77 research outputs found
Polarization fields in GaN/AlN nanowire heterostructures studied by Off axis holography
In this work, we present an off-axis holography study of GaN/AlN
heterostructured nanowires grown by plasma-assisted molecular-beam epitaxy. We
discuss the sample preparation of nanowire samples for electron holography and
combine potential profiles obtained using holography with theoretical
calculations of the projected potential in order to gain understanding of the
potential distribution in these nanostructures. The effects of surface states
are discusse
Cathodoluminescence of stacking fault bound excitons for local probing of the exciton diffusion length in single GaN nanowires
We perform correlated studies of individual GaN nanowires in scanning
electron microscopy combined to low temperature cathodoluminescence,
microphotoluminescence, and scanning transmission electron microscopy. We show
that some nanowires exhibit well localized regions emitting light at the energy
of a stacking fault bound exciton (3.42 eV) and are able to observe the
presence of a single stacking fault in these regions. Precise measurements of
the cathodoluminescence signal in the vicinity of the stacking fault give
access to the exciton diffusion length near this location
UV Photosensing Characteristics of Nanowire-Based GaN/AlN Superlattices
We have characterized the photodetection capabilities of single GaN nanowires
incorporating 20 periods of AlN/GaN:Ge axial heterostructures enveloped in an
AlN shell. Transmission electron microscopy confirms the absence of an
additional GaN shell around the heterostructures. In the absence of a surface
conduction channel, the incorporation of the heterostructure leads to a
decrease of the dark current and an increase of the photosensitivity. A
significant dispersion in the magnitude of dark currents for different single
nanowires is attributed to the coalescence of nanowires with displaced
nanodisks, reducing the effective length of the heterostructure. A larger
number of active nanodisks and AlN barriers in the current path results in
lower dark current and higher photosensitivity, and improves the sensitivity of
the nanowire to variations in the illumination intensity (improved linearity).
Additionally, we observe a persistence of the photocurrent, which is attributed
to a change of the resistance of the overall structure, particularly the GaN
stem and cap sections. In consequence, the time response is rather independent
of the dark current.Comment: This document is the unedited Author's version of a Submitted Work
that was subsequently accepted for publication in Nano Letters (2016),
copyright (C) American Chemical Society after peer review. To access the
final edited and published work see
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b0080
Assessment of active dopants and p-n junction abruptness using in-situ biased 4D-STEM
A key issue in the development of high-performance semiconductor devices is
the ability to properly measure active dopants at the nanometer scale. 4D
scanning transmission electron microscopy and off-axis electron holography have
opened up the possibility of studying the electrostatic properties of a p-n
junction with nm-scale spatial resolution. The complete description of a p-n
junction must take into account the precise evolution of the concentration of
dopants around the junction, since the sharpness of the dopant transition
directly influences the built-in potential and the maximum electric field.
Here, a contacted silicon p-n junction is studied through in-situ biased
4D-STEM. Measurements of electric field, built-in voltage, depletion region
width and charge density in the space charge region are combined with
analytical equations as well as finite-element simulations in order to evaluate
the quality of the junction interface. The nominally-symmetric, highly doped
() junction presents an electric
field and built-in voltage much lower than expected for an abrupt junction.
These experimental results are consistent with electron holography data. All
measured junction parameters are compatible with the presence of an
intermediate region with a graded profile of the dopants at the p-n interface.
This hypothesis is also consistent with the evolution of the electric field
with bias. These results demonstrate that in-situ biased 4D-STEM enables a
better understanding of the electrical properties of semiconductor p-n
junctions with nm-scale resolution.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Optical properties of single ZnTe nanowires grown at low temperature
Optically active gold-catalyzed ZnTe nanowires have been grown by molecular
beam epitaxy, on a ZnTe(111) buffer layer, at low temperature 350\degree under
Te rich conditions, and at ultra-low density (from 1 to 5 nanowires per
micrometer^{2}. The crystalline structure is zinc blende as identified by
transmission electron microscopy. All nanowires are tapered and the majority of
them are oriented. Low temperature micro-photoluminescence and
cathodoluminescence experiments have been performed on single nanowires. We
observe a narrow emission line with a blue-shift of 2 or 3 meV with respect to
the exciton energy in bulk ZnTe. This shift is attributed to the strain induced
by a 5 nm-thick oxide layer covering the nanowires, and this assumption is
supported by a quantitative estimation of the strain in the nanowires
Residual strain and piezoelectric effects in passivated GaAs/AlGaAs core-shell nanowires
International audienceWe observe a systematic red shift of the band-edge of passivated GaAs/Al0.35Ga0.65As core-shell nanowires with increasing shell thickness up to 100 nm. The shift is detected both in emission and absorption experiments, reaching values up to 14 meV for the thickest shell nanowires. Part of this red shift is accounted for by the small tensile strain imposed to the GaAs core by the AlGaAs shell, in line with theoretical calculations. An additional contribution to this red shift arises from axial piezoelectric fields which develop inside the nanowire core due to Al fluctuations in the shell
Extraction of the homogeneous linewidth of the spectrally diffusing line of a CdSe/ZnSe quantum dot embedded in a nanowire
International audienceWe present a simple method to extract the homogeneous linewidth of a single photon emitter line exhibiting fast (down to 1 ns) spectral diffusion (SD). It is based on a recently developed technique using photon correlation measurements on half of the line. Here we show that the SD induced bunching depends on the ratio between the width of the homogeneous line and the spectral diffusion amplitude. Using this technique on a CdSe/ZnSe quantum dot, we investigate the temperature dependence of its fast SD amplitude and its homogeneous excitonic linewidt
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