Abstract

We demonstrate the first electrically injected AlGaN-based ultraviolet-B resonant-cavity light-emitting diode (RCLED). The devices feature dielectric SiO2/HfO2 distributed Bragg reflectors enabled by tunnel junctions (TJs) for lateral current spreading. A highly doped n++-AlGaN/n++-GaN/p++-AlGaN TJ and a top n-AlGaN current spreading layer are used as transparent contacts, resulting in a good current spreading up to an active region mesa diameter of 120 μm. To access the N-face side of the device, the substrate is removed by electrochemically etching a sacrificial n-AlGaN layer, leading to a smooth underetched surface without evident parasitic etching in the n- and n++-doped layers of the device. The RCLEDs show a narrow emission spectrum with a full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of 4.3 nm compared to 9.4 nm for an ordinary LED and a more directional emission pattern with an angular FWHM of 52° for the resonance at 310 nm in comparison to ∼126° for an LED. Additionally, the RCLEDs show a much more stable emission spectrum with temperature with a red-shift of the electroluminescence peak of about ∼18 pm/K and a negligible change of the FWHM compared to LEDs, which shift ∼30 pm/K and show spectrum broadening with temperature. The demonstration of those devices, where a highly reflective mirror is spatially separated from an ohmic metal contact, opens up a new design space to potentially increase the poor light extraction efficiency in UV LEDs and is an important step toward electrically injected UV vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers.

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