Photoacoustic study of the effect of doping concentration on the transport properties of GaAs epitaxial layers
Author(s) -
Sajan D. George
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
optical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.357
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1560-2303
pISSN - 0091-3286
DOI - 10.1117/1.1564101
Subject(s) - materials science , thermal diffusivity , epitaxy , doping , photoacoustic effect , signal (programming language) , optoelectronics , substrate (aquarium) , photoacoustic imaging in biomedicine , molecular beam epitaxy , diffusion , optics , layer (electronics) , nanotechnology , physics , oceanography , quantum mechanics , geology , computer science , thermodynamics , programming language
We report a photoacoustic (PA) study of the thermal and transport properties of a GaAs epitaxial layer doped with Si at varying doping concentration, grown on GaAs substrate by molecular beam epitaxy. The data are analyzed on the basis of Rosencwaig and Gersho's theory of the PA effect. The amplitude of the PA signal gives information about various heat generation mechanisms in semiconductors. The experimental data obtained from the measurement of the PA signal as a function of modulation frequency in a heat transmission configuration were fitted with the phase of PA signal obtained from the theoretical model evaluated by considering four parameters—viz., thermal diffusivity, diffusion coefficient, nonradiative recombination time, and surface recombination velocity—as adjustable parameters. It is seen from the analysis that the photoacoustic technique is sensitive to the changes in the surface states depend on the doping concentration. The study demonstrates the effectiveness of the photoacoustic technique as a noninvasive and nondestructive method to measure and evaluate the thermal and transport properties of epitaxial layers. the effectiveness of the photoacoustic technique as a noninvasive and nondestructive method to measure and evaluate the thermal and transport properties of epitaxial layers.
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