American Institute of Physics, Applied Physics Letters, 2(80), p. 231-233, 2002
DOI: 10.1063/1.1432751
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The effect of the III/V ratio and growth temperature on the In incorporation has been studied in thick (≫300 nm) InGaN layers, with In mole fractions from 19% to 37%, grown by molecular-beam epitaxy on sapphire and on GaN templates. Significant desorption of In occurs at growth temperatures above 550 °C. Symmetric and asymmetric reflections from high resolution X-ray diffraction reveals that the layers are not fully relaxed. A bowing parameter of 3.6 eV is calculated from optical absorption data, once corrected for strain-free band gap values. The increase of both, the absorption band-edge broadening and the photoluminescence full width at half maximum at room temperature with the In content, is discussed in terms of a strong In localization effect. This localization effect is further evidenced by the S-shaped temperature dependence of the emission energy.