Gallium arsenide phosphide explained

Gallium arsenide phosphide () is a semiconductor material, an alloy of gallium arsenide and gallium phosphide. It exists in various composition ratios indicated in its formula by the fraction x.

Gallium arsenide phosphide is used for manufacturing red, orange and yellow light-emitting diodes. It is often grown on gallium phosphide substrates to form a GaP/GaAsP heterostructure. In order to tune its electronic properties, it may be doped with nitrogen (GaAsP:N).[1]

See also

References

  1. Characteristics of Nitrogen-Doped GaAsP Light-Emitting Diodes. Tadashige Sato and Megumi Imai. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics. 41. 5995–5998. 2002. 10 . 10.1143/JJAP.41.5995. 2002JaJAP..41.5995S . 119751060 .