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Toward h-BN/GaN Schottky Diodes: Spectroscopic Study on the Electronic Phenomena at the Interface.

Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), together with other members of the van der Waals crystal family, has been studied for over a decade, both in terms of fundamental and applied research. Up to now, the spectrum of h-BN-based devices has broadened significantly, and systems containing the h-BN/III-V junctions have gained substantial interest as building blocks in, inter alia, light emitters, photodetectors, or transistor structures. Therefore, the understanding of electronic phenomena at the h-BN/III-V interfaces becomes a question of high importance regarding device engineering. In this study, we present the investigation of electronic phenomena at the h-BN/GaN interface by means of contactless electroreflectance (CER) spectroscopy. This nondestructive method enables precise determination of the Fermi level position at the h-BN/GaN interface and the investigation of carrier transport across the interface. CER results showed that h-BN induces an enlargement of the surface barrier height at the GaN surface. Such an effect translates to Fermi level pinning deeper inside the GaN band gap. As an explanation, we propose a mechanism based on electron transfer from GaN surface states to the native acceptor states in h-BN. We reinforced our findings by thorough structural characterization and demonstration of the h-BN/GaN Schottky diode. The surface barriers obtained from CER (0.60 ± 0.09 eV for GaN and 0.91 ± 0.12 eV for h-BN/GaN) and electrical measurements are consistent within the experimental accuracy, proving that CER is an excellent tool for interfacial studies of 2D/III-V hybrids.

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