Publication | Open Access
Direct Measurement of Auger Electrons Emitted from a Semiconductor Light-Emitting Diode under Electrical Injection: Identification of the Dominant Mechanism for Efficiency Droop
657
Citations
25
References
2013
Year
EngineeringElectron OpticElectrical InjectionElectron SpectroscopyAuger ProcessesLight-emitting DiodesInstrumentationEfficiency DroopElectrical EngineeringPhotoluminescencePhysicsNew Lighting TechnologyAluminum Gallium NitridePhotoelectric MeasurementMicroelectronicsCategoryiii-v SemiconductorSolid-state LightingApplied PhysicsGan Power DeviceAuger ProcessAuger Electrons EmittedElectronic InstrumentationOptoelectronicsAuger Electrons
We report on the unambiguous detection of Auger electrons by electron emission spectroscopy from a cesiated InGaN/GaN light-emitting diode under electrical injection. Electron emission spectra were measured as a function of the current injected in the device. The appearance of high energy electron peaks simultaneously with an observed drop in electroluminescence efficiency shows that hot carriers are being generated in the active region (InGaN quantum wells) by an Auger process. A linear correlation was measured between the high energy emitted electron current and the "droop current"--the missing component of the injected current for light emission. We conclude that the droop phenomenon in GaN light-emitting diodes originates from the excitation of Auger processes.
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