Developing fabrication processes for optoelectronic integration

Lead Research Organisation: Cardiff University
Department Name: School of Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

The development of new fabrication strategies is required for integrated optoelectronics. For example, there are challenges in etching facets for III-phosphide materials, and III-P and / or III-As on Silicon where the combination of CS and silicon leads to different requirements.

In integrated devices the processes to deposit high reflectivity mirrors on facets or layers providing surface passivation and increases in the catastrophic optical facet damage level are not straightforward. SPTS have tools that can etch facets and they have processes that can deposit conformal layers on surface and surface normal surfaces. These processes may hugely benefit the performance of integrated devices and so the project is about developing these processes for lasers, as an example of the most sensitive active component, while being appropriate for full scale integrated optoelectronic circuits.

There may also be advantages for individual devices or small scale integrated chips if we can combine a high quality etched facet process with a wafer segmentation process. These are developed for silicon but the Compound Semiconductor materials and devices may suffer substantial or subtle damage from these processes as currently utilised.

InAs Quantum Dot materials grown on an GaAs lattice constant (on Silicon) are said to offer some tolerance to damage created in active devices and we will examine whether the InAs quantum dots on an InP lattice constant (on Silicon) also offer such advantages and how these compare to quantum well active devices and how both compare to e.g. cleaved facet and /or scribed devices.

Planned Impact

Through our students, following consideration of the consequences of their research and appropriate action informed by their Responsible Innovation training, impact will fall into one of 3 strands:

SOCIETAL:

As a Key Enabling Technology, Compound Semiconductors (CS) bring benefit to society in general through developing the connected society, e.g. the 5G network, the smart phones that use it, satellite communications systems and data server infrastructure;

they contribute to reducing our carbon footprint through e.g. photovoltaics, new energy efficient lighting, and, power electronics for the next generation of electric vehicles.

CS sensor technology is at the heart of early medical diagnosis and CS based light sources are essential for both cosmetic treatments, such as hair removal, and life-saving treatments such as Photodynamic Therapy.

CS based magnetic sensors are being developed for security screening and next generation secure communication.

In total these technologies support our connected world, our health, our security and the environment.

ECONOMIC: The global market for CS is large, currently worth around $33.7Bn, with a compound annual growth rate of 17.3%.

The vision of the CS cluster was first defined in 2015, to build on existing academic and industrial assets, capability and manufacturing excellence to create Europe's 5th Semiconductor Cluster and the first in the world dedicated to Compound Semiconductor Technologies. To date the cluster has secured commitments of >£500M private and public investment with a suite of innovation assets and critical manufacturing infrastructure and a purpose to drive UK growth in the CS sector.

It is absolutely critical to recognise that the formation of clusters need ongoing nurturing, cross fertilisation of people and ideas and most importantly the supply of skilled staff to support rapid growth in order to reach critical mass for sustainability. The predicted PhD level jobs increase in just the current local cluster companies would more than use all of the minimum underwritten CDT output over the next 5 years, and we need to do much more. Our CDT is essential to support the development of key elements of the rapidly emerging Compound Semiconductor Cluster and drive new linkages within the wider UK industrial supply chain. Thus addressing the issue of bringing manufacturing supply chains back to the UK - a key element of the Government's Industrial Strategy.

The EPSRC CS roadmap document , June 2012, identified a concern that the UK CS Research Community is missing an exploitation link that can provide a route to impact and economic leverage EPSRC's >£20M pa CS research investment. Many technological solutions work well in the research laboratory or as one-off demonstrators but fail to translate to industrial production or commercial success. The CDT will directly address this issue by changing the mind-set of the next generation of researchers so that they start from solutions that allow rapid translation to production.

OUTREACH:

It is critical that the public and our politicians understand the excellence and importance of CS manufacturing in the UK. Our CDT cohort will undergo training in elevator pitches and media interactions to influence decision makers and will develop videos explaining how Compound Semiconductors are made and what they can do. They will inform a diverse set of people using a range of innovative formats such as performance and theatre production skills.

A crucial part of the people pipeline, which will support our future manufacturing excellence, is the motivation of our young people. Our CDT cohort will develop a Schools programme and an Undergraduate programme.

This will ensure we attract the very best and widest range of applicants and, most importantly, inform and excite the next generation about the opportunities that CS technology and Manufacturing offers them.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S024441/1 01/07/2019 31/12/2027
2265649 Studentship EP/S024441/1 01/10/2019 31/12/2023 Tristan Burman