11 research outputs found
Giant, Anomalous Piezoimpedance in Silicon-on-insulator
International audienceA giant, anomalous piezoresponse of fully depleted silicon-on-insulator devices under mechanical stress is demonstrated by impedance spectroscopy. This piezoresponse strongly depends on the measurement frequency, ω, and consists of both a piezoresistance (PZR) and a piezocapacitance, whose maximum values are −1100 × 10−11 and −900 × 10−11 Pa−1, respectively. These values should be compared withthe usual bulk PZR in p-type silicon, 70 × 10−11 Pa−1. The observations are well described by models of space-charge-limited hole currents in the presence of fast electronic traps having stress-dependent capture rates (ωc) and emission rates. Under steady-state conditions (i.e., when ω ωc), where the impedancespectroscopy measurements yield results that are directly comparable with those of previously published reports of PZR in depleted, silicon nano-objects, the overall piezoresponse is just the usual, bulk silicon PZR. Anomalous PZR is observed only under non-steady-state conditions when ω ≈ ωc, with a symmetry suggesting that the electromechanically active fast traps are native Pb0 interface defects. The observations suggest new functionalities for fully depleted silicon-on-insulator, and shed light on the debate over the PZR of carrier-depleted nanosilicon
Valley population of donor states in highly strained silicon
International audienceStrain is extensively used to controllably tailor the electronic properties of materials. In the context of indirect band-gap semiconductors such as silicon, strain lifts the valley degeneracy of the six conduction band minima, and by extension the valley states of electrons bound to phosphorus donors. Here, single phosphorus atoms are embedded in an engineered thin layer of silicon strained to 0.8% and their wave function imaged using spatially resolved spectroscopy. A prevalence of the out-of-plane valleys is confirmed from the real-space images, and a combination of theoretical modelling tools is used to assess how this valley repopulation effect can yield isotropic exchange and tunnel interactions in the xy-plane relevant for atomically precise donor qubit devices. Finally, the residual presence of in-plane valleys is evidenced by a Fourier analysis of both experimental and theoretical images, and atomistic calculations highlight the importance of higher orbital excited states to obtain a precise relationship between valley population and strain. Controlling the valley degree of freedom in engineered strained epilayers provides a new competitive asset for the development of donor-based quantum technologies in silicon