GaAs cells covering
MidSTAR-1 Transistor uses Gallium arsenide (GaAs) transistors are used in the RF power amplifiers for cell phones and wireless communicating. GaAs wafers are used in
laser diodes,
photodetectors, and
radio frequency (RF) amplifiers for mobile phones and base stations. GaAs transistors are also integral to
monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs), utilized in satellite communication and radar systems, as well as in
low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) that enhance weak signals.
Solar cells and detectors Gallium arsenide is an important semiconductor material for high-cost, high-efficiency
solar cells and is used for single-crystalline
thin-film solar cells and for
multi-junction solar cells. The first known operational use of GaAs solar cells in space was for the
Venera 3 mission, launched in 1965. The GaAs solar cells, manufactured by Kvant, were chosen because of their higher performance in high temperature environments. GaAs cells were then used for the
Lunokhod rovers for the same reason. In 1970, the GaAs heterostructure solar cells were developed by the team led by
Zhores Alferov in the
USSR, achieving much higher efficiencies. In the early 1980s, the efficiency of the best GaAs solar cells surpassed that of conventional,
crystalline silicon-based solar cells. In the 1990s, GaAs solar cells took over from silicon as the cell type most commonly used for
photovoltaic arrays for satellite applications. Later, dual- and triple-junction solar cells based on GaAs with
germanium and
indium gallium phosphide layers were developed as the basis of a triple-junction solar cell, which held a record efficiency of over 32% and can operate also with light as concentrated as 2,000 suns. This kind of solar cell powered the
Mars Exploration Rovers
Spirit and
Opportunity, which explored
Mars' surface. Also many
solar cars utilize GaAs in solar arrays, as did the Hubble Telescope. GaAs-based devices hold the world record for the highest-efficiency single-junction solar cell at 29.1% (as of 2019). This high efficiency is attributed to the extreme high quality GaAs epitaxial growth, surface passivation by the AlGaAs, and the promotion of photon recycling by the thin film design. GaAs-based
photovoltaics are also responsible for the highest efficiency (as of 2022) of conversion of light to electricity, as researchers from the
Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems achieved a 68.9% efficiency when exposing a GaAs
thin film photovoltaic cell to monochromatic laser light with a wavelength of 858 nanometers. Today, multi-junction GaAs cells have the highest efficiencies of existing photovoltaic cells and trajectories show that this is likely to continue to be the case for the foreseeable future. In 2022,
Rocket Lab unveiled a solar cell with 33.3% efficiency based on inverted metamorphic multi-junction (IMM) technology. In IMM, the lattice-matched (same lattice parameters) materials are grown first, followed by mismatched materials. The top cell, GaInP, is grown first and lattice matched to the GaAs substrate, followed by a layer of either GaAs or GaInAs with a minimal mismatch, and the last layer has the greatest lattice mismatch. After growth, the cell is mounted to a secondary handle and the GaAs substrate is removed. A main advantage of the IMM process is that the inverted growth according to lattice mismatch allows a path to higher cell efficiency. Complex designs of AlxGa1−xAs-GaAs devices using
quantum wells can be sensitive to infrared radiation (
QWIP). GaAs diodes can be used for the detection of X-rays.
Future outlook of GaAs solar cells Despite GaAs-based photovoltaics being the clear champions of efficiency for solar cells, they have relatively limited use in today's market. In both world electricity generation and world electricity generating capacity, solar electricity is growing faster than any other source of fuel (wind, hydro, biomass, and so on) for the last decade. However, GaAs solar cells have not currently been adopted for widespread solar electricity generation. This is largely due to the cost of GaAs solar cells - in space applications, high performance is required and the corresponding high cost of the existing GaAs technologies is accepted. For example, GaAs-based photovoltaics show the best resistance to gamma radiation and high temperature fluctuations, which are of great importance for spacecraft. But in comparison to other solar cells, III-V solar cells are two to three orders of magnitude more expensive than other technologies such as silicon-based solar cells. The primary sources of this cost are the
epitaxial growth costs and the substrate the cell is deposited on. GaAs solar cells are most commonly fabricated utilizing epitaxial growth techniques such as
metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) and
hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE). A significant reduction in costs for these methods would require improvements in tool costs, throughput, material costs, and manufacturing efficiency. but this method is time-consuming, somewhat dangerous (with its use of
hydrofluoric acid), and requires multiple post-processing steps. However, other methods have been proposed that use phosphide-based materials and hydrochloric acid to achieve ELO with
surface passivation and minimal post-
etching residues and allows for direct reuse of the GaAs substrate. There is also preliminary evidence that
spalling could be used to remove the substrate for reuse. An alternative path to reduce substrate cost is to use cheaper materials, although materials for this application are not currently commercially available or developed. Concentrator systems have the highest efficiency of existing photovoltaics. So, technologies such as concentrator photovoltaics and methods in development to lower epitaxial growth and substrate costs could lead to a reduction in the cost of GaAs solar cells and forge a path for use in terrestrial applications.
Laser Diodes GaAs has been used to produce near-infrared laser diodes since 1962. It is often used in alloys with other semiconductor compounds for these applications.
Cryogenic Scintillators N-type GaAs doped with silicon donor atoms (on Ga sites) and boron acceptor atoms (on As sites) responds to ionizing radiation by emitting scintillation photons. At cryogenic temperatures it is among the brightest scintillators known and is a promising candidate for detecting rare electronic excitations from interacting dark matter, due to the following six essential factors: • Silicon donor electrons in GaAs have a binding energy that is among the lowest of all known
n-type semiconductors. Free electrons above per cm3 are not "frozen out" and remain delocalized at cryogenic temperatures. • Boron and gallium are group III elements, so boron as an impurity primarily occupies the gallium site. However, a sufficient number occupy the arsenic site and act as acceptors that efficiently trap ionization event holes from the valence band. • After trapping an ionization event hole from the valence band, the boron acceptors can combine radiatively with delocalized donor electrons to produce photons 0.2 eV below the cryogenic band-gap energy (1.52 eV). This is an efficient radiative process that produces scintillation photons that are not absorbed by the GaAs crystal. One would expect that almost all of the scintillation photons should be trapped and absorbed in the crystal, but this is not the case. Recent Monte Carlo and Feynman path integral calculations have shown that the high luminosity could be explained if most of the narrow beam absorption is not absolute absorption but a
novel type of optical scattering from the conduction electrons with a cross section of about 5 × 10−18 cm2 that allows scintillation photons to escape total internal reflection. This cross section is about 107 times larger than Thomson scattering but comparable to the optical cross section of the conduction electrons in a metal mirror. •
N-type GaAs(Si,B) is commercially grown as 10 kg crystal ingots and sliced into thin wafers as substrates for electronic circuits. Boron oxide is used as an encapsulant to prevent the loss of arsenic during crystal growth, but also has the benefit of providing boron acceptors for scintillation.
Fiber optic temperature measurement For this purpose an optical fiber tip of an optical fiber temperature sensor is equipped with a gallium arsenide crystal. Starting at a light wavelength of 850 nm GaAs becomes optically translucent. Since the spectral position of the band gap is temperature dependent, it shifts about 0.4 nm/K. The measurement device contains a light source and a device for the spectral detection of the band gap. With the changing of the band gap, (0.4 nm/K) an algorithm calculates the temperature (all 250 ms).
Spin-charge converters GaAs may have applications in
spintronics as it can be used instead of
platinum in spin-charge converters and may be more tunable.
Traveling-wave amplifiers GaAs has been effectively utilized to fabricate traveling-wave amplifiers. ==Safety==