Author:
Yang Junjie,Deng Huiwen,Park Jae-Seong,Chen Siming,Tang Mingchu,Liu Huiyun
Abstract
Monolithic growth of III-V materials onto Si substrates is appealing for realizing practical on-chip light sources for Si-based photonic integrated circuits (PICs). Nevertheless, the material dissimilarities between III-V materials and Si substrates inevitably lead to the formation of crystalline defects, including antiphase domains (APBs), threading dislocations (TDs), and micro-cracks. These nontrivial defects lead to impaired device performance and must be suppressed to a sufficiently low value before propagating into the active region. In this chapter, we review current approaches to control the formation of defects and achieve high-quality GaAs monolithically grown on Si substrates. An APB-free GaAs on complementary-metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible Si (001) substrates grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) only and a low TD density GaAs buffer layer with strained-layer superlattice (SLS) and asymmetric step-graded (ASG) InGaAs layers are demonstrated. Furthermore, recent advances in InAs/GaAs quantum dot (QD) lasers as efficient on-chip light sources grown on the patterned Si substrates for PICs are outlined.