The present invention relates to a semiconductor light emitting device formed on a substrate using a compound semiconductor layer of AlGaInP to form an active layer, a p-n junction to inject carriers into this active layer, and the thickness of the active layer and other constituent layers are chosen to optimize the efficiency of light emission.
Light emitting diodes (LEDs) are widely accepted in many applications that require low power consumption, small size, and high reliability. Energy-efficient diodes that emit light in the yellow-green to red regions of the visible spectrum contain active layers formed of an AlGaInP alloy. The conventional AlGaInP LED, shown in
The internal quantum efficiency of an AlGaInP LED depends upon, among other things, the thickness of the active layer and its alloy composition (which determines the color of the emitted light), and the alloy composition of the confining layers. Curve (a) of
Although the confining layer compositions are selected to maximize the confinement energy, in the AlGalnP material system, this energy is not large enough to completely prevent carriers from “leaking” out of the active layer. In the wide-energy-gap alloys utilized for the confining layers ((AlxGa1−x)0.5In0.5P with x>0.55), non-radiative recombination occurs at a high rate, so carriers which leak out of the active layer are essentially lost and the internal quantum efficiency of the LED suffers. The magnitude of the leakage current is determined by alloy compositions of the active layer and adjacent layers and the resultant differences in their energy gaps. Thus, if a wider-gap active layer is used to generate 590-nm light, the carrier confinement is poorer than if the active layer generates 630-nm light, when the LED is otherwise identical. Those skilled in the art will recognize that LEDs do not emit light of only one wavelength. The LED wavelength is defined at the point of maximum photon emission The rate at which carriers escape from the active layer is furthermore related to the concentration of carriers located at the interface between the active and confining layers. This concentration decreases as the active layer thickness increases. Taking these two effects together (leakage and carrier concentration), the active layer thickness for highest internal quantum efficiency will vary with the color of the emitted light. This is illustrated by curve (b) of
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,153,889; Sugawara et at. show that if the active layer of an absorbing substrate AlGaInLP LED is thicker than the diffusion length of the injected minority carriers, then the double heterostructure does not provide additional confinement of electrons and holes in the active layer. On the other hand, if the active layer is too thin (<1500 Å, according to the authors), then the density of carriers within the active layer is so high that a substantial fraction of them escape into the confining layers. For a p-type active layer with a net hole concentration of about 5×1016 cm−3 and an upper confining layer composition (Al0.5Ga0.5)0.5In0.5P with a net hole concentration of about 5×1017 cm−3, the optimal active layer thickness is specified to be between 1500 Å and 7500 Å. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,710,440, Kagawa et at. demonstrate that with an (Al0.5Ga0.3))0.5In0.5P upper confining layer with a net hole concentration of about 3×1017 cm−3, the optimum active layer thickness ranges between 1.1 μm and 1.3 μm for an absorbing substrate (AS) LED.
Another way in which the internal quantum efficiency can be improved, particularly for short-wavelength-emitting LEDs, is with multi-quantum-well (MQW) structures. In these devices, the light emission occurs in multiple (usually five or more) thin quantum well active layers of light-emitting AlGaInP (also known as “wells”) between multiple “barrier” layers of another alloy composition of AlGaJnP that is transparent to visible light. An active region consists of one or more light-emitting layers. For a MQW structure, optically transparent higher bandgap barrier layers separate the active layers. The total active region thickness is the sum of the thicknesses of all active layers (wells) and barriers. The total active layer thickness is the sum of the thicknesses of all the individual light emitting active layers (wells). For a single light emitting layer device, the active layer and active region thickness are the same. To form a quantum well (wherein the carriers exhibit quantum size effects), the thickness of the wells must be less than 200 Å, which is roughly the length of the wave function of a thermal electron in AlGaInP, in the effective mass approximation. The exact thickness depends on the alloy composition of the quantum wells and barriers. If the carriers which leak out of the thin quantum well can recombine in a second or third, or fourth, etc. well, the internal quantum efficiency of the LED is improved. It is for this reason that quantum-well LEDs typically have several tens of wells in the active region. Furthermore, the total thickness of the wells is described as the active layer thickness because light is not emitted from the barriers. Sugawara et al. describe in U.S. Pat. No. 5,410,159 a method for determining the optimum combination of well thicknesses and number of wells to produce a high efficiency absorbing substrate LED. Utilizing forty 50 Å-thick wells (for a total active layer thickness of 2000 Å) with alloy composition (Al0.3Gao0.7)0.5In0.5P, the authors achieved ˜2.7% external quantum efficiency at 20 mA of drive current, and an emission wavelength of 575 nm. Huang et al. also describe the use of MQW active regions in U.S. Pat. No. 5,661,742, although the authors do not specify the external quantum efficiencies that they achieved.
Internal quantum efficiency is one factor determining the “external quantum efficiency” of a LED, defined as the ratio of the number of photons exiting the LED to the number of electrons which enter it through the contacts. Another factor is the “extraction efficiency”, defined as the fraction of photons generated in the active layer that escape from the semiconductor surfaces of the LED and enter the surrounding material. The optional window layer enhances extraction efficiency by allowing more light to exit the semiconductor material. The extraction efficiency of an LED can be much improved by either growing or mechanically bonding the lower confining layer upon a transparent substrate (TS) rather than an absorbing one. The extraction efficiency of TS AlGaInP LEDs can be approximately twice as high as that of AS AlGaInP LEDs, improving the external quantum efficiency of the LED by approximately a factor of two.
The extraction efficiency of a transparent substrate LED (TS-LED) is reduced by the presence of any layers in the LED that have an energy gap equal to or smaller than that of the light-emitting layers. This is because some of the light that is emitted by the active layer passes through the absorbing layers before it exits the LED. Typical, but not all, absorbing layers are formed of alloys of (AlxGa1−x)0.5In0.5P where x<0.55, or of AlyGa1−yAs and related alloys. These layers may be located between the active layer and the window layer, and between the lower confining layer and the substrate. These absorbing layers are included because they reduce the number of dislocations or other defects in the active layer or are used to simplify the LED manufacturing process. Another effect is to reduce band offsets at heterointerfaces, which lower the voltage that must be applied to the contacts in order to force a particular current through the diode. Because the absorbing layers tend to absorb shorter-wavelength light more effectively than longer-wavelength light, LEDs that emit at 590 nm suffer a greater performance penalty due to the presence of these layers than LEDs that emit at 640 nm.
Absorption in the active region also reduces the extraction efficiency.
When light is absorbed by the active layer (either a single layer or a plurality of layers arranged in a multiple-well configuration), electron and hole pairs are formed that may recombine radiatively or non-radiatively. In AlGaInP active layers, only a fraction of the absorbed photons is re-emitted. This fraction is equivalent to the internal quantum efficiency of the active layer, and is determined by the alloy composition of the active layer (i.e. the emission wavelength of the LED) and the predilection of electron-hole pairs to recombine non-radiatively through crystalline defects or impurities. Typically, for a 590 nm LED, only 5–50% of the absorbed photons will be re-emitted by the active layer. Thus, 95–50% of the light that is originally emitted by and subsequently absorbed by the active layer is lost irretrievably, resulting in a decrease in extraction efficiency and the external quantum efficiency of the device.
In the prior art, techniques for improving the efficiency of AlGaInP LEDs have focussed on determining the active layer thickness which results in greatest internal quantum efficiency and on increasing the extraction efficiency of the LED by removing the absorbing substrate.
The extraction efficiency of a TS-LED can be further improved by making all absorbing layers, including the active layer, as thin as possible. However, in AlGaInP LEDs, ultra-thin active layers result in a decrease in the internal quantum efficiency of the LED. An optimal active layer thickness will balance the effects of increasing extraction efficiency and decreasing internal quantum efficiency. Consequently, the TS-LED has neither optimal extraction efficiency nor optimal internal quantum efficiency when its external quantum efficiency is maximized.
The present invention is an LED that includes an AlGaInP active region that has active layer thickness which provides superior external quantum efficiency in a transparent substrate LED while accounting for compromises between ηinternal (internal quantum efficiency) and ηextraction (extraction efficiency). Because ηinternal is a function of many properties, particularly the composition of the active region and the confining layers, the optimum thickness is specific to a particular AlGaInP LED design. The thickness and number of layers in the active region are specified to provide superior external quantum efficiency. Furthermore, the external quantum efficiency of the LED does not change substantially with prolonged operation. Specific ranges for the thickness of the active layer, the thickness of confining layers, and other conditions of the constituting elements can increase the external quantum efficiency and manufacturability.
The LED includes device layers formed on a substrate of a first conductivity type. The device layers have a total absorbance. These layers include a lower confining layer of an AlGaInP alloy of the first conductivity type, an active region of AlGaInP of a second conductivity type, and an upper confining layer of an AlGaInP alloy of the second conductivity type. The absorbance of the active region is at least one fifth of the total absorbance and the absorbance of the active region is less than 0.2. To improve reliability and manufacturability, the LED may optionally include one or two set-back layers of AlGaInP, the set-back layer interposing one of confining layer and active region. The set-back layers provide a region wherein dopant atoms may migrate during high temperature processing, while maintaining the p-n junction in the same location in the finished LED. Furthermore, the set-back layers can reduce the sensitivity of the internal quantum efficiency to changes in the temperature of the LED. The p-type upper confining layer may be doped with oxygen to improve the reliability of the LED.
ηexternal=ηinternal×ηextraction
For one range of active layer thicknesses shown in
The extraction efficiency depends on active layer thickness only if the absorption in this region is a significant fraction of the total absorption in the LED. In one extreme, the active layer is the only absorbing layer in the LED, e.g. a transparent-substrate LED, and varying its thickness has a large effect on extraction efficiency. In the other extreme, e.g. an absorbing-substrate LED with a thin (<2000 Å) active layer, the active layer contributes little to the total absorption in the device and reducing its thickness does not significantly improve the extraction efficiency.
The degree to which a particular layer absorbs light can be quantified by defining, with the following expression, an absorbance for the layer:
absorbance=1−exp[−α(λpeak)·L] Eq. (1)
where α is the absorption coefficient of the layer at the peak wavelength of the LED's emission spectrum, and L is the thickness of the same layer. When defining absorbance, light is assumed to pass through the layer at normal incidence. Light which passes through the layer at an oblique angle will travel through an apparent layer thickness that is larger than L, so Eq. 1 represents the minimum absorbance that the active layer will have. It would be obvious to one skilled in the art that if a semiconductor layer that partially covers the layer below it, then the absorbance should be calculated with respect to the ratio of the area of the semiconductor layer to the area of the LED.
According to Equation 1, a layer having a high absorption coefficient or large thickness will absorb more light than a layer having a low absorption coefficient or that is thin.
where there are i semiconductor layers in the device which absorb the light emitted by the active layer, including the active layer itself (or active layers, if there is more than one) and excluding the substrate (again assuming normal incidence of light on the layers). To maximize the benefit of reducing the active layer thickness, the preferred relative absorption of the active layers and “parasitic” absorbing layers can be expressed mathematically by comparing the absorbance in the active region to the total absorbance of the device layers. The absorbance of the active region is determined by the following sum:
where the subscript AL refers to the light-emitting active layers in the LED's active region. The “active layer thickness” is the summation of the thicknesses of the j light-emitting active layers. For an optimal device, the active region absorbance is related to the total absorbance by:
Equation 4 requires that the absorbance of the active region is at least one fifth of the total absorbance in the semiconductor device layers.
The thicknesses of the parasitic absorbing layers in an LED are typically on the order of 100–1000 Å as described by Itaya et al. in “Current-voltage characteristics of p-p isotype InGaAlP/GaAs heterojunction with a large valence-band discontinuity,” Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 32, pp. 1919–1922, 1993. The thickness is constrained on the lower end because of the necessity to grow a layer thick enough to be reproducible in high-volume manufacturing by OMVPE (metal-organic chemical vapor deposition) or MBE (molecular beam epitaxy) and have the desired effect, and is constrained on the upper end by a need to minimize parasitic losses, particularly if the layer is located between the active region and the window layer of the LED. If the parasitic layers are formed of In0.5Ga0.5P, which has the worst-case absorption coefficient for an (AlxGa1−x)0.5In0.5P alloy, the thicknesses above correspond to a range of absorbances of 0.04 to 0.34 (for an emission wavelength of 555 nm, which is the shortest emission wavelength from direct-gap AlGaInP). Equation 4 requires that the minimum active region absorbance be in the range of 0.01 to 0.085.
When Eq. 4 is satisfied, changing the thickness of the active layer will have a meaningful effect on the extraction efficiency of the LED. If, for example, the absorbance of the active layer in the LED is slightly less than one-fifth of the total absorbance, then reducing the active layer thickness by a factor of 2 decreases the total absorbance of the device by ˜10%. The extraction efficiency will increase by a smaller amount, because of reflective losses inside the device. However, this magnitude of an improvement in device performance can not be repeatably distinguished from noise in the experimental measurements of external quantum efficiency. Hence, the active layer absorbance should have a larger impact on external quantum efficiency, and Eq. 4 satisfies this requirement.
The maximum active region absorbance of an optimal LED depends upon the internal quantum efficiency of the active region. For a 590-nm-emitting LED, the internal quantum efficiency may be as low as 5%. If the absorbance of the active region is 0.45 (corresponding to an active layer thickness of 7500 Å, which is commonly utilized in the prior art), then after each pass of a ray of light through the active layer the ray of light is 0.57× of its original intensity. An optimal active region will result in the single-pass intensity of a ray of light being minimally affected, defined to be at least 0.8× of its original intensity. This condition for single-pass intensity is satisfied by, and results in improved external quantum efficiency of, all of the transparent-substrate AlGaInP LEDs studied. For an AlGaInIP LED with an internal quantum efficiency of 5%, this corresponds to an active layer thickness of 3800 Å and an absorbance of 0.26. Some AlGaInP LEDs, particularly those that emit in the green, have internal quantum efficiencies which are lower than 5%. In order to accommodate an active layer with an internal quantum efficiency that is <<5% (nearly zero), an upper limit for the active region absorbance can be established at 0.2, corresponding to an active layer thickness of 2800 Å. For an LED with higher internal quantum efficiency, the active region absorbance may be greater than 0.2 while maintaining the 0.8× single-pass transmittance. However, a thinner active layer will have superior extraction efficiency and is preferred. Thus, in order to optimize extraction efficiency, there is no lower limit on the absorbance of the active region, except for the requirement of Eq. 4.
Another parameter that determines the optimal active layer thickness is the alloy composition of the active layer (which determines the color of light that the LED emits).
Because the properties of the constituent layers in the LED cannot be controlled perfectly, the optimum thickness of the active layer will vary over the range of 1000–2500 Å, corresponding to an absorbance of 0.08–0.18. LEDs that emit at less than 600 nm also demonstrate improved performance over this range of active layer absorbances.
In comparison,
One problem with thinner active layers is that the internal quantum efficiency becomes more sensitive to variations in the doping levels in the confining layers, which reduces the manufacturing yield and hence increases the cost of the LEDs. In one embodiment of an AlGaInP LED, the upper confining layer is doped, during growth, with a p-type dopant, e.g. Zn or Mg. As the wafer undergoes subsequent high-temperature processing steps, the p-type dopant diffuses out of the upper confining layer. The internal quantum efficiency is greatest when the p-n junction is located precisely at the interface between the active layer and the n-type lower confining layer, because the heterojunction increases the number of electrons which the p-n junction will inject into the p-type active layer. The redistribution of dopants during growth and subsequent processing may cause the p-n junction to not be optimally located.
When the active layer is thin and the adjacent confining layers are doped, it is more likely that the p-n junction will be misplaced because of small variations in the initial dopant concentrations in the confining layers. For example, a 7× change in the external quantum efficiency of LEDs with 1000 Å thick active layers has been observed, in response to a 20% change in the concentration of dopant atoms in the upper confining layer. This sensitivity is reduced by the use of set-back layers. These are unintentionally doped layers interposing the active and confining layers, into which dopant atoms from the confining layers diffuse during growth or processing. The thickness of these layers is chosen to cause the p-n junction to be located, for the case of a device with only an upper set-back layer, at the lower-confining-layer/active-layer heterointerface at the end of the entire device fabrication process. For the case of a device with a lower set-back layer, the optimal position of the p-n junction is between the lower-set-back-layer/active-layer heterointerface and the lower confining layer/lower set-back layer heterointerface. The diffusion coefficients of the dopant through the different layers in the device, as well as the temperature and duration of the processing steps, will determine the necessary thicknesses of the set-back layers. Furthermore, the set-back layers may be formed of a plurality of layers of different semiconductor alloys or compounds that are transparent to the light emitted by the active layer. The set-back layers may also comprise layers wherein the composition of the alloy varies spatially, e.g. linearly graded or parabolically graded.
a shows a schematic of an LED 10A having a thin active layer 12 and confining layers 14A, 14B of Al0.5In0.5P. In this device, if there is too much p-type dopant in the upper confining layer 14B, it may diffuse into the n-type lower confining layer, causing the p-n junction to be misplaced.
In one embodiment, the high-temperature processing steps which the LED is subjected to cause the p-type dopant to diffuse between 5000 Å and 10,000 Å from the p-type upper confining layer. Consequently, a thin active layer LED would optimally have a total thickness of active layer and upper set-back layer of between 5000 Å and 10,000 Å, preferably 7500 Å. 590 nm-emitting LEDs with 2000 Å thick active layers and 5500 Å thick upper set-back layers have been found to provide superior performance. For a 630 nm LED, the optimal device might have a 500 Å thick active layer with a 7000 Å thick upper set-back layer. The external quantum efficiency of these devices has not been observed to vary more than 5%, in response to a 20% change in the doping level of the upper confining layer. This illustrates the effectiveness of the set-back layers at improving the yield of the manufacturing process.
When a set-back layer is used in the LED, the composition of this layer, because it adjoins the active region, will have an effect on the internal quantum efficiency. The external quantum efficiency of a preferred LED comprising a transparent substrate, a lower confining layer of Al0.5In0.5P formed on the substrate, a 2000 Å thick active layer of (Al0.3Ga0.7)0.5In0.5P formed on the lower confining layer, a 5500 Å thick upper set-back layer of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P formed on the active layer, an upper confining layer of A0.5In0.5P formed on the upper set-back layer, and a window layer has an extemal quantum efficiency of 18.4% at 5 mA. An inferior LED comprises an upper set-back layer formed of Al0.5In0.5P and is otherwise identical. The external quantum efficiency of this LED is 16.7% at 5 mA, which is 10% lower than that of the preferred LED. Additionally, measurements have been made on LEDs wherein the upper set-back layer is formed of (Al0.8Ga0.2)0.5In0.5P and (Al0.5Ga0.5)0.5In0.5P. In none of these cases was the external quantum efficiency of the LED greater than that of the LED with an upper set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P. Consequently, a preferred LED has an upper set-back layer formed of this particular composition of AlGaTnP. The composition of the set-back layer improves the internal quantum efficiency of the device because it reduces the amount of leakage current out of the active layer. This reduction in leakage current is caused in part by the lower rate of non-radiative recombination in the set-back layer.
Another factor that affects the leakage current is the relative doping level of the active region and the upper set-back layer. The leakage current will be lower if the upper set-back layer is doped more heavily. In an LED with an upper set-back layer formed of Al0.5In0.5P, the doping level in the upper set-back layer is lower than in an upper set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P. This is caused by diffusion and accumulation of the p-type dopant, during high-temperature processing steps, from the set-back layer into the active layer. The energy gap of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P is less than that of Al0.5In0.5P, resulting in a higher doping level in the (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P set-back. Therefore, an (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P is preferable to an Al0.5In0.5P set-back.
The superior carrier confinement of an LED with an upper set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P also improves the ability of the LED to maintain its internal quantum efficiency when its temperature is changed. In typical AlGaInP LEDs that emit 590 nm, the internal quantum efficiency decreases approximately 1–2% per degree Celsius increase in the temperature of the LED. The rate at which the efficiency decreases depends on the active layer alloy composition, and the rate decreases for longer-wavelength LEDs. The internal quantum efficiency of an AlGaJnP LED comprising an upper set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P does not decrease as rapidly with increasing temperature, compared to an LED with set-backs formed of an alloy with a higher-Al mole fraction. An LED formed on a transparent substrate, with a lower confining layer formed of Al0.5In0.5P, a 2000 Å thick active layer formed of (Al0.3Ga0.7)0.5In0.5P on the lower confining layer, and an upper set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P on the active layer, exhibited a decrease in internal quantum efficiency of −1.3%/° C., while an identical LED, except that the upper set-back layer was formed of (Al0.8Ga0.2)0.5In0.5P, exhibited a decrease of −1.4%/° C.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,732,098, Nisitani et al. describe an AlGaInP LED with (AlxGa1−x)0.5In0.5P layers interposing the active layer and Al0.5In0.5P confining layers wherein the energy-gap of the interposing layers is less than that of the confining layers or the aluminum mole fraction of the interposing layer is less. However, for the purpose of improving electron confinement in the active layer or other performance characteristics of the device, the composition of AlGaInP in the set-back layers may be chosen to be non-lattice-matched to the confining or active layers, and may have a wider energy gap than the confining layers or may have a higher Al mole fraction than the upper confining layer. A transparent substrate AlGaInP LED with a lower confining layer of Al0.5In0.5P, a 2000 Å thick active layer of (Al0.3Ga0.7)0.5In0.5P formed on the lower confining layer, a 500 Å thick first set-back layer of Al0.615In0.385P formed on the active layer, a 5000 Å second set-back layer formed of (Al0.65Ga0.35)0.5In0.5P on the first set-back layer, and an upper confining layer formed of Al0.5In0.5P on the second set-back layer, has an external quantum efficiency that is 10% greater than that of an LED wherein the first set-back layer is not present, the second set-back layer has a thickness of 5500 Å, and is otherwise identical. The first set-back layer formed of Al0.615In0.385P causes the internal quantum efficiency to be higher because it has a wider band-gap than the upper confining layer and the second set-back layer, resulting in a smaller leakage current out of the active layer.
Another parameter that affects the internal quantum efficiency of the active layer is its doping level. The radiative recombination rate is proportional to the product of the electron and hole densities. The confining layers increase the efficiency of the LED by increasing the electron and hole densities in the active layer. The densities are also increased by incorporating more dopant atoms in the active layer.
Internal quantum efficiency, particularly for short-wavelength LEDs, can be improved by replacing the active layer with multiple-quantum-well active regions, formed by using multiple (>5) thin layers of AlGaInP between multiple layers of a transparent AlGaInP alloy. To form a quantum well, the thickness of the AlGaInP active layer must be less than the wavelength of the electron wave function in AlGaInP (approximately 200 Å). Because it is difficult to maintain a uniform composition and thickness for multiple quantum well active layers in a high-volume manufacturing environment, the use of thicker wells is preferred. Thicker wells do not exhibit quantum confinement effects such as reduced emission wavelength. The use of multiple thicker wells increases the internal quantum efficiency of the active region, compared to a single active layer of greater thickness, because the carrier density in the wells is greater, resulting in a higher radiative recombination rate. At the same time, the absorbance of the active region (as calculated by Eq. 3) must satisfy the requirement of being less than 0.2.
The internal quantum efficiency is improved partly due to the enhanced incorporation of the p-type dopant atoms in the wells. This increases the hole concentration in the wells and thus increases the radiative recombination rate, which in turn increases the internal quantum efficiency. A 3× increase in dopant concentration in the wells has been observed by secondary ion mass spectrometry of the device corresponding to curve c. When the LED undergoes high-temperature processing steps the dopant atoms diffuse out of the barriers and into the wells. The dopant atoms collect in the wells because they are more soluble in the narrow-gap AlGaInP alloy that form the wells than in the wider-gap AlGaInP alloy that forms the barriers. Another reason for the improved internal quantum efficiency is that majority charge carriers (electrons or holes) will tend to diffuse out of the wider-energy-gap barrier layers and into the narrower-gap wells. This further increase the radiative recombination rate.
The ability of an LED to maintain external quantum efficiency during operation is an important performance parameter. The composition of the upper set-back layer affects the reliability of the LED.
Another technique for improving the reliability of AlGaInP LEDs is the use of oxygen doping in layers adjacent to the active region, as described by Stockman et al. in UK Patent Application 2,301,934A. Stockman et al. teaches that oxygen or other impurities improve the reliability of LEDs by inhibiting the formation or propagation of defects that reduce the lifetime of electrons and holes. The layers adjacent the active layer should be doped with oxygen because the leakage current is highest in these layers, and the formation of defects in these layers increases the leakage current. Layers located distal of the active layer have smaller leakage currents, therefore oxygen doping in these layers was not anticipated to improve the reliability of the LED.
When comparing the external quantum efficiency of these devices, it was found that the efficiency (before stress) is highest when no oxygen is used and lowest when oxygen is present both in the upper confining layer and in the upper set-back layer. Furthermore, upon measuring the effect of different levels of oxygen doping in the upper confining layer, it was found that when the oxygen concentration (as measured by secondary-ion mass spectrometry) was less than 1×1017 cm−3, the reliability of the LED was poor. When the oxygen concentration exceeded 5×1018 cm−3, the internal quantum efficiency of the LED was poor. Therefore, the preferred range of oxygen dopant concentrations in the upper confining layer is 1×1017 cm−3 to 5×1018 cm−3.
Those skilled in the art will recognize that these principles and teachings may be extended to a number of LED device structures, including an absorbing substrate LED with a mirror layer interposing the active region and the substrate, as well as LEDs fabricated in other material systems (such as AlGaAs or InGaN).
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/122,568, filed Jul. 24, 1998, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5008718 | Fletcher et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
5060028 | Kuo et al. | Oct 1991 | A |
5153889 | Sugaware et al. | Oct 1992 | A |
5233204 | Fletcher et al. | Aug 1993 | A |
5376580 | Kish et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5410159 | Sugawara et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5661742 | Huang et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
5710440 | Okagawa et al. | Jan 1998 | A |
5732098 | Nisitani et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
5744829 | Murasato et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
5793062 | Kish, Jr. et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5811839 | Shimoyama et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
5917201 | Ming-Jiunn et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
6081540 | Nakatsu | Jun 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 301 934 | Dec 1996 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20020127751 A1 | Sep 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09122568 | Jul 1998 | US |
Child | 10011521 | US |