Cooperative roles of chemical reactions and mechanical friction in chemical mechanical polishing of gallium nitride assisted by OH radicals: tight-binding quantum chemical molecular dynamics simulations

Literature Information

Publication Date 2021-01-06
DOI 10.1039/D0CP05826B
Impact Factor 3.676
Authors

Kentaro Kawaguchi, Yusuke Ootani, Yuji Higuchi, Nobuki Ozawa


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Abstract

Chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) is a key manufacturing process for applying gallium nitride (GaN), especially the Ga-face GaN, to semiconductor devices such as laser diodes. However, the CMP efficiency for GaN is very low due to its high hardness and chemical stability. Experimentally, OH radicals appear able to improve the CMP efficiency of GaN polished by a SiO2 abrasive grain, whereas the mechanisms of the OH-radical-assisted CMP process remain unclear because experimental elucidation of the complex chemical reactions occurring among GaN substrate, abrasive grain, and OH radicals is difficult. In this work, we used our previously developed tight-binding quantum chemical molecular dynamics simulator to study the OH-radical-assisted CMP process of the widely employed Ga-face GaN substrate polished by an amorphous SiO2 abrasive grain in an effort to understand how OH radicals assist the CMP process and then aid the development of next-generation CMP techniques. Our simulations revealed that the OH-radical-assisted CMP process of GaN occurs via the following three basic reaction steps: (i) first, all hydrogen terminations on the GaN surface are replaced by OH terminations through continuous reactions with OH radicals; (ii) after the substrate is fully terminated by OH, the hydrogen atoms of these OH terminations are removed by reacting with newly added OH radicals, which forms H2O molecules and leaves energetic oxygen atoms with dangling bonds on the surface; and (iii) finally, these energetic oxygen atoms intrude inside the substrate with concomitant dissociation of Ga–N bonds and the generation of N2 and gallium hydroxide molecules, which accumulatively lead to the removal of N and Ga atoms from the substrate.

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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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