The nitride semiconductor materials GaN, AlN, and InN, and their alloys and heterostructures have been investigated extensively in the last 3 decades, leading to several technologically successful photonic and electronic devices. Just over the past few years, a number of "new" nitride materials have emerged with exciting photonic, electronic, and magnetic properties. Some examples are 2D and layered hBN and the III-V diamond analog cBN, the transition metal nitrides ScN, YN, and their alloys (e.g. ferroelectric ScAlN), piezomagnetic GaMnN, ferrimagnetic Mn4N, and epitaxial superconductor/semiconductorNbN/GaN heterojunctions. This article reviews the fascinating and emerging physics and science of these new nitride materials. It also discusses their potential applications in future generations of devices that take advantage of the photonic and electronic devices eco-system based on transistors, light-emitting diodes, and lasers that have already been created by the nitride semiconductors.
The recent demonstration of
≈
2
W mm−1 output power at 94 GHz in AlN/GaN/AlN high‐electron‐mobility transistors (HEMTs) has established AlN as a promising platform for millimeter‐wave electronics. The current state‐of‐art AlN HEMTs using ex situ‐deposited silicon nitride (SiN) passivation layers suffer from soft gain compression due to trapping of carriers by surface states. Reducing surface state dispersion in these devices is thus desired to access higher output powers. Herein, a potential solution using a novel in situ crystalline AlN passivation layer is provided. A thick, 30+ nm‐top AlN passivation layer moves the as‐grown surface away from the 2D electron gas (2DEG) channel and reduces its effect on the device. Through a series of metal‐polar AlN/GaN/AlN heterostructure growths, it is found that pseudomorphically strained
≤
15 nm thin GaN channels are crucial to be able to grow thick AlN barriers without cracking. The fabricated recessed‐gate HEMTs on an optimized heterostructure with 50 nm AlN barrier layer and 15 nm GaN channel layer show reduction in dispersion down to
2
−
6
%
compared with
20
%
in current state‐of‐art ex situ SiN‐passivated HEMTs. These results demonstrate the efficacy of this unique in situ crystalline AlN passivation technique and should unlock higher mm‐wave powers in next‐generation AlN HEMTs.
Mn4N is a compound magnetic material that can be grown using MBE while exhibiting several desirable magnetic properties such as strong perpendicular magnetic anisotropy, low saturation magnetization, large domain size, and record high domain wall velocities. In addition to its potential for spintronic applications exploiting spin orbit torque with epitaxial topological insulator/ferromagnet bilayers, the possibility of integrating Mn4N seamlessly with the wide bandgap semiconductors GaN and SiC provides a pathway to merge logic, memory and communication components. We report a comparative study of MBE grown Mn4N thin films on four crystalline substrates: cubic MgO, and hexagonal GaN, SiC and sapphire. Under similar growth conditions, the Mn4N film is found to grow single crystalline on MgO and SiC, polycrystalline on GaN, and amorphous on sapphire. The magnetic properties vary on the substrates and correlate to the structural properties. Interestingly, the field dependent anomalous Hall resistance of Mn4N on GaN shows different behavior from other substrates such as a flipped sign of the anomalous Hall resistance.
Recent observation of high density polarization-induced two-dimensional electron gases in ultra-thin N-polar GaN layers grown on single-crystal AlN has enabled the development of N-polar high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) on AlN. Such devices will take advantage of thermal and power handling capabilities of AlN, while simultaneously benefitting from the merits of N-polar structures, such as a strong back barrier. We report the experimental demonstration of N-polar GaN/AlGaN/AlN HEMTs on single-crystal AlN substrates, showing an on-current of 2.6 A/mm with a peak transconductance of 0.31 S/mm. Small-signal RF measurements revealed speeds exceeding ft/ fmax = 68/100 GHz. These results pave the way for developing RF electronics with excellent thermal management based on N-polar single-crystal AlN.
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