34 research outputs found
High-Resolution Electron Microscopy of Semiconductor Heterostructures and Nanostructures
This chapter briefly describes the fundamentals of high-resolution electron microscopy techniques. In particular, the Peak Pairs approach for strain mapping with atomic column resolution, and a quantitative procedure to extract atomic column compositional information from Z-contrast high-resolution images are presented. It also reviews the structural, compositional, and strain results obtained by conventional and advanced transmission electron microscopy methods on a number of III–V semiconductor nanostructures and heterostructures
Realistic model of LED structure with InGaN quantum-dots active region
We report on numerical simulations of quantum-dot heterostructures derived from experimental high-resolution transmission electron microscopy results. A real sample containing large InGaN islands with size of ten of nm and non-uniform In content is analyzed. The three-dimensional models for the quantum dots have been directly extrapolated from experimental results by a numerical algorithm. We show electromechanical, continuum k→ · p→, empirical tight-binding and optical calculations for these realistic structures, which present a very good agreement if compared with experimental measurements, implying that the use of realistic structures can provide significant improvements into the modeling and the understanding of quantum-dot nanostructures
Influence of electromechanical coupling on optical properties of InGaN quantum-dot based light-emitting diodes
The impact of electromechanical coupling on optical properties of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with InGaN/GaN quantum-dot (QD) active regions is studied by numerical simulations. The structure, i.e. the shape and the average In content of the QDs, has been directly derived from experimental data on out-of-plane strain distribution obtained from the geometric-phase analysis of a high-resolution transmission electron microscopy image of an LED structure grown by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy. Using continuum (k) over right arrow . (p) over right arrow calculations, we have studied first the lateral and full electromechanical coupling between the QDs in the active region and its impact on the emission spectrum of a single QD located in the center of the region. Our simulations demonstrate the spectrum to be weakly affected by the coupling despite the strong common strain field induced in the QD active region. Then we analyzed the effect of vertical coupling between vertically stacked QDs as a function of the interdot distance. We have found that QCSE gives rise to a blue-shift of the overall emission spectrum when the interdot distance becomes small enough. Finally, we compared the theoretical spectrum obtained from simulation of the entire active region with an experimental electroluminescence (EL) spectrum. While the theoretical peak emission wavelength of the selected central QD corresponded well to that of the EL spectrum, the width of the latter one was determined by the scatter in the structures of various QDs located in the active region. Good agreement between the simulations and experiment achieved as a whole validates our model based on realistic structure of the QD active region and demonstrates advantages of the applied approach