Enhanced microLED efficiency via strategic pGaN contact geometries

: Micro light-emitting diode (microLED) structures were modeled and validated with fabricated devices to investigate p-type GaN (pGaN) contact size dependence on power output efficiency. Two schemes were investigated: a constant 10 µ m diameter pGaN contact and varying microLED sizes and a constant 10 µ m diameter microLED with varying contact sizes. Modeled devices show a 17% improvement in output power by increasing the microLED die size. Fabricated devices followed the same trend with a 70% improvement in power output. Modeled microLED devices of a constant size and varying inner contact sizes show optimized power output at different current densities for various contact sizes. In particular, lower current densities show optimized output for smaller pGaN contacts and trend towards larger contacts for higher current densities in a balance between undesirable efficiency losses at high-current injection and preventing surface recombination losses. We show that for all device geometries, it is preferential to shrink the pGaN contact to maximize efficiency by suppressing surface recombination losses and further improvements should be carefully considered to optimize efficiency for a desired operational brightness.


Introduction
Micro light-emitting diode (microLED) displays are rapidly progressing to the forefront of display technologies due to their extraordinary characteristics. MicroLEDs can outperform liquid-crystal displays (LCD) and organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays in brightness, ambient contrast ratios, pixel response time, and minimum emitter size [1]. These strengths pose microLEDs in the forefront for augmented reality (AR) and mixed reality (MR) near-to-eye displays (NED) where the display requires small emitters with brightness that compete with sunlight. However, several challenges still prevent microLED technologies from widespread use. Red, blue, and green pixel integration remains a key challenge while the overall cost and yield requirements for mass-transfer methods are still prohibitively high [2,3].
For GaN/InGaN microLEDs, efficiency rapidly decreases at higher current densities with smaller emitter sizes, commonly referred to as microLED droop [4,5]. Several studies have investigated the causes of microLED droop and analytical models have been proposed to account for droop with decreasing size [6][7][8][9][10][11]. One of the main contributing factors to the decreasing performance with smaller emitters is non-radiative surface recombination due to nitrogen vacancies which creates Shockley-Read-Hall (SRH) trap sites from dry-etched GaN/InGaN during mesa formation [12][13][14]. The smaller emitter sizes increases the sidewall surface-area-toemitter-size ratio, thus allowing injected current to more readily diffuse towards the sidewalls increasing surface recombination current relative to radiative current [10]. For AR/MR display applications that require extremely small microLED emitters, these efficiency losses become increasingly prohibitive to light output and power efficiency.
Several techniques have been described to mitigate these efficiency roll-offs. Methods have been proposed to minimize the amount of sidewall damage in dry etched pixels by altering plasma gas concentrations and plasma power [15]. Wet etching techniques have also been investigated and compared to dry-etching methods [16,17]. Solution treatment to partially etch or clean the sidewalls have also been proposed to passivate the etched microLED surface after dry etching to improve device performance [18]. The microLED sidewalls are often coated with an insulating material during fabrication to allow for lithographically patterned deposited metal to electrically contact the pGaN layer without shorting the device. To this end, different insulators have been investigated for their ability to partially passivate the etched microLED sidewalls and improve device performance [19]. While these methods do improve device performance, they do not completely offset non-radiative current losses to surface recombination.
A second cause of efficiency droop in LEDs, independent of emitter size, stems from increased non-radiative recombination and leakage current effects at high operational current densities [6,20]. The exact cause of high current droop has been contested and several models have been proposed to account for diminishing efficiencies [21]. Auger recombination has been shown to be a temperature-dependent source of non-radiative recombination partially responsible for efficiency droop [22]. A secondary source of droop occurs at high-injection current conditions and may partially be caused by Auger recombination and further explained by a modified drift-leakage model [23]. Moreover, SRH recombination from trap states unrelated to etched sidewalls is temperature dependent and thus efficiency decreases as the device heats up to operating temperature if effective heat-sinking is not employed [24][25][26]. The exact interplay of these efficiency losses is beyond the scope of this paper and several review articles on the matter are cited [21,27,28].
MicroLED structures are often dry-etched with a nickel hardmask due to nickel's resistance to the chlorine-based plasma used in dry etching GaN [29]. Nickel is also an excellent metal choice for good ohmic contact to p-type GaN (pGaN) [30][31][32]. Thus, nickel is often employed as both the dry-etch mask and the ohmic conctact for a single lithographic self-aligned microLED process step [33]. The self-alignment method is favorable in reducing the number of lithographic steps needed to form a device and it also creates perfect alignment and coverage of the entire exposed pGaN, allowing for the maximum amount of possible current injection with minimal series contact resistance. However, for small microLED devices, this work proposes that self-aligned contacts are overall detrimental to device performance and there are simple application-dependent methods to optimally reshape the pGaN contact to optimize device performance. Previous studies have found a contact geometry dependence on current spreading and light output in vertical, chip-sized LED structures, but no substantial work has been completed on contact geometry in microLED devices [34].
This work examines microLED performance and efficiency for emitters ranging in size from 10 to 20 µm in diameter. Within these devices, the pGaN contact diameter is also investigated to understand the effect of minimizing sidewall recombination and the interplay with current crowding efficiency losses. Efficiency is modeled with a hybrid approach: 1D drift-diffusion modeling of the bandgap structure from epitaxial growth parameters and 3D modeling of the current spreading, internal heating, and efficiency of the device structures. Modeling results are discussed in detail and verified by fabricated devices of the same structure and similar material parameters.

Device fabrication and testing
LED wafers of epitaxially grown GaN/InGaN on patterned sapphire substrates as shown in Fig. 1(a) were used for this study. Devices were fabricated according to the schematic in Fig. 1(b). First, pGaN contacts (20 nm Ni and 50 nm Au) were electron-beam evaporated and lithographically patterned via lift-off. MicroLED dimensions of various sizes according to Fig. 1(c) were defined by lithographically patterning Megaposit SPR220 4.5 photoresist as a dry-etch mask. MicroLEDs were etched in an Oxford PlasmaPro 100 Cl-etcher using Cl/BCl 3 to an approximate depth of 1200 nm. n-type GaN (nGaN) contacts (80 nm Al) were thermally deposited and lithographically patterned via lift-off. An insulating SiO 2 layer (500 nm) was deposited via plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) in an Oxford PlasmaPro 80. Via holes were lithographically patterned with SPR220 4.5 and dry-etched with a CHF 3 plasma in an Oxford PlasmaPro 100. Finally, aluminum interconnects to the nGaN and pGaN were sputter-deposited in an AJA sputter system. The aluminum was patterned and dry-etched in a Cl/BCl 3 plasma. The aluminum was designed uniformly larger than the microLED pixels to also act as a reflective mirror focusing light out the bottom. Finally, probe pads were deposited and patterned with e-beam metal evaporation (10 nm Cr / 500 nm Au).
Luminance-current-voltage (LIV) measurements were recorded with a Keithley 2600 and a ThorLabs S120VC power meter. pGaN and nGaN contact pads were probed by micromanipulators with the microLED under test centered above the photodiode recording bottom emissive light through the sapphire substrate. External quantum efficiency (EQE) measurements are not exact as some amounts of stray light were lost due to substrate modes and imperfect out-coupling. However, the relative size of the microLEDs (10 to 20 µm diameter) compared to the photodiode size (10 mm diameter) ensures that there is no substantial difference between different device sizes and EQE measurements can be quantitatively compared.

Modeling methods
Devices were modeled using STR-Software's SiLENSe and SpeCLED tools. Material properties from Table 1 were modeled with SiLENSe to generate a 1D bandgap model, electrical properties, and internal quantum efficiencies (IQE) from 300 to 500 K. The output data from SiLENSe was then transferred to SpeCLED where several different microLED models were constructed according to Fig. 1(c) and (d). Each model was solved for current densities ranging from approximately 10 to 3000 A/cm 2 . SpecLED was configured to self-consistently solve current spreading, self-heating effects, and IQE per mesh cell. Surface recombination current was also solved for assuming a surface recombination velocity of 1x10 5 cm/s 2 [11]. This recombination velocity is an estimate based on the higher range of reported InGaN and GaN recombination velocities. Average IQE, total emission power, emission power densities, and current-voltage characteristics were recorded for each model and compared. More details on modeling methodology can be found here [35,36].

Constant pGaN contact diameter with variable pixel sizes
Experimental microLED devices were fabricated, measured, and compared to simulation results according to Fig. 1(c). Figure 2 shows modeled device results from SpeCLED. Output power, IQE, surface recombination current, and the ratio of surface recombination current to total operational current are plotted against current density. Datapoints were recorded for current densities ranging from approximately 20 to 3000 A / cm 2 with the 10 µm diameter pGaN contact used to define area for comparison consistency. However, note that current densities then vary  within the microLED pixel because current can spread laterally within the microLED before recombination. The same trends observed in Fig. 2 remain consistent if data is plotted by current density where the area is defined as the microLED size instead, this phenomenon is discussed in more detail below. The light grey arrows point in the trend of increasing microLED pixel size to observe luminosity and electrical performance trends. Maximum output power at a current density of 3000 A / cm 2 is 17% greater for the 20 µm microLED when compared to the 10 µm microLED. This is due to a larger amount of the current being able to recombine radiatively rather than through surface recombination. This is illustrated by the trend of increasing IQE with microLED diameter despite the same current. This is elucidated further by examining the amount of recombined surface current, which is vastly higher for the 10 µm microLED and decreases for each larger microLED. The trend observed in Fig. 2(c) and (d) is most prevalent for 10 to 13 µm diameter microLEDs and rolls off at larger diameters where surface recombination current is almost 0 for the largest devices. This suggests that lateral current spreading within the pGaN layer and the emission layer is significant for one to two microns beyond the pGaN contact diameter.
LIV measurements of fabricated devices of the same design and dimensions from SpeCLED modeling are displayed in Fig. 3. Figure 3(a) shows a schematic of the measurement setup where the microLED devices are placed above the power meter and bottom emitted light is collected. Figures 3(b) and (c) show the spectral output and microscopy images of a fabricated device. Figure 3 additionally highlights current-voltage characteristics, measured output power, and qualitative EQE curves. Notably in Fig. 3(e) and (f), the same trends in output power and EQE are observed with increasing die size as seen in Fig. 2. The fabricated devices show a greater difference in power output from the 20 to 10 µm die when compared to the modeled devices with 70% greater power at 2800 A/cm 2 and 83% greater power at the maximum 12,730 A/cm 2 measured current density. The EQE curves in Fig. 3(f) show an increasing peak EQE current density with increasing die size. This is in contrast to the IQE curves in Fig. 2(b) that show decreasing peak IQE current density. There are several factors in our models that could be affecting the peak IQE current density. In particular, the surface recombination velocity and carrier diffusion length were estimated from commonly reported literature values. Modeling results could be improved by empirically solving for these constants for a particular device epitaxy. Both modeled and fabricated results support increased efficiencies by increasing the microLED diameter for a fixed pGaN contact area.

Constant microLED Size with variable pGaN contact diameter
While expanding microLED size for a constant contact geometry improves output power, it is done so at the expense of die real estate. For microLED display applications that require high fill factors, die space for integrated thin-film transistors, tight fabrication tolerances, or extremely small emitters, expanding the microLED pixel may not be a feasible option. This section examines a constant microLED size assuming a fabrication or design requirement and investigates whether there is an optimal pGaN contact diameter that will increase IQE by reducing surface recombination.
Modeled results of varying the pGaN contact diamater with a fixed microLED size are shown in Fig. 4. Current density is calculated for a constant 10 µm microLED diameter size rather than pGaN contact diameter size for comparison consistency. The grey arrow points in the trends observed for increasing pGaN contact diameter. IQE has a negative trend with increasing contact diameter size for lower current densities but the trend reverses at higher current densities. The smaller contacts reach a high-level injection state at lower current densities due to the smaller pGaN contact. Surface recombination current follows an expected trend with smaller pGaN contacts having low or negligible surface recombination at high current densities and larger pGaN contacts are responsible for large surface recombination current loss. Power plots shown in Fig. 2(a) and 3(c) are not presented here as the output powers for each pGaN diameter were difficult to differentiate. Instead, Fig. 4(d) shows plots of output power versus pGaN diameter for several current densities. Output power for each current density is normalized to the pGaN contact diameter's maximum output power. This plot shows an extraordinary trend where output power can vary significantly (32% different for 10 A/cm 2 ) with different pGaN contact diameters. The trend is most prominent at lower current densities where a minimum pGaN contact size is preferred. At higher current densities, the trend of maximum output power shifts to larger pGaN contacts. For all current densities though, maximum output power occurs at a pGaN contact diameter of 8 µm or less. This demonstrates that by leaving a 1 µm gap between the pGaN contact perimeter and the microLED edge, surface recombination losses can be substantially suppressed. Given that displays will often operate within target brightness constraints for specific applications, consideration should be given to the the optimal pGaN contact diameter for a fixed microLED size and operational current density.
To detail this phenomenon further, 2D emission power density (W/cm 2 ) plots of the active emitting area are displayed in Fig. 5. These plots represent how current spreads through the thin (150 nm) pGaN layer into the MQW emitting region with lateral diffusion, the localized IQE, temperature distribution, and surface recombination taken into account. pGaN contact diameters of 4, 7, and 10 µm at current densities of 25, 100, and 1000 A/cm 2 are shown as representative points from Fig. 4(d).
For devices operating at low current densities (∼25 to 100 A/cm 2 ), results from Fig. 4(d) show that a minimum pGaN contact size across the ranges examined gives the maximum amount of output power. The smaller contact size creates a higher current density than plotted values at the center of the microLED, pushing the localized IQE higher as depicted from Fig. 4(a). Beyond this, IQE decreases for higher current densities due to current crowding, increased localized temperature, and Auger recombination effects. Additionally, small pGaN contact sizes minimize the amount of surface recombination as the distance from the contact edge to the etched microLED surface is much longer than the carrier diffusion length in pGaN [37][38][39][40]. This phenomenon is clearly depicted in Fig. 5(b) for 25 and 100 A/cm 2 where emission power density is highly localized around the center of the microLEDs for the smaller pGaN contact sizes.
At higher current densities, the small contact size becomes less optimal. The localized current density increases, causing the IQE to roll off more rapidly. The smaller pGaN contacts cover far less available emission area and current can not sufficiently spread to the outer radii of the microLED. This is depicted in the 1000 A/cm 2 column of Fig. 5(a) and (b) where there is a strong drop off in power density outside the contact region. This would suggest that a pGaN contact matching the size of the microLED would be optimal to properly distribute current and minimize droop at higher current densities. The main complication is that surface recombination has a negative effect on output power. For high current densities (> 250 A/cm 2 ), the optimum contact size trends from 6 to 8 µm as current density increases to the maximum density modeled (1650 A/cm 2 ).

Device architecture considerations
This work has been focused primarily on efficiency and power output as figures-of-merit as they are generalized and apply to most microLED applications. However, the taxonomy of microLED architectures is vast and rapidly developing, and design constraints for different applications will be able to take the device improvements presented here into consideration. Of particular note, light outcoupling efficiency is largely dependent on device implementation and architecture. This study assumes a constant 30% light extraction efficiency (LEE) to calculate output power from localized IQE and current densities in modeled results. While real results may differ because of the slightly different geometries, the small changes in localized power densities are not significant enough to alter the presented trends. This is validated by the fabricated devices in Fig. 3 following the same trends as the modeled devices in Fig. 2. Further, the fabricated devices show an enhanced trend from the modeled devices, with an output power at 2800 A/cm 2 differed a full 70% from the 10 to 20 µm diameter fabricated microLEDs whereas SpeCLED reuslts only predicted a 17% power difference. This discrepancy can likely be explained from a low estimation of the surface recombination velocity in simulation. Recombination velocities can vary significantly for GaN/InGaN microLEDs depending on epitaxy and etching quality and methods [11]. From this, we can predict that the trends observed in Fig. 4 may be even more pronounced, given further motivation to examine microLED devices with smaller pGaN contact geometries for a constant die diameter.
Outside of figure-of-merit improvements, the second consideration display designers may take into account is the desired beam shape of outcoupled light for the given architecture. A detailed analysis of beam shape would require ray-tracing studies in-situ from emission power density data and is beyond the scope of this study due to the variety of applications that could alter the figures-of-merit. Instead, a shorter discussion on how beam shape could effect different architectures is presented. Larger scale display systems that involve pick-and-place or other mass transfer methodologies are likely outcoupling bottom-emitting light with lesser geometry constraints on die size. Here, the maximum amount of efficiency and output power is desired and output power can be significantly enhanced by increasing the microLED diameter size as presented in section 2.1. However, this may change the beam shape outcoupled from the bottom of the microLED and could be a less desirable tradeoff for certain applications. The second scenario presented in section 2.2 with a constant microLED diameter and varying pGaN contact sizes is more applicable to monolithic microLED display designs. Here, the driving electronics are integrated directly with the microLED array and device real-estate is at a premium. There is a careful balance in maximizing microLED fill-factor, reducing interconnect resistance, and ample channel width for high current driving capabilities to consider. The results here suggest power output can be improved by carefully selecting a pGaN contact size for a display's driving current density. Finally, due to the small amount of lateral current spreading in the pGaN and the emission area as depicted by Fig. 5(b), the beam shape of top-emitting devices are strongly dependent on the top-contact geometry. Therefore, a simple method to decrease the apparent pixel size is to reduce the shape of the contact geometry without necessarily etching the microLED shape to match. This both simplifies fabrication methods and improves quantum efficiency of the device.

Conclusion
This study demonstrates significant efficiency improvements through modeling and fabricated devices by a novel method of reshaping pGaN contact geometries to reduce surface recombination. Different contact geometries alter the current densities for a given microLED size and can be harnessed to maximize efficiency for a target display brightness. Display designers should carefully consider the balance between current density, brightness, efficiency, and beam shape characteristics to optimize the pGaN contact shape rather than use a self-aligned microLED design.