%0 Journal Article %T Reactive ion etching of high optical quality GaN/sapphire photonic crystal slab using CH4-H2 chemistry %+ Laboratoire de photonique et de nanostructures (LPN) %+ Groupe d'étude des semiconducteurs (GES) %A Bouchoule, S. %A Boubanga-Tombet, S. %A Le Gratiet, L. %A Le Vassor d'Yerville, M. %A Torres, J. %A Chen, Y. %A Coquillat, D. %< avec comité de lecture %@ 0021-8979 %J Journal of Applied Physics %I American Institute of Physics %V 101 %P 043103 %8 2007 %D 2007 %K photonic crystal %K GaN %K second-harmonic generation %Z Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/General Physics [physics.gen-ph]Journal articles %X Reactive ion etching RIE using a CH4–H2 plasma is investigated for the fabrication of a GaN one-dimensional 1D photonic crystal PhC slab. The dominant control parameter for the etch rate and the sidewall profile is the dc bias. The influence of operating pressure, CH4/H2 ratio, and total gas flow rate on the etching characteristics is also presented. An etch rate as high as 85 nm/min and an overcut angle as low as 5° obtained in this work are among the best values reported for conventional RIE technique. The CH4–H2 process is used to etch 1D PhCs with a lattice parameter ranging from 700 to 350 nm and an air filling factor of 0.30 into a 600-nm-thick GaN/sapphire slab. Sharp peaks corresponding to the resonant modes of the nanopatterned structures are observed in the experimental reflection spectra for all the lattice periods. Furthermore, the good optical quality of the nanostructures is evidenced by a resonantly enhanced second-harmonic generation experiment around 400 nm. A second-harmonic generation enhancement factor as high as 105 is obtained, compared with the unpatterned GaN reference slab. These results demonstrate that the CH4–H2 conventional RIE technique is well adapted to the etching of GaN PhC for the fabrication of next generation photonic devices exploiting nonlinear processes. %G English %L hal-00390399 %U https://hal.science/hal-00390399 %~ CNRS %~ UNIV-MONTP2 %~ GES %~ UNIV-MONTPELLIER %~ UM1-UM2