Metamorphic semiconductor devices such as high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs), light-emitting diodes (LEDs), laser diodes, and solar cells are grown on mismatched substrates and typically exhibit a high degree of lattice relaxation. In order to minimize the incorporation of threading defects it is common to use a linearly-graded buffer layer to accommodate the mismatch between the substrate and device layers. However, some work has suggested that buffer layers with non-linear grading could offer higher performance in terms of limiting the surface density of threading defects. In this work, we compare bi-parabolic graded buffer layers to linear and S-graded buffer layers in terms of the surface threading dislocation density by considering a uniform InGaAs layer grown on a GaAs substrate with an intermediate graded InGaAs buffer layer. The threading dislocation densities were calculated using the LMD model, in which the coefficient for second-order annihilation and coalescence reactions between threading dislocations is considered to be equal to the length of misfit dislocations.
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