III-nitride materials, particularly binary, ternary, quaternary, and quinary alloys of gallium, boron, aluminum, indium, and nitrogen, have been used to produce semiconductor devices, particularly light emitting diodes and laser diodes. III-nitride materials may also have advantages for power electronics, particularly in applications requiring high voltage, high temperature operation, or high frequency operation.
III-nitride devices are often fabricated on a substrate by an epitaxial growth technique such as metal organic chemical vapor deposition. N-type layers are typically doped with Si and p-type layers are typically doped with Mg.
The substrate is typically a non-III-nitride substrate such as sapphire or silicon carbide. Sapphire is often used as a substrate because of its wide availability and low cost. III-nitride material grown on sapphire includes defects such as dislocations because of the difference between the lattice constants and the coefficients of thermal expansion of sapphire and III-nitride material.
A method of reusing a III-nitride growth substrate according to embodiments of the invention includes epitaxially growing a III-nitride semiconductor structure on a III-nitride substrate. The III-nitride semiconductor structure includes a sacrificial layer and an additional layer grown over the sacrificial layer. The sacrificial layer is implanted with at least one implant species. The substrate is separated from the additional layer at the implanted sacrificial layer. In some embodiments the substrate is GaN and the sacrificial layer is GaN, an aluminum-containing III-nitride layer, or an indium-containing III-nitride layer. In some embodiments, the substrate is separated from the additional layer by etching the implanted sacrificial layer.
GaN or other III-nitride substrates are preferred to non-III-nitride substrates because III-nitride device layers can be grown on III-nitride substrates with fewer defects than III-nitride device layers grown on sapphire, silicon carbide, and other non-III-nitride substrates. GaN substrates, however, and not widely available and are expensive, particularly compared to substrates such as sapphire and silicon.
In accordance with embodiments of the invention, techniques are described to reuse a GaN, other III-nitride, or other growth substrate for a III-nitride device. The substrate is removed in a wafer-scale process. Though in the embodiments below, the reused substrate is a GaN substrate, the techniques described herein can be used with any suitable growth substrate.
In
Additional layer 14 is grown over sacrificial layer 12. Additional layer 14 may be a single GaN layer, a single III-nitride layer, or a multi-layer stack. In some embodiments, additional layer 14 includes the entire device structure, such that no further epitaxial growth is required after removing the substrate as illustrated in
In
Examples of suitable implant species include H, He, C, N, O, Mg, Al, Si, Ar, Hf, and other metals. Lighter implant species such as H and He are appropriate for a deep implant, for example when additional layer 14 is thick. In some embodiments, more than one implant species is used. For example, Si and O can be coimplanted. Specifically, Si can be implanted in a first implant and O can be implanted in a second implant. The implant conditions for the first and second implants are selected such that the Si and O implant regions overlap. In some embodiments, the implant species may be selected based on the dopant type of a region near the implanted region. For example, if the additional layer adjacent to the sacrificial region is n-type, the implant species may be an n-type dopant such as Si. If the additional layer adjacent to the sacrificial region is p-type, the implant species may be a p-type dopant such as Mg. The implant energy is between 10 keV and 3000 keV or more in some embodiments, between 100 and 500 keV in some embodiments, between 300 keV and 700 keV in some embodiments, and between 400 keV and 600 keV in some embodiments. The implant dose may be between 1×1014 cm−2 and 3×1018 cm−2 in some embodiments and between 1×1017 cm−2 and 3×1018 cm−2 in some embodiments.
Table 1 illustrates the implant depth and straggle for implants of several species at an implant energy of 100 keV. The straggle is the thickness of material both above and below the implant depth that is damaged by the implant. For example, in the case of hydrogen as shown in Table 1, the implant depth is 5656 Å. Above that depth, 1241 Å of material are damaged by the implant, and below that depth, 1241 Å material are damaged by the implant, such that the total thickness of the implant is 2481 Å of material centered at a depth of 5656 Å. In some embodiments, for a given implant species and energy, the sacrificial layer 12 is grown to a thickness of twice the straggle, and the thickness of additional layer 14 is selected such that the center of the sacrificial layer 12 is at the implant depth.
Table 2 illustrates the implant depth and straggle for implants of several species at an implant energy of 400 keV.
Table 3 illustrates the implant depth and straggle for implants of several species at an implant energy of 1000 keV.
In some embodiments, one or more semiconductor layers are grown over additional layer 14 after implant. The semiconductor layers grown after implant may be grown by any suitable technique. In some embodiments, the layers grown after implant include all or part of a device structure. In some embodiments, a thick layer is grown by a fast growth technique such as vapor phase epitaxy, then a thinner, high quality layer which may form a layer of a device is grown over the thick layer by a slower growth method such as chemical vapor deposition. The presence of the thick layer may support the thinner layer to prevent or reduce damage during removal of the growth substrate, described below.
In
Substrate 10 is often removed by an etch 18 that selectively etches amorphous sacrificial layer 12 of
Separating the substrate 10 from the additional layer 14 causes a rough surface 11 on the top of the substrate 10 and a rough surface 15 on the bottom of additional layer 14. The top surface 11 of substrate 10 may be treated, for example by polishing, heating, and/or cleaning with solvent to repair, reduce, or remove the roughness, before substrate 10 is reused. The bottom surface 15 of additional layer 14 may be similarly treated before further processing of additional layer 14.
Implant 16 is illustrated in
In order to protect substrate 10 from damage from implant 16, in some embodiments a spacer layer 28 is grown first over substrate 10, as illustrated in
As described above, in order for a strained sacrificial layer 12 to remain epitaxial to substrate 10, sacrificial layer 12 must be thinner than the threshold for cracking, which may be thinner than the total thickness of implanted material. Examples of strained sacrificial layers include AlN, AlGaN, InN, InGaN, and some AlGaInN layers layers. In some embodiments, in order to grow a thicker sacrificial layer 12, sacrificial layer 12 is a compositional super-lattice, as illustrated in
In some embodiments, more highly strained layers 30 are thicker than less highly strained layers 32. Layers 30 may be one to ten times thicker than layers 32 in some embodiments, one to five times thicker in some embodiments, and one to two times thicker in some embodiments. In some embodiments, less highly strained layers 32 are the same thickness as or thicker than more highly strained layers 30. Each of layers 30 and 32 may be no more than 20 nm thick in some embodiments and no more than 10 nm thick in some embodiments. Layers 30 may be between 1 and 10 nm thick in some embodiments. Layers 32 may be between 1 and 5 nm thick in some embodiments. The super-lattice may include between 2 and 25 pairs of layers 30 and 32 in some embodiments. The total thickness of the super-lattice may be between 0.1 and 5 microns in some embodiments. An additional layer, as described above, is grown over the super-lattice, then all or a portion of the super-lattice is implanted with one or more implant species, as described above. After implanting, optional additional semiconductor layers may be grown. The substrate is then separated from the additional layer, as described above.
In some embodiments, the sacrificial layer is the same composition as substrate 10, usually GaN.
As described above in reference to
Any suitable device structure may be grown within or over additional layers 14 and 34 illustrated in
Having described the invention in detail, those skilled in the art will appreciate that, given the present disclosure, modifications may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit of the inventive concept described herein. Aspects of some embodiments may be omitted. Aspects and features of different embodiments may be combined. Therefore, it is not intended that the scope of the invention be limited to the specific embodiments illustrated and described.