119 research outputs found

    GaAs transistors formed by Be or Mg ion implantation

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    N-p-n transistor structures have been formed in GaAs by implanting n-type substrates with Be ions to form base regions and then implanting them with 20-keV Si ions to form emitters. P-type layers have been produced in GaAs by implantation of either Mg or Be ions, with substrate at room temperature, followed by annealing at higher temperatures

    Optical waveguiding in proton-implanted GaAs

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    We have produced optical waveguides in n-type GaAs by implantation with 300-keV protons. The guiding is shown to be due to the elimination of charge carriers from the implanted region. Annealing of the waveguide leads to very large reductions in the 1.15-Āµ guided-wave absorption

    Development of ion implantation techniques for microelectronics

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    Ion implantation process for fabricating active devices in high bandgap semiconductor materials for high temperature operatio

    Channel Optical Waveguides and Directional Couplers in GaAs -- Imbedded and Ridged

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    Two-channel imbedded directional couplers were fabricated with proton implantation, yielding complete light transfer in 2 mm. Ridged channel guides were fabricated by ion-micromachining epitaxial layers, and a method of directional coupling was demonstrated

    The Presence of Deep Levels in Ion Implanted Junctions

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    It has been found that ion implantation doping results in the generation and diffusion of defect species, forming deep trapping levels. The effect of these levels on the electrical characteristics of zincā€implanted GaAs diodes has been observed for the case of 70ā€kV implantation at 400Ā°C into substrates with nā€type concentrations ranging from 1 Ɨ 10^16 to 1.8 Ɨ 10^18 atoms/cm^3. Capacitanceā€voltage measurements have indicated the presence of a semiā€insulating layer in the diodes, varying in thickness from 0.18 Ī¼ for the most heavily doped substrate to 2.7 Ī¼ for the lightest. Frequency dependence of the junction capacitance and power law variation of forward current vs voltage have also been observed and are attributed to deep levels

    Integrated photonic qubit quantum computing on a superconducting chip

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    We study a quantum computing system using microwave photons in transmission line resonators on a superconducting chip as qubits. We show that all control necessary for quantum computing can be implemented by coupling to Josephson devices on the same chip, and take advantage of their strong inherent nonlinearities to realize qubit interactions. We analyze the gate error rate to demonstrate that our scheme is realistic even for Josephson devices with limited decoherence times. A conceptually innovative solution based on existing technologies, our scheme provides an integrated and scalable approach to the next key milestone for photonic qubit quantum computing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Development of ion implantation techniques for microelectronics

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    Ion implantation forming of conducting layers and p-n junctions in gallium arsenide and silicon carbid

    Theory and fabrication of integrated optics directional couplers in GaAs

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    Channel optical waveguide couplers will be discussed, citing the fabrication of closely-spaced waveguides by proton implantation. Coupling was observed at 1.15Ī¼ and 1.06Ī¼
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