Breakthroughs extending nanostructure engineering beyond what is possible
with current fabrication techniques will be crucial for enabling
next-generation nanotechnologies. Nanoepitaxy of strain-engineered bent
nanowire heterostructures presents a promising platform for realizing bottom-up
and scalable fabrication of nanowire devices. The synthesis of these structures
requires the selective asymmetric deposition of lattice-mismatched shells-a
complex growth process which is not well understood. We present the
nanoepitaxial growth of GaAs-InP core-shell bent nanowires and connecting
nanowire pairs to form nano-arches. Compositional analysis of nanowire
cross-sections reveals the critical role of adatom diffusion in the
nanoepitaxial growth process, which leads to two distinct growth regimes:
indium-diffusion limited growth and phosphorous-limited growth. The highly
controllable phosphorous-limited growth mode is employed to synthesize
connected nanowire pairs and quantify the role of flux shadowing on the shell
growth process. These results provide important insight into three-dimensional
nanoepitaxy and enable new possibilities for nanowire device fabrication