Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Haiding Sun is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Haiding Sun.


Optics Express | 2017

Droop-free Al x Ga 1-x N/Al y Ga 1-y N quantum-disks-in-nanowires ultraviolet LED emitting at 337 nm on metal/silicon substrates

Bilal Janjua; Haiding Sun; Chao Zhao; Dalaver H. Anjum; Davide Priante; Abdullah A. Alhamoud; Feng-Yu Wu; Xiaohang Li; Abdulrahman M. Albadri; Ahmed Y. Alyamani; Munir M. El-Desouki; Tien Khee Ng; Boon S. Ooi

Currently the AlGaN-based ultraviolet (UV) solid-state lighting research suffers from numerous challenges. In particular, low internal quantum efficiency, low extraction efficiency, inefficient doping, large polarization fields, and high dislocation density epitaxy constitute bottlenecks in realizing high power devices. Despite the clear advantage of quantum-confinement nanostructure, it has not been widely utilized in AlGaN-based nanowires. Here we utilize the self-assembled nanowires (NWs) with embedding quantum-disks (Qdisks) to mitigate these issues, and achieve UV emission of 337 nm at 32 A/cm2 (80 mA in 0.5 × 0.5 mm2 device), a turn-on voltage of ~5.5 V and droop-free behavior up to 120 A/cm2 of injection current. The device was grown on a titanium-coated n-type silicon substrate, to improve current injection and heat dissipation. A narrow linewidth of 11.7 nm in the electroluminescence spectrum and a strong wavefunctions overlap factor of 42% confirm strong quantum confinement within uniformly formed AlGaN/AlGaN Qdisks, verified using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The nitride-based UV nanowires light-emitting diodes (NWs-LEDs) grown on low cost and scalable metal/silicon template substrate, offers a scalable, environment friendly and low cost solution for numerous applications, such as solid-state lighting, spectroscopy, medical science and security.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Influence of TMAl preflow on AlN epitaxy on sapphire

Haiding Sun; Feng Wu; Young Jae Park; T. M. Al tahtamouni; Kuang-Hui Li; Nasir Alfaraj; Theeradetch Detchprohm; Russell D. Dupuis; Xiaohang Li

The trimethylaluminum (TMAl) preflow process has been widely applied on sapphire substrates prior to growing Al-polar AlN films by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition. However, it has been unclear how the TMAl preflow process really works. In this letter, we reported on carbons significance in the polarity and growth mode of AlN films due to the TMAl preflow. Without the preflow, no trace of carbon was found at the AlN/sapphire interface and the films possessed mixed Al- and N-polarity. With the 5 s preflow, carbon started to precipitate due to the decomposition of TMAl, forming scattered carbon-rich clusters which were graphitic carbon. It was discovered that the carbon attracted surrounding oxygen impurity atoms and consequently suppressed the formation of AlxOyNz and thus N-polarity. With the 40 s preflow, the significant presence of carbon clusters at the AlN/sapphire interface was observed. While still attracting oxygen and preventing the N-polarity, the carbon clusters served as randomly distrib...


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Valence and conduction band offsets of β-Ga2O3/AlN heterojunction

Haiding Sun; C. G. Torres Castanedo; Kaikai Liu; Kuang-Hui Li; Wenzhe Guo; Ronghui Lin; Xinwei Liu; Jingtao Li; Xiaohang Li

Both β-Ga2O3 and wurtzite AlN have wide bandgaps of 4.5–4.9 and 6.1 eV, respectively. We calculated the in-plane lattice mismatch between the (−201) plane of β-Ga2O3 and the (0002) plane of AlN, which was found to be 2.4%. This is the smallest mismatch between β-Ga2O3 and binary III-nitrides which is beneficial for the formation of a high quality β-Ga2O3/AlN heterojunction. However, the valence and conduction band offsets (VBO and CBO) at the β-Ga2O3/AlN heterojunction have not yet been identified. In this study, a very thin (less than 2 nm) β-Ga2O3 layer was deposited on an AlN/sapphire template to form the heterojunction by pulsed laser deposition. High-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed the core-level (CL) binding energies of Ga 3d and Al 2p with respect to the valence band maximum in individual β-Ga2O3 and AlN layers, respectively. The separation between Ga 3d and Al 2p CLs at the β-Ga2O3/AlN interface was also measured. Eventually, the VBO was found to be −0.55 ± 0.05 eV. Consequent...


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Photoinduced entropy of InGaN/GaN p-i-n double-heterostructure nanowires

Nasir Alfaraj; Somak Mitra; Feng Wu; Idris A. Ajia; Bilal Janjua; Aditya Prabaswara; Renad A. Aljefri; Haiding Sun; Tien Khee Ng; Boon S. Ooi; Iman S. Roqan; Xiaohang Li

The photoinduced entropy of InGaN/GaN p-i-n nanowires was investigated using temperature-dependent (6–290 K) photoluminescence. We also analyzed the photocarrier dynamics in the InGaN active regions using time-resolved photoluminescence. An increasing trend in the amount of generated photoinduced entropy of the system above 250 K was observed, while we observed an oscillatory trend in the generated entropy of the system below 250 K that stabilizes between 200 and 250 K. Strong exciton localization in indium-rich clusters, carrier trapping by surface defect states, and thermodynamic entropy effects were examined and related to the photocarrier dynamics. We conjecture that the amount of generated photoinduced entropy of the system increases as more non-radiative channels become activated and more shallowly localized carriers settle into deeply localized states; thereby, additional degrees of uncertainty related to the energy of states involved in thermionic transitions are attained.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Band alignment of B0.14Al0.86N/Al0.7Ga0.3N heterojunction

Haiding Sun; Young Jae Park; Kuang-Hui Li; C. G. Torres Castanedo; Abdulmohsen Alowayed; Theeradetch Detchprohm; Russell D. Dupuis; Xiaohang Li

Owing to large bandgaps of BAlN and AlGaN alloys, their heterojunctions have the potential to be used in deep ultraviolet and power electronic device applications. However, the band alignment of such junctions has not been identified. In this work, we investigated the band-offset parameters of a B0.14Al0.86 N/Al0.7Ga0.3N heterojunction grown by metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy. These specific compositions were chosen to ensure a sufficiently large band offset for deep ultraviolet and power electronic applications. High resolution transmission electron microscopy confirmed the high structural quality of the heterojunction with an abrupt interface and uniform element distribution. We employed high resolution X-ray photoemission spectroscopy to measure the core level binding energies of B 1s and Ga 2p3/2 with respect to the valence band maximum of B0.14Al0.86N and Al0.7Ga0.3N layers, respectively. Then, we measured the energy separation between the B 1s and Ga 2p3/2 core levels at the interface of the hetero...


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Wurtzite BAlN and BGaN alloys for heterointerface polarization engineering

Kaikai Liu; Haiding Sun; Feras AlQatari; Wenzhe Guo; Xinwei Liu; Jingtao Li; Carlos G Torres Castanedo; Xiaohang Li

The spontaneous polarization (SP) and piezoelectric (PZ) constants of BxAl1-xN and BxGa1-xN (0 ≤ x ≤ 1) ternary alloys were calculated with the hexagonal structure as reference. The SP constants show moderate nonlinearity due to the volume deformation and the dipole moment difference between the hexagonal and wurtzite structures. The PZ constants exhibit significant bowing because of the large lattice difference between binary alloys. Furthermore, the PZ constants of BxAl1-xN and BxGa1-xN become zero at boron compositions of ∼87% and ∼74%, respectively, indicating non-piezoelectricity. The large range of SP and PZ constants of BxAl1-xN (BAlN) and BxGa1-xN (BGaN) can be beneficial for the compound semiconductor device development. For instance, zero heterointerface polarization Δ P can be formed for BAlN and BGaN based heterojunctions with proper B compositions, potentially eliminating the quantum-confined Stark effect for c-plane optical devices and thus removing the need of non-polar layers and substrate...


AIP Advances | 2017

Thermodynamic photoinduced disorder in AlGaN nanowires

Nasir Alfaraj; Mufasila Mumthaz Muhammed; Kuang-Hui Li; Bilal Janjua; Renad A. Aljefri; Haiding Sun; Tien Khee Ng; Boon S. Ooi; Iman S. Roqan; Xiaohang Li

In this study, we examine thermodynamic photoinduced disorder in AlGaN nanowires through their steady-state and transient photoluminescence properties. We correlate the energy exchange during the photoexcitation and photoemission processes of the light–solid reaction and the generation of photoinduced entropy of the nanowires using temperature-dependent (6 K to 290 K) photoluminescence. We observed an oscillatory trend in the generated entropy of the system below 200 K, with an oscillation frequency that was significantly lower than what we have previously observed in InGaN/GaN nanowires. In contrast to the sharp increase in generated entropy at temperatures close to room temperature in InGaN/GaN nanowires, an insignificant increase was observed in AlGaN nanowires, indicating lower degrees of disorder-induced uncertainty in the wider bandgap semiconductor. We conjecture that the enhanced atomic ordering in AlGaN caused lower degrees of disorder-induced uncertainty related to the energy of states involved ...


Optics Express | 2017

71-Mbit/s ultraviolet-B LED communication link based on 8-QAM-OFDM modulation

Xiaobin Sun; Zhenyu Zhang; Anas Chaaban; Tien Khee Ng; Chao Shen; Rui Chen; Jianchang Yan; Haiding Sun; Xiaohang Li; Junxi Wang; Jinmin Li; Mohamed-Slim Alouini; Boon S. Ooi

A demonstration of ultraviolet-B (UVB) communication link is implemented utilizing quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM). The demonstration is based on a 294-nm UVB-light-emitting-diode (UVB-LED) with a full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of 9 nm and light output power of 190 μW, at 7 V, with a special silica gel lens on top of it. A -3-dB bandwidth of 29 MHz was measured and a high-speed near-solar-blind communication link with a data rate of 71 Mbit/s was achieved using 8-QAM-OFDM at perfect alignment. 23.6 Mbit/s using 2-QAM-OFDM when the angle subtended by the pointing directions of the UVB-LED and photodetector (PD) is 12 degrees, thus establishing a diffuse-line-of-sight (LOS) link. The measured bit-error rate (BER) of 2.8 ×10-4 and 2.4 ×10-4, respectively, are well below the forward error correction (FEC) criterion of 3.8 ×10-3. The demonstrated high data-rate OFDM-based UVB communication link paves the way for realizing high-speed non-line-of-sight free-space optical communications.


Applied Physics Express | 2018

Revealing microstructure and dislocation behavior in BAlN/AlGaN heterostructures

Haiding Sun; Feng Wu; Young Jae Park; T. M. Al tahtamouni; Che-Hao Liao; Wenzhe Guo; Nasir Alfaraj; Kuang-Hui Li; Dalaver H. Anjum; Theeradetch Detchprohm; Russell D. Dupuis; Xiaohang Li

The KAUST authors acknowledge the support of the GCC Research Program REP/1/3189-01-01, Baseline BAS/1/1664-01-01, and Equipment BAS/1/1664-01-07. The work at QU was supported by the GCC Research Program GCC-2017-007. The work at the Georgia Institute of Technology was supported in part by DARPA under Grant No. W911NF-15-1-0026 and NSF under Grant No. DMR-1410874. R.D.D. acknowledges the additional support of the Steve W. Chaddick Endowed Chair in Electro-Optics and Georgia Research Alliance.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Using Mosaicity to Tune Thermal Transport in Polycrystalline Aluminum Nitride Thin Films

Shivkant Singh; Shahab Shervin; Haiding Sun; Milad Yarali; Jie Chen; Ronghui Lin; Kuang-Hui Li; Xiaohang Li; Jae-Hyun Ryou; Anastassios Mavrokefalos

The effect of controlling the c-axis alignment (mosaicity) to the cross-plane thermal transport in textured polycrystalline aluminum nitride (AlN) thin films is experimentally and theoretically investigated. We show that by controlling the sputtering conditions we are able to deposit AlN thin films with varying c-axis grain tilt (mosaicity) from 10° to 0°. Microstructural characterization shows that the films are nearly identical in thickness and grain size, and the difference in mosaicity alters the grain interface quality. This has a significant effect to thermal transport where a thermal conductivity of 4.22 vs 8.09 W/mK are measured for samples with tilt angles of 10° versus 0° respectively. The modified Callaway model was used to fit the theoretical curves to the experimental results using various phonon scattering mechanisms at the grain interface. It was found that using a non-gray model gives an overview of the phonon scattering at the grain boundaries, whereas treating the grain boundary as an array of dislocation lines with varying angle relative to the heat flow, best describes the mechanism of the thermal transport. Lastly, our results show that controlling the quality of the grain interface provides a tuning knob to control thermal transport in polycrystalline materials.

Collaboration


Dive into the Haiding Sun's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiaohang Li

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kuang-Hui Li

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Boon S. Ooi

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Feng Wu

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tien Khee Ng

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bilal Janjua

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nasir Alfaraj

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ronghui Lin

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theeradetch Detchprohm

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge