Luminescence associated with stacking faults in GaN
Jonas L\"ahnemann, Uwe Jahn, Oliver Brandt, Timur Flissikowski, Pinar, Dogan, Holger T. Grahn

TL;DR
This paper reviews how stacking faults in GaN create quantum well-like structures that emit characteristic luminescence, enabling detection and analysis of these defects through spectroscopy.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the luminescence properties of stacking faults in GaN, including emission energies, effects of the quantum-confined Stark effect, and factors influencing luminescence.
Findings
Stacking faults act as quantum wells in GaN, producing distinct luminescence.
The quantum-confined Stark effect significantly influences emission energies.
Room temperature luminescence characteristics are discussed.
Abstract
Basal-plane stacking faults are an important class of optically active structural defects in wurtzite semiconductors. The local deviation from the 2H stacking of the wurtzite matrix to a 3C zinc-blende stacking induces a bound state in the gap of the host crystal, resulting in the localization of excitons. Due to the two-dimensional nature of these planar defects, stacking faults act as quantum wells, giving rise to radiative transitions of excitons with characteristic energies. Luminescence spectroscopy is thus capable of detecting even a single stacking fault in an otherwise perfect wurtzite crystal. This review draws a comprehensive picture of the luminescence properties related to stacking faults in GaN. The emission energies associated with different types of stacking faults as well as factors that can shift these energies are discussed. In this context, the importance of the…
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