Tunnel-recombination currents and electroluminescence efficiency in InGaN/GaN LEDs
2005
The mechanism of injection loss in p-GaN/InGaN/n-GaN quantum-well LEDs is analyzed by studying the temperature and current dependences of external quantum efficiency in the temperature range 77–300 K and by measuring transient currents. The data obtained are interpreted in terms of a tunnel-recombination model of excess current, which involves electron tunneling through the potential barrier in n-GaN and the over-barrier thermal activation of holes in p-GaN. At a low forward bias, the dominant process is electron capture on the InGaN/p-GaN interface states. At a higher bias, the excess current sharply increases due to an increase in the density of holes on the InGaN/p-GaN interface and their recombination with the trapped electrons. The injection of carriers into the quantum well is limited by the tunnel-recombination current, which results in a decrease in efficiency at high current densities and low temperatures. The pinning of the Fermi level is attributed to the decoration of heterointerfaces, grain boundaries, and dislocations by impurity complexes.
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