The growth of high-quality III-nitrides by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy on Si(1 1 1) substrates is addressed. A combination of optimized AIN buffer layers and a two-step growth process leads to GaN layers of high crystal quality (8 arcmin X-ray diffraction full-width at half-maximum) and Rat surfaces (57 Angstrom rms). Low-temperature luminescence spectra, dominated by excitonic emissions at 3.465 +/- 0.002 eV, reveal the presence of a biaxial tensile strain of thermal origin. AlGaN layers, grown within the alloy range 0.10 < x < 0.76, have Bat surfaces and exhibit strong excitonic luminescence. Si-doping of GaN and AlGaN produces n-type films reaching electron densities up to 2 x 10(19) and 8 x 10(19) cm(-3), respectively. From photoluminescence and Hall data analysis a Si-donor ionization energy between 50 and 60 meV is derived in GaN. The exciton bound to Si neutral donors at 3.445 eV redshifts while the c-axis lattice parameter decreases as the Si-doping increases, indicating an enhancement of the biaxial tensile strain in the film. This strain increase is a consequence of a strong reduction of the density of dislocations reaching the free surface, due to a particular grain size and orientation governed by the presence of Si donors. Be-doping is also achieved on GaN giving the shallowest acceptor activation energy reported so far, around 90-100 meV. However, there is a severe limitation of the Be incorporation on substitutional sites, leading to the formation of complex, deep defects. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.