laser diodes and distributed Bragg reflectors of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers. Al1−xInxN alloys, with indium content x ranging from 0.114 to 0.185, were grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition on a c-plane GaN/sapphire template. SOAs on 300-nm-thick thin films were characterized using photothermal deflection spectroscopy (PDS). Thermal emission, such as nonradiative recombination with phonon emission, is the dominant energy relaxation process occurring after SOA in Al1−xInxN alloys. The absorption coefficient of the SOA was estimated to be 0.6–7.0 × 103 cm−1 in these samples by combining PDS and spectroscopic ellipsometry. The drastic increase in the SOA, when x exceeded the lattice-matched composition of the GaN/sapphire template, indicates that impurities, vacancy-type defects, and their complexes with increasing x are possible candidates that result in SOA in Al1−xInxN alloys.

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