Hydrogen is a traditional carrier gas used in organo-metallic vapor phase epitaxy and hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) tools for growth of As/P semiconductors. Dynamic-hydride vapor phase epitaxy (D-HVPE) has attracted significant attention for its high growth rates of III-V materials exceeding 300 μm/h while maintaining excellent material quality. D-HVPE is capable of growing structures with abrupt and defect-free heterointerfaces as demonstrated by the growth of Esaki diodes and multijunction solar cells. D-HVPE's ability to transfer samples quickly between multiple growth chambers enables the high-quality heterointerfaces required for these devices. In addition to excellent performance, D-HVPE has the potential to be a low-cost III-V growth technique due to the use of elemental group III precursors, high utilization of metals and hydrides, and ultrafast growth rates that would enable high throughput in production-line reactors.
An additional strategy to decrease the cost associated with HVPE is to consider alternative carrier gases other than H2 carrier gas, which is the typical carrier gas used for III-V As/P growth. HVPE growth has been demonstrated with inert carrier gases such as N2 or Ar, which is advantageous because H2 is both highly flammable and comparatively more expensive. However, HVPE growth historically exhibited lower growth rates when conducted with an inert carrier gas instead of H2 in a regime where arsenic vapor (As2 or As4) is the dominant group V species, which would negatively affect throughput in production-line reactors.
In an aspect, disclosed herein are methods and devices for increasing the epitaxial growth rate on a reaction surface within a HVPE reactor. In an embodiment, the method uses a low-conductivity inert carrier gas to deliver a reactant to the reaction surface. In another embodiment, the reactant is AsH3. In another embodiment, the temperature at the reaction surface is about 700° C. lower when compared to using hydrogen as a carrier gas. In an embodiment, the concentration of AsH3 or another reactant at the reaction surface is greater than when using hydrogen as a carrier gas.
In an aspect, disclosed herein is a reactor capable of the deposition of at least one layer of a semiconductor device by using hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) using at least one group III metal source, at least one group V hydride gas, and an inert carrier gas, wherein the reactor comprises at least one source zone region at a temperature of up to about 800° C., and at least one deposition zone region at a temperature of below about 700° C.; and a delivery means to the deposition zone region wherein the delivery means comprises the inert gas carrier and reactant gases comprising a group III metal and at least one group V hydride gas that are flowed towards a growth substrate at a volumetric flow rate. In an embodiment, the reactor has a deposition zone region that is below about 650° C. In an embodiment, the at least one layer of the semiconductor device is GaAs. In an embodiment, the GaAs deposition is up to 528 μm/h. In another embodiment, the rate of deposition of the at least one layer of a semiconductor device is improved by up to 32 percent when compared to using H2 as a carrier gas in the reactor instead of the inert carrier gas. In an embodiment, the volumetric flow rate for the inert carrier gas and group V hydride gas is up to 5000 sccm. In an embodiment, the volumetric flow rate for the group V hydride gas is up to 100 sccm. In yet another embodiment, the partial pressure for the group V hydride gas within the inert gas carrier and reactant gases is up to 0.01 atm. In an embodiment, the partial pressure for the gas comprising the group III metal within the inert gas carrier and reactant gases is up to 0.0012 atm.
In an aspect, disclosed herein is a method for growing at least one layer of a semiconductor device using a reactor comprising at least one source zone and at least one deposition zone wherein the method comprises hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) using at least one group III metal, at least one group V hydride gas, and an inert carrier gas. In an embodiment, the at least one source zone is at a temperature of up to about 800° C., and wherein the at least one deposition zone is at a temperature of up to about 700° C. In another embodiment, the at least one layer of the semiconductor device is GaAs. In an embodiment, the GaAs growth rate is up to 528 μm/h. In an embodiment, the growth rate of the at least one layer of a semiconductor device is improved by up to 32 percent when compared to using H2 as a carrier gas in the reactor instead of the inert gas. In another embodiment, a volumetric flow rate of the inert carrier gas and group V hydride gas is up to 5000 sccm. In an embodiment, a volumetric flow rate for the group V hydride gas is up to 100 sccm. In an embodiment, a partial pressure for the group V hydride gas within the inert carrier gas is up to 0.01 atm. In yet another embodiment, a surface roughness of the GaAs layer is below 0.8 nm. In an embodiment, an electron mobility of the GaAs layer is up to 1600 cm2/V-s. In an embodiment, an electron concentration of the GaAs layer is up to 9.9×1018 cm−3.
Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in referenced figures of the drawings. It is intended that the embodiments and figures disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative rather than limiting.
Disclosed herein are methods that use nitrogen as a carrier gas in HVPE. By using nitrogen as a carrier gas in HVPE, record fast growth rates reaching 432 microns/hour (about 40% faster than the current record using hydrogen as a carrier gas) have been observed.
The two largest cost barriers for III-V photovoltaics are those of both the growth and the substrate. Therefore, enhancing the growth rate of III-V semiconductors would increase the throughput of these devices, which decreases the total costs associated with growth with a simple modification to reactant gases. Additionally, use of a nitrogen ambient is potentially necessary to enable the nucleation and growth of GaAs epilayers on a monolayer-graphene coated GaAs substrate, because H2 is known to etch graphene at typical reactor temperatures. “Remote-epitaxy” through graphene and liftoff is a technology that is useful as a route to reduce substrate costs.
In an embodiment, disclosed herein are record GaAs growth rates approaching 530 μm/h using nitrogen carrier gas and 400 μm/h using hydrogen carrier gas in a dynamic-hydride vapor phase epitaxy reactor. Computational fluid dynamics modeling was performed to study the effect that either nitrogen or hydrogen carrier gas has on heat and mass transfer given the potential AsH3 decomposition at surfaces. As disclosed herein through experiments and support with modeling, nitrogen carrier gas enhances the growth rate compared to hydrogen carrier gas in a hydride-enhanced regime by minimizing the amount of arsine that decomposes before reaching the wafer surface.
Previous work using HVPE has demonstrated that using nitrogen as a carrier gas in HVPE slows the growth rate of III-V semiconductors. However, as disclosed herein, experiments using a dynamic-HVPE tool have resulted in a growth rate increase from 20%-100% when using nitrogen as a carrier gas instead of hydrogen, which indicates an exciting discovery contrary to conventional wisdom. Without being limited by theory, a “hydride-enhanced” growth mechanism does not require H2 to participate in the reaction, and H2 is potentially a product of the reaction AsH3+GaCl→GaAs+H2+HCl. This means that there are potential advantages to using an inert and/or higher density carrier gas, which thus makes the use of N2 enabling. A final advantage is that a nitrogen environment is non-flammable, which increases the safety of this growth technique compared to growth in a hydrogen ambient.
Previously, others in the art have stated that since argon and nitrogen are gases with heavier atomic weight, that the growth rate would be lower than that of hydrogen at the same temperature. However, as disclosed herein, the heavier gas can also affect the density and potentially thin the boundary layer thickness to enhance the growth rate. Without being limited by theory, hydrogen may be both a carrier gas and reactant that participates in the reaction to enhance the growth rate. Hydrogen may play a role in both the forward and reverse reactions.
Without being bound by theory, since the partial pressure of GaCl increases in nitrogen at the expense of HCl, solid GaAs tends to vaporize into the gas phase with the increase of the mole fraction of nitrogen and hence a reduction in growth rate is observed. However, the effect of partial pressure may be offset by the reduction in boundary layer thickness or difference in thermal conductivity between hydrogen and nitrogen.
Disclosed herein are methods and devices that use a low-thermal conductivity inert gas to shield the reactant gases and hence create a regime of cold wall operation within a hot wall system. In contrast to using a low thermal conductivity carrier gas that lowers the temperature of all of the reactant species, using methods and devices disclosed herein protects the stream of hot gases from the temperature of the reactor walls.
In another embodiment, disclosed herein is a method for the insulation of reactant gases by a low-thermal conductivity inert gas for hot wall vapor phase reactors. As disclosed herein, a heavy, inert gas with low thermal conductivity (such as nitrogen, argon, krypton, xenon, etc.) is flowed through an outer tube such that it surrounds reactant gases flowed through a central port towards a substrate in a hot wall vapor growth reactor. The reactant gases are insulated from the high temperatures of the reactor walls by the heavy outer gas, preventing their decomposition.
Growth in a hydrogen ambient at standard growth temperatures can either lead to arsine decomposition or, if gas velocity is increased to transport the reactants to the surface more quickly, reduce uniformity. Arsine can decompose into arsenic dimers and tetramers in a hot wall growth reactor at standard growth temperatures. However, it is advantageous to transport undecomposed arsine to the surface. High gas velocity can be used to transport arsine to the surface more quickly, in a “hydride-enhanced” growth mechanism. However, a high flow rate can lead to poor growth uniformity across a substrate, which impairs yield. Using an inert gas with low thermal conductivity flowed through an outer tube in order to encapsulate the arsine as it flows to the surface prevents decomposition without requiring exceedingly high reactant velocities or low pressures. A low-conductivity inert gas that blankets the reactant gases also eliminates the flammability risk of having a hydrogen ambient in a hot furnace.
As disclosed herein HVPE has demonstrated a hydride-enhanced regime in which a significant amount of uncracked AsH3 reaches the wafer surface, resulting in much higher growth rates due to the lower kinetic barrier to growth. In both the Asx and the hydride-enhanced regime, the rate-limiting step to GaAs growth is the reduction of GaCl complexes that form on the surface. In the Asx regime, GaCl can be removed either through reduction assisted by the H2 carrier gas to form HCl as a byproduct, or by a slower mechanism where three GaCl are converted to volatile GaCl3. Slower GaAs growth rates were historically observed with an inert carrier gas due to the slower reaction mechanism in the absence of H2. In contrast, the hydride-enhanced regime enables the direct reaction of AsH3 with GaCl to form GaAs without any influence of any carrier gas. The effect of inert carrier gas on growth rate has not been studied in the hydride-enhanced regime.
GaAs Growth Rates of 528 μm/h Using D-HVPE with a Nitrogen Carrier Gas
Disclosed herein are experiments that confirm the observation of lower growth rates in the Asx regime when using N2 as a carrier gas instead of H2, yet reveal a notable increase in growth rate when using N2 in the hydride-enhanced regime. Demonstrated herein are growth rates up to 528 μm/h using N2 carrier gas, compared to 400 μm/h using H2 carrier gas. CFD modeling was used to investigate the effect of carrier gas on internal reactor temperature and relative group V partial pressures to identify potential mechanism for these exceptional growth rates. Using methods disclosed herein, very similar material quality was achieved regardless of the growth regime used.
In an embodiment, materials were grown in a dual-chamber D-HVPE reactor. In an embodiment, a simplified schematic of the reactor can be found in K. L. Schulte, et al., “High growth rate hydride vapor phase epitaxy at low temperature through use of uncracked hydrides,” Applied Physics Letters, vol. 112, p. 042101, 2018; and U.S. Pat. No. 9,824,890 by D. L. Young, et al., entitled “High throughput semiconductor deposition system”. In an embodiment, GaCl and InCl were formed in-situ by the reaction of anhydrous HCl over elemental Ga and In for the group III sources. Hydride gases were used for the group V source, and n-type doping was achieved using hydrogen selenide (H2Se). The gas plumbing design is such that the carrier gas species is either H2 or N2, but not a combination of both. Changes in the AsH3 carrier flow (QN
The modeling was performed with the commercially available computational fluid dynamics package CFD-ACE+, which allows the user to build and define the geometry in which reactions take place, set initial boundary conditions, and detail the composition and flow of the desired reactants. In an embodiment of the modeling experiments, the temperature was fixed at the reactor walls in the simulation to values of 800° C. at the source zone and 650° C. in the deposition zone, as it is in the real reactor. The effective rate constant for the decomposition of arsine at those temperatures were manually input into CFD-ACE+ from values previously reported in order to take into account AsH3 cracking into As4. The model assumes that any AsH3 that reaches the surface will react with available GaCl to deposit GaAs, an assumption which seems to align well with experimental results. The 3D geometry used for these simulations was a single growth chamber, where carrier gas flows through either a center tube as the carrier for AsH3 or through an inlet that approximates the flows through the actual top port and source boats.
It has been demonstrated that a higher QH
The data shown in
CFD modeling was also used to better understand the influence of the carrier gas on the extent of AsH3 decomposition. In these simulations, carrier gas flows through either a center tube to simulate QN
GaCl+AsH3⇄GaAs+HCl+H2 (1)
and the growth rate increases with enhanced preservation of AsH3. Without being bound by theory, because GaAs has a lower kinetic barrier to growth under AsH3 than Asx, and less AsH3 decomposition occurs with the low thermal conductivity carrier gas, the resulting growth rate is higher for N2 compared to H2.
For low QN
GaCl+¼ As4+½H2⇄GaAs+HCl (2)
is the reaction attributed to GaAs growth. In this case, H2 participates as a reactant and enables higher growth rates compared to GaAs growth with N2. This explains both the decrease in growth rate observed in
3GaCl+¼As4⇄2GaAs+GaCl3 (3)
where the carrier gas plays no direct role in the reaction. For disproportionately large amounts of group III precursors, this reaction mechanism can yield higher GaAs growth rates compared to H2. However, for the GaCl partial pressure of 0.0012 atm used in these experiments, it is statistically improbable to assemble 3 GaCl molecules to create GaCl3, leading to the observed lower growth rate with N2 due to these kinetic limitations. Together,
The average surface roughness, electron mobility, electron concentration of the samples in
The electron mobility and concentration were determined using Hall-effect measurements of GaAs epilayers grown with the same H2Se flow between samples. The electron mobilities are high at all growth rates using H2 carrier gas, and only begin to degrade by 300 cm2/V-s between 483 μm/h and 389 μm/h with N2 carrier gas. Additionally, the value of electron mobilities are reasonably close between H2 and N2 carrier gas, which is a promising result for device quality at high growth rates with N2 since excellent device performance has been realized with H2.
Using methods and devices disclosed herein, record growth rates up to 400 μm/h using H2 and 528 μm/h using N2 in a D-HVPE reactor have been demonstrated, with smooth surfaces and high electron mobility demonstrated up to growth rates of 336 μm/h and 483 μm/h for the respective carrier gases. The high throughput, lower cost, and safety benefits of the N2 compared to the incumbent H2 used in III-V As/P HVPE systems make N2 an attractive alternative for carrier gas. CFD modeling showed that enhanced AsH3 delivery to the wafer surface enabled by a lower internal reactor temperature using a N2, whereas more Asx reaches the wafer surface with H2. However, for low AsH3 carrier gas flows, significant AsH3 decomposition occurs, and Asx becomes the predominant group V reactant. In this case, H2 plays an enabling role in the growth mechanism, and subsequently a higher growth rate is observed with H2 instead of N2. This result indicates that it is possible to grow GaAs at high growth rates under a N2 environment which should reduce deposition cost by eliminating expenses associated with producing and handling H2 in a high temperature environment.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Nos. 62/860,893, filed on 13 Jun. 2019 and 63/011732 filed on 17 Apr. 2020, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The United States Government has rights in this invention under Contract No. DE-AC36-08GO28308 between the United States Department of Energy and Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC, the Manager and Operator of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4253887 | Jolly | Mar 1981 | A |
4368098 | Manasevit | Jan 1983 | A |
4419179 | Nogami | Dec 1983 | A |
4488914 | Quinlan et al. | Dec 1984 | A |
4710428 | Tamamizu et al. | Dec 1987 | A |
5330046 | Yuzawa et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
5685214 | Neff et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
7272333 | Mizes | Sep 2007 | B2 |
7727333 | Syrkin | Jun 2010 | B1 |
8647435 | Dmitriev et al. | Feb 2014 | B1 |
8987156 | D'Evelyn | Mar 2015 | B2 |
8992684 | Kovalenkov et al. | Mar 2015 | B1 |
9416464 | Dmitriev et al. | Aug 2016 | B1 |
9647156 | Tassev | May 2017 | B1 |
9650723 | D'Evelyn | May 2017 | B1 |
9824890 | Young et al. | Nov 2017 | B2 |
RE47114 | D'Evelyn | Nov 2018 | E |
10192740 | Young et al. | Jan 2019 | B2 |
10903389 | Schulte | Jan 2021 | B2 |
20020155713 | Tsvetkov et al. | Oct 2002 | A1 |
20020170484 | Katamine | Nov 2002 | A1 |
20030008765 | Niwa et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20040047714 | Poli et al. | Mar 2004 | A1 |
20040137657 | Dmitriev et al. | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20040178251 | Trucco | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20050142391 | Dmitriev et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050167899 | Aldridge et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20060011135 | Dmitriev et al. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
20060285945 | Hofmeister et al. | Dec 2006 | A1 |
20070032046 | Dmitriev | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20070138505 | Preble | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20090127662 | Okahisa et al. | May 2009 | A1 |
20090130781 | Dmitriev et al. | May 2009 | A1 |
20090149008 | Kryliouk et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20090178611 | Arena et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20100024732 | Mokhlesi et al. | Feb 2010 | A1 |
20100164070 | Okahisa et al. | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20100273320 | Kappeler et al. | Oct 2010 | A1 |
20100279020 | Melnik et al. | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20110155049 | Solomon | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20110259879 | Hanawa et al. | Oct 2011 | A1 |
20110297076 | Lee et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20120058630 | Quinn | Mar 2012 | A1 |
20120132638 | Garcia et al. | May 2012 | A1 |
20120269226 | Parks et al. | Oct 2012 | A1 |
20130309848 | Young | Nov 2013 | A1 |
20140196660 | Fujikura et al. | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20150235848 | Schunemann et al. | Aug 2015 | A1 |
20150325430 | Young et al. | Nov 2015 | A1 |
20150380496 | Ishibashi | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20160268129 | Mori et al. | Sep 2016 | A1 |
20170204533 | Schumann et al. | Jul 2017 | A1 |
20170260628 | Fujikura | Sep 2017 | A1 |
20170260630 | Fujikura et al. | Sep 2017 | A1 |
20180330927 | Bera et al. | Nov 2018 | A1 |
20180354803 | Liu et al. | Dec 2018 | A1 |
20190221705 | Schulte | Jul 2019 | A1 |
20200385886 | Hoteida | Dec 2020 | A1 |
20210143297 | Schulte | May 2021 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0037199 | Oct 1981 | EP |
Entry |
---|
Beaudet, A., “How do I read the solar panel specifications?”, Apr. 13, 2016, retrieved online from https://www.altestore.com/blog/2016/04/how-do-i-read-specifications-of-my-solar-panel/# XNbupCJKhhE on May 10, 2019, 6 pages. |
Castaldini, A. et al., “The EL2 trap in highly doped GaAs:Te,” Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 78, No. 11, Dec. 1995, 6 pages. |
DenBaars, S.P. et al., “Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Thermal Decomposition Rates of Trimethylgallium and Arsine and Their Relevance to the Growth of GaAs by MOCVD,” Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 77, 1986, 6 pages. |
Deschler, M. et al., “Very Rapid Growth of High Quality GaAs, InP and Related III-V Compounds,” Journal De Physique, Colloque C4, vol. 49, Sep. 1988, pp. C4-689-C4692. |
Enstrom, R. et al., “Influence of gas phase stoichiometry on the properties of vapour-grown In1-xGaxP alloys,” Proceedings of the 1972 Symposium on GaAs (Institute of Physics, London, 1973), vol. 17, pp. 37-47. |
Fan, J. et al., “Simplified fabrication of GaAs homojunction solar cells with increased conversion efficiencies,” Applied Physics Letters, vol. 36, Issue 6, Mar. 15, 1978, pp. 390-392. |
Grüter, K. et al., “Deposition of High Quality GaAs Films at Fast Rates in the LP-CVD System,” 1989, Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 94, pp. 607-612. |
King, R. et al., “Advances in High-Efficiency III-V Multijunction Solar Cells,” Advances in OptoElectronics, vol. 2007, Article ID 29523, Accepted Sep. 2007, 8 pages. |
Koukitu, A. et al., “Thermodynamic Analysis of the Vapour Growth of GaAs: The Inert Gas-Hydrogen Mixed Carrier System,” Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 16, No. 11, 1977, 5 pages. |
Ourdudoss, S. et al., “Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy Revisited,” IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, vol. 3, No. 3, Jun. 1997, pp. 749-767. |
Metaferia, W. et al., “Gallium arsenide solar cells grown at rates exceeding 300 um h-1 by hydride vapor phase epitaxy,” Nature Communications, doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11341-3, 2019, 8 pages. |
Mountziaris, T. et al., “Gas-Phase and Surface Reaction Mechanisms in MOCVD of GaAs with Trimethyl-Gallium and Arsine,” Journal of Electrochemical Society, vol. 138, No. 8, 1991, 15 pages. |
Olsen, G.H., “Vapour-phase Epitaxy of GaInAsP,” GaInAsP Alloy Semiconductors, Edited by T. P. Pearsall, 1982 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Chapter 1, pp. 11-25. |
Sato, M. et al., “Effect of precracking of organometallics and arsine on growth of GaAs,” Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 115, 1991, 5 pages. |
Schulte, K. et al., “Controlled formation of GaAs pn junctions during hydride vapor phase expitaxy of GaAs,” Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 352, Issue 1, Aug. 2012, pp. 253-257. |
Schulte, K. et al., “A Kinetic Model for GaAs Growth by Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy,” 2016 IEEE Photovoltaics Specialists Conference, pp. 1930-1933. |
Schulte, K. et al., “Computational fluid dynamics-aided analysis of a hydride vapor phase epitaxy reactor,” Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 434, 2016, 10 pages. |
Schulte, K. et al., “High growth rate hydride vapor phase epitaxy at low temperature through use of uncracked hydrides, ” Applied Physics Letters, vol. 112, 2018, 5 pages. |
Schulte, K. et al., “Multijunction Ga0.5In0.5P/GaAs solar cells grown by dynamic hydride vapor phase epitaxy,” Progress in Photovoltaics, vol. 26, 2018, 7 pages. |
Schwetlick, S. et al., “Growth Mechanisms in GaAs-VPE at Low Deposition Temperature,” Crystal Research Technology, vol. 20, No. 4, 1985, 7 pages. |
Shahrjerdi, D. et al., “High-efficiency thin-film InGaP/InGaAs/Ge tandem solar cells enabled by controlled spalling technology,” Applied Physics Letters, vol. 100, 2012, pp. 053901-1 through 053901-3. |
Shaw, Don, “Influence of Substrate Temperature on GaAs Epitaxial Deposition Rates,” 1968, Journal of the Electrochemical Society, vol. 115, No. 4, pp. 405-408. |
Simon, J. et al., “III-V-Based Optoelectronics with Low-Cost Dynamic Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy,” Crystals, vol. 9, No. 3, 2019, 14 pages. |
Wikipedia, “Solar cell efficiency,” Jul. 22, 2017, retrieved online from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=solar_cell_efficiency&oldid=791811865, 7 pages. |
Yao-Wang, L. et al., “Epitaxial Growth of High Purity GaAs in an Argon Atmosphere,” Journal of Crystal Growth, vol. 70, 1984, pp. 108-111. |
PCT/17-39 Search Report and Written Opinion dated Jul. 23, 2019; 4 pages. |
European Extended Search Report from corresponding European Patent Application No. 19738729.3 dated Sep. 14, 2021, 6 pages. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion from corresponding PCT patent application No. PCT/US20/37640, mail date Oct. 5, 2020, 7 pages. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion from related PCT patent application No. PCT/US20/37806, mail date Oct. 5, 2020, 12 pages. |
Corresponding European Extended Search Report, European Patent Application No. 20822484.0, mail date May 25, 2023, 8 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200407873 A1 | Dec 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63011732 | Apr 2020 | US | |
62860893 | Jun 2019 | US |