Enhanced injection efficiency and light output in bottom tunnel-junction light-emitting diodes using UID GaN spacers


Abstract in English

Recently, the use of bottom-TJ geometry in LEDs, which achieves N-polar-like alignment of polarization fields in conventional metal-polar orientations, has enabled enhancements in LED performance due to improved injection efficiency. Here, we elucidate the root causes behind the enhanced injection efficiency by employing mature laser diode structures with optimized heterojunction GaN/In$_{0.17}$Ga$_{0.83}$N/GaN TJs and UID GaN spacers to separate the optical mode from the heavily doped absorbing p-cladding regions. In such laser structures, polarization offsets at the electron blocking layer, spacer, and quantum barrier interfaces play discernable roles in carrier transport. By comparing a top-TJ structure to a bottom-TJ structure, and correlating features in the electroluminescence, capacitance-voltage, and current-voltage characteristics to unique signatures of the N- and Ga-polar polarization heterointerfaces in energy band diagram simulations, we identify that improved hole injection at low currents, and improved electron blocking at high currents, leads to higher injection efficiency and higher output power for the bottom-TJ device throughout 5 orders of current density (0.015 - 1000 A/cm$^2$). Moreover, even with the addition of a UID GaN spacer, differential resistances are state-of-the-art, below 7x10-4 $Omega$cm$^2$. These results highlight the virtues of the bottom-TJ geometry for use in high-efficiency laser diodes.

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