An efficient electrically-pumped light emitter integrated in the standard CMOS technology has been so far the Holy Grail of the monolithic electronic-photonic integration. As a matter of fact, rapid advances in Si photonics over the last decade have enabled mass production of higher-functionality and lower-cost photonic integrated circuits, in which all the active and passive components such as waveguides, couplers, modulators, photodetectors, etc., except for the light source, can be fabricated side by side with both digital and analog circuitry in a silicon CMOS foundry. The obvious main advantages of a fully integrated light source are cost reduction, yield, easing of the packaging, link-budget improvement and a consequent power consumption reduction.
Among the different pathways leading to the on-chip integration of the light source, epitaxial lasers on silicon comprising active regions based on III-V or SiGe heterostructures have attracted a wide interest. In particular, Ge heteroepitaxial layers on Si are very promising since key photonic components for this material system, including high speed detectors and modulators, have been successfully integrated in standard CMOS process flow. Thus, Ge is now a “fab”-compatible material produced by means of fully qualified production processes and is considered one of the most promising materials for “more than Moore” device development.
An optically pumped Ge-on-Si laser demonstrating continuous-wave (cw) operation at room temperature has already been fabricated, as reported by J. Liu et al. Optics Letters 35, 679 (2010). In this approach, although Ge has an indirect band gap, the authors exploit a tensile strain in the Ge layer caused by a difference in thermal expansion coefficients between the Ge layer itself and the silicon substrate and accumulated during the fabrication process. Strain ε is defined as
wherein a denotes the lattice constant of the strained lattice and a0 denotes the lattice constant of the unstrained lattice of the solid state material under consideration. Moderate strain of the order of 0.2% was reported sufficient to reduce the energy difference between the and L valleys in the conduction band of the energy band structure of Germanium. Free electrons, incorporated through n-type doping, can fill up the low-lying L valley so that injected electrons do not thermalize at L but at , being thus available for radiative recombination through a direct transition.
The net gain is determined by the competition between this optical gain enhancement and the optical loss from additional free carrier absorption. In optically pumped bulk-Ge lasers, using a very high level of doping of 8×1019 cm−3, a net optical gain as high as 500 cm−1 could be achieved, as reported by X. Sun et al. IEEE J. of Sel. Topics in Quantum Electr. 16, 124 (2010).
The presence of a thermal tensile strain of 0.2% can double such a value. However the maximum reported gain for highly doped, thermal tensile strained structures is 50 cm−1, owing to the difficulties in to real high- and ultra-high n-doping in Ge due to donor solubility, dopant activation, and material processing. Therefore P. H. Lim et al., Optics Express 17, 16358 (2009), proposed to reduce the need of high-doping levels by externally increasing the tensile strain in the Ge epi-layer using micromechanical engineering.
A first aspect of the present invention a Ge-based light emitter structure that is CMOS compatible.
Another aspect of the present invention is a CMOS compatible process enabling the fabrication of a Ge-based LED/Laser.
According to the first aspect of the present invention, a semiconductor light emitter device is provided, comprising
The semiconductor light emitter device of the present invention provides an innovative concept for a CMOS-compatible, electrically driven Ge-based LED or laser structure.
The device is based on the recognition that the Ge active layer may be shaped as an air bridge that is under the influence of a stressor layer. The action of the stressor layer is to induce a tensile stress in the Ge active layer.
As a consequence of the tensile strain, the electronic energy bands are modified in a way that the radiative recombination of electron-hole pairs is enhanced in comparison to the Ge bulk case. Moreover, the energy-band gap is shrunk in comparison with that of unstrained Ge. As a consequence, the light emission efficiency of the material is increased, with the emission occurring at a wavelength increasing with the amount of tensile strain.
As will be disclosed in the context of the description of preferred embodiments, the light emitter device of the present invention forms an advantageous device platform that allows adding tuning elements, which enable a tuning of the emitted wavelength by strain adjustment, either fixed via proper selection of the stressor material, or even variable under operation of the device via an electrical control.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention, a process for fabricating a light emitter comprises
In the following, embodiments of the above two aspects of the invention will be described. The additional features distinguishing the different embodiments can be combined to obtain further embodiments.
The following specification first turns to embodiments of the light emitter device of the first aspect of the invention.
The active layer bridging the gap is preferably arranged as an outer layer of the bridge in order to allow inducing the tensile strain. Whether the bridge above the gap is bent upward (away from the substrate) or downward (towards the substrate) is a matter of processing options and photonic design. Both alternatives form respective embodiments of the light emitter device of the present invention.
A Ge light emitting diode (LED) or laser diode (LD) in accordance with the present invention is preferably configured as a lateral p-i-n diode operating under forward bias condition. Electrical contacts to the Ge microbridge structure are preferably arranged laterally with respect to the active layer, i.e., when the structure is displayed in a cross-sectional view as in
The electrical contacts from the side areas may for instance be made of poly-Si or a germanide of a metal, such as Co, Ni, Ti. Also W metal contacts could be used as direct contacts to Ge.
The active layer bridging the gap between the bridgeposts is herein also referred to as a microbridge. The part of the microbridge structure with highest strain is preferably of intrinsic conductivity and configured for efficient light emission by direct recombination.
The spatial separation of the high doping areas and the light emission area brings about key advantages. These include a low free-carrier absorption and a low Auger recombination. Furthermore, due to a lowering of the conduction band minimum and an increase of the valence band maximum in energy under tensile strain, electrons as well as holes will drift to the highly strained intrinsic part and, due to this local confinement by band gap engineering, be available for efficient direct recombination and light output.
The light output at the desired wavelength can be further enhanced by the presence of a photonic crystal design in the intrinsic, highly tensile strained part of the Ge microbridge structure.
Preferably, the tensile strain in the active layer is more than 1%, in other embodiments even above 2%. Increasing the tensile strain to this level induces a band gap shrinkage and a further shift of the and L conduction bands, which in turn progressively decrease their energy distance, eventually leading to a cross-over toward a “direct-type” gap.
Such a high level of strain allows reaching a net gain value as high as 2000 cm−1 with doping levels even below 2×1019 cm−3, for instance as low as 8×1018 cm−3. This is a much easier-to-achieve donor density. This preferred decrease of the requested donor density in the present embodiment has another beneficial effect. As a matter of fact, below the of 2×1019 cm−3 limit, the gain is expected to increase with the operating temperature with a gain maximum achieved at 350 K, i.e., at a temperature very close to the on-chip temperature in standard CMOS devices.
Nonetheless, other, in particular higher doping levels can be used in other embodiments to partially compensate the strain-induced band gap shrinkage to maximize the optical gain at a desired emission wavelength.
In some embodiments, the substrate is a silicon-on-insulator substrate having a top silicon layer on an intermediate insulator layer, which is arranged on a carrier substrate, and wherein the gap reaches through the top silicon layer. The carrier substrate may be made of any material that meets mechanical and electrical requirements of the device and of the processing technology to be used in fabrication of the device. Silicon is a suitable carrier in particular in the context of a CMOS fabrication process.
In one embodiment of the invention the static stressor is a dielectric or a dielectric layer stack deposited on the active Ge layer. The stress in the stressor layer induces a tensile strain in to the Ge active layer.
In one type of embodiments, the stressor layer either comprises or consists of a material layer deposited immediately on the active layer. In these embodiments, a layer stack comprising the active layer and the stressor layer may forms the air bridge that bridges the gap between the bridgeposts. The material choice of the stressor layer depends on the desired tensile strain that is to be induced. The dielectric layer can for instance comprise SiN, SiON, or Silicon-rich SiON. One skilled in the art can find other suitable materials for the stressor layer based on these examples. An example of a suitable material for inducing a tensile stress of more than 1% is silicon nitride. The strain level may be adjusted by an appropriate choice of the thickness of the stressor layer, its composition and deposition conditions.
In another embodiment, the stressor layer comprises an electrically tunable layer, which is configured to induce the tensile strain or a tensile strain component in the active layer upon electrical actuation of the tuning layer. Suitable tuning layers include a bimorph, that is, a layer stack of a piezoelectric material and a metal. The piezoelectric material is in one embodiment in contact with the active layer.
An actuation, that is, application of an electric field to the bimorph, causes the piezoelectric layer to extend and the metal to contract, which will induce a bow in the active layer that creates strain. This strain adds to the strain created by the stressor layer.
In one embodiment, the voltage-dependent piezoelectric response of the bimorph is transformed into a strain tuning range of the active layer, thus creating to a tuning range of the wavelength of emitted light in response to a voltage range of a tuning voltage applied to the bimorph. In this embodiment the tensile strain can be micromechanically tuned and the density of active dopants can be selected in a wide range of concentrations.
Examples of suitable piezoelectrics are ZnO and/or AlN, Different embodiments have the piezoelectric layer in polycrystalline or epitaxially grown form.
In another embodiment, the stressor layer consists of the tuning layer.
The stressor layer is in an alternative embodiment arranged remotely from the active layer. For instance, the stressor layer may be arranged with only indirect mechanical contact to the active layer, in particular below the active layer.
A preferred embodiment of the process for fabricating a semiconductor light emitter device in accordance with the second aspect of the invention comprises
This CMOS-compatible processing enables a cost-efficient fabrication of the light emitter device in large volumes in the context of standard processing techniques.
In the following, additional embodiments will be described with reference to the enclosed Figures.
In the embodiment of
The effect of the stressor layer 110 is to stress and bend the underlying active layer 108. In this way the electronic energy bands of Ge in the active layer 108 are modified in a way that the radiative recombination of electron-hole pairs is enhanced respect to the Ge bulk case, as described above in more detail. Moreover the energy-band gap of Ge is shrunk. As a consequence the light efficiency of the active layer 108 is increased, with the emission occurring at a wavelength increasing with the amount of tensile strain set.
The embodiment of
On top of the active layer 208, the stressor layer 210 is arranged, in a similar manner as in the embodiment of
The influence of the piezoelectric effect, if a tuning voltage is applied, the stress in the active layer increases or reduces to some extent in comparison with the absence of a tuning voltage. This way, the band gap of Ge can be influenced and thus the wavelength of the emitted light under application of an operating voltage across the p-i-n structure can be tuned.
In another variant that is not shown, a second electrically actuated stressor (bimorph layer) can be deposited on top of a steady stressor layer (e.g., SiN). The purpose of this second stressor is much like that of the embodiment of
The present process is CMOS-compatible. It is performed starting from an SOI substrate 302 (
On the SOI substrate 302, an intrinsic Germanium layer 308.1 (
Subsequently, patterning starts with the stressor layer, which is selectively removed, leaving only a stripe-shaped section (
Subsequently, the top substrate layer 302.3 is patterned by fabrication a shallow trench opening, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12154997.6 | Feb 2012 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/052702 | 2/11/2013 | WO | 00 |