A nitrogen–aluminum–gallium–arsenic plasma is formed by pulsed laser co-ablation of an Al target and a GaAs target in electron cyclotron resonance discharge-generated nitrogen plasma for AlxGa1−xN film deposition. The formed plasma was characterized by time-integrated and time-resolved optical emission spectroscopy measurements and the process of AlxGa1−xN deposition was discussed. The plasma contains excited species originally present in the working N2 gas and energetic species ablated from the targets, and its emission is abundant in the emission bands of diatomic nitrogen molecules and molecular ions and the emission lines of monoatomic aluminum, gallium, and arsenic atoms and atomic ions. The temporal and spatial features of the plasma emission reveal that the nitrogen species in the electron cyclotron resonance nitrogen plasma experience additional excitations due to the expanding ablation plumes, and the ablated species are excited frequently when traveling with the expanding plumes in the nitrogen plasma, making the formed plasma very reactive, which is very important in the process of AlxGa1−xN film deposition. The deposited film was evaluated for composition analysis by energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy and structure characterization by x-ray diffraction. The AlxGa1−xN film is slightly nitrogen rich with an aluminum content x of about 0.6 and featured with hexagonal wurtzite crystal structure with preferred c-axis orientation.
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