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Self-Assembled Single-Crystalline GaN Having a Bimodal Meso/Macropore Structure To Enhance Photoabsorption and Photocatalytic Reactions.

Taishi KimuraShunsuke SatoKeita KataokaTakeshi MorikawaDaisuke Nakamura
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
This paper describes the self-assembled fabrication of single-crystal GaN with a bimodal pore (meso/macropore) size distribution (BiPS-GaN). A 4.7 μm-thick BiPS-GaN layer was grown spontaneously using halogen-free vapor phase epitaxy in conjunction with boron impurity doping (>1 × 1019 atoms/cm3) on a GaN template fabricated via metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD-GaN). The boron impurity acted as a surfactant, and its segregation generated a dense (>1 × 1010 cm-2), homogeneous distribution of mesopores with sizes of 30-40 nm in GaN during growth. In addition, macropores with sizes of 0.1-2 μm were produced by the fusion of mesopores in close proximity to one another. As a result, BiPS-GaN exhibited a high density of both meso- and macropores, all aligned in the vertical direction (that is, along the c axis). BiPS-GaN showed good electroconductivity and almost the same high degree of crystallinity as the MOCVD-GaN template. Furthermore, the hybrid meso/macropore structure of BiPS-GaN imparted excellent photoabsorption properties and allowed this material to work as an efficient support for a nanosized IrO x catalyst. The photocurrent density in BiPS-GaN was enhanced by as much as a factor of 5 compared to planar GaN by effective absorption due to the hybrid meso/macropore structure of BiPS-GaN. Moreover, the oxygen generation efficiency of BiPS-GaN with the IrO x catalyst was approximately doubled, compared to that of BiPS-GaN without IrO x, while maintaining long-term stability. These results demonstrate that BiPS-GaN fabricated in this facile manner has significant potential in applications such as photoelectrochemical reactions and catalysis.
Keyphrases
  • light emitting
  • high density
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • climate change
  • sensitive detection
  • human health