Optical Properties of Narrow-Gap Low-Dimensional Structures

Optical Properties of Narrow-Gap Low-Dimensional Structures
Author: Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 357
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1461318793

This volume contains the Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on "Optical Properties of Narrow-Gap Low-Dimensional Structures", held from July 29th to August 1st, 1986, in St. Andrews, Scotland, under the auspices of the NATO International Scientific Exchange Program. The workshop was not limited to optical properties of narrow-gap semiconductor structures (Part III). Sessions on, for example, the growth methods and characterization of III-V, II-VI, and IV-VI materials, discussed in Part II, were an integral part of the workshop. Considering the small masses of the carriers in narrow-gap low dimensional structures (LOS), in Part I the enhanced band mixing and magnetic field effects are explored in the context of the envelope function approximation. Optical nonlinearities and energy relaxation phenomena applied to the well-known systems of HgCdTe and GaAs/GaAIAs, respectively, are reviewed with comments on their extension to narrow gap LOS. The relevance of optical observations in quantum transport studies is illustrated in Part IV. A review of devices based on epitaxial narrow-gap materials defines a frame of reference for future ones based on two-dimensional narrow-gap semiconductors; in addition, an analysis of the physics of quantum well lasers provides a guide to relevant parameters for narrow-gap laser devices for the infrared (Part V). The roles and potentials of special techniques are explored in Part VI, with emphasis on hydrostatic pressure techniques, since this has a pronounced effect in small-mass, narrow-gap, non-parabolic structures.

Physics and Properties of Narrow Gap Semiconductors

Physics and Properties of Narrow Gap Semiconductors
Author: Junhao Chu
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 613
Release: 2007-11-21
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0387748016

Narrow gap semiconductors are the most important materials for the preparation of advanced modern infrared systems. They often operate at the extremes of the rules of semiconductor science. This book offers clear descriptions of crystal growth and the fundamental structure and properties of these unique materials. Topics covered include band structure, optical and transport properties, and lattice vibrations and spectra. A thorough treatment of the properties of low-dimensional systems and their relation to infrared applications is provided.

Narrow-gap II-VI Compounds for Optoelectronic and Electromagnetic Applications

Narrow-gap II-VI Compounds for Optoelectronic and Electromagnetic Applications
Author: Peter Capper
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 632
Release: 1997-10-31
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780412715600

The field of narrow-gap II-VI materials is dominated by lhe compound mercury cadmium telluride, MCT or Hg1_ .. Cd .. Te. By varying the x value, material can be made to cover all the important infrared (lR) ranges of interest. It is probably true to say that MCT is the third most studied semiconductor after silicon and gallium arsenide. As current epitaxial layers of MCT are mainly grown on bulk CdTe family substrates these materials are included in this book, although strictly, of course, they are not 'narrow-gap'. This book is intended for readers who are either new to the field or are experienced workers in the field who need a comprehensive and up to date view of this rapidly expanding area. To satisfy the needs of the frrst group each chapter discusses the principles underlying each topic and some of the historical background before bringing the reader the most recent information available. For those currently in the field the book can be used as a collection of useful data, as a guide to the literature and as an overview of topics covering the wide range of work areas.

Narrow Gap Semiconductors - Proceedings Of The Eighth International Conference

Narrow Gap Semiconductors - Proceedings Of The Eighth International Conference
Author: Sue-chu Shen
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 494
Release: 1998-04-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9814545325

Contents:Materials and Related Physics: Magnetic Field and Dimensionality Induced Population Effects in HgSe and HgSe:Fe (O Portugall et al)Growth and in Situ Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Studies of IV–VI Semiconductors (Abstract) (G Springholz)Detectors and Arrays: China's Satellite Project for Earth Observation and Infrared Detection (D-B Kuang)Recent Progress in Quantum Well Infrared Photodetectors and Focal Plane Arrays for LWIR Imaging Applications (S S Li)Infrared Lasers: Mid-Infrared Resonant-Cavity-Based Devices: Of Detectors and Emitters (J Bleuse et al)W Lasers for the Mid-IR (J R Meyer et al)Devices and Related Physics: Optoelectronic Devices from Indium Aluminium Antimonide and Mercury Cadmium Telluride (T Ashley)Three-Terminal Superconductor–Semiconductor Devices (H Takayanagi & T Akazaki)Physics: Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering in Diluted Magnetic IV–VI Epilayers and Superlattices (H Pascher et al)High Field Cyclotron Resonance in GaSb and Effective Mass at the Γ and L-Points (H Arimoto et al)Quantum Dots: Growth and Characterization of InAs Quantum Dots (N N Ledentsov)Self-Assembled InAs Quantum Boxes: Growth, Intrinsic Properties, Potential Applications (Abstract) (J M Gérard)and other papers Readership: Researchers in the field of semiconductors.

Narrow Gap Semiconductors 2007

Narrow Gap Semiconductors 2007
Author: Ben Murdin
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2008-11-30
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1402084250

Narrow gap semiconductors have provided an exciting field of research and show a number of extreme physical and material characteristics. They are the established material systems for infrared detectors and emitters, and with new developments in the technology these materials are emerging as a viable route to high speed, low power electronics. New kinds of narrow gap semiconductor, such as graphene and other composite nanocrystals, are also providing renewed interest in the underlying physics. The Thirteenth International Conference on Narrow Gap Semiconductors (NGS-13) was held at the University of Surrey, Guildford, UK in July 2007. The conference brought together experts and young scientists to discuss the latest findings and developments in the field. This book contains the invited and contributed papers which were presented at this meeting and serves to provide a broad overview of the current worldwide activities in narrow gap semiconductor research. The subjects covered are theoretical and material physics of narrow gap semiconductors and quantum heterostructures, spin related phenomenon including carrier dynamics and magnetotransport, carbon nanotubes and graphene as novel narrow gap material, as well as device physics including transistors, mid and far-infrared lasers and detectors.

Condensed Systems of Low Dimensionality

Condensed Systems of Low Dimensionality
Author: J.L. Beeby
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 811
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1468413481

The NATO Special Programme Panel on Condensed Systems of Low Dimensionality began its work in 1985 at a time of considerable activity in the field. The Panel has since funded many Advanced Research Workshops, Advanced Study Institutes, Cooperative Research Grants and Research Visits across the breadth of its remit, which stretches from self-organizing organic molecules to semiconductor structures having two, one and zero dimensions. The funded activities, especially the workshops, have allowed researchers from within NATO countries to exchange ideas and work together at a period of development of the field when such interactions are most valuable. Such timely support has undoubtedly assisted the development of national programs, particularly in the countries of the alliance wishing to strengthen their science base. A closing Workshop to mark the end of the Panel's activities was organized in Marmaris, Turkey from April 23-27, 1990, with the same title as the Panel: Condensed systems of Low Dimensionality. This volume contains papers presented at that meeting, which sought to bring together chemists, physicists and engineers from across the spectrum of the Panel's activities to discuss topics of current interest in their special fields and to exchange ideas about the effects of low dimensionality. As the following pages show, this is a topic of extraordinary interest and challenge which produces entirely new scientific phenomena, and at the same time offers the possibility of novel technological applications.

Magnetooptical properties of dilute nitride nanowires

Magnetooptical properties of dilute nitride nanowires
Author: Mattias Jansson
Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press
Total Pages: 77
Release: 2020-06-18
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN: 9179298834

Nanostructured III-V semiconductors have emerged as one of the most promising materials systems for future optoelectronic applications. While planar III-V compounds are already at the center of the ongoing lighting revolution, where older light sources are replaced by modern white light LEDs, fabricating such materials in novel architectures, such as nanowires and quantum dots, creates new possibilities for optoelectronic applications. Not only do nanoscale structures allow the optically active III-V materials to be integrated with silicon microelectronics, but they also give rise to new fascinating properties inherent to the nanoscale. One of the key parameters considered when selecting materials for applications in light-emitting and photovoltaic devices is the band gap energy. While alloying of conventional III-V materials provides a certain degree of band gap tunability, a significantly enhanced possibility of band gap engineering is offered by so-called dilute nitrides, where incorporation of a small percentage of nitrogen into III-V compounds causes a dramatic down-shift of the conduction band edge. In addition, nitrogen-induced splitting of the conduction band in dilute nitrides can be utilized in intermediate band solar cells, belonging to the next generation of photovoltaic devices. For any material to be viable for optoelectronic applications, detailed knowledge of the electronic structure of the material, as well as a good understanding of carrier recombination processes is vital. For example, alloying may not only cause changes in the electronic structure but can also induce disorder. Disorder-induced potential fluctuations may alter charge carrier and exciton dynamics, and may even induce quantum confinement. Moreover, various defects in the material may introduce detrimental non-radiative (NR) states in the band gap deteriorating radiative efficiency. It is evident that, due to their different growth mechanisms, such properties could be markedly different in nanowires as compared to their planar counterparts. In this thesis, I aim to describe the electronic structure of dilute nitride nanowires, and its effects on the optical properties. Firstly, we investigate the electronic structure, and the structural and optical properties of novel GaNAsP nanowires, with a particular focus on the dominant recombination channels in the material. Secondly, we show how short-range fluctuations in the nitrogen content lead to the formation of quantum dots in dilute nitride nanowires, and investigate their electronic structure. Finally, we investigate the combined charge carrier and exciton dynamics of the quantum dots and effects of defects in their surroundings. Before considering individual sources of NR recombination, it is instructive to investigate the overall effects of nitrogen incorporation on the structural properties of the nanowires. In Paper I, we show that nitrogen incorporation up to 0.16% in Ga(N)AsP nanowires does not affect the overall structural quality of the material, nor does nitrogen degrade the good compositional uniformity of the nanowires. It is evident from our studies, however, that nitrogen incorporation has a strong and complex effect on recombination processes. We first show that nitrogen incorporation in GaNAsP nanowires reduces the NR recombination at room temperature as compared to the nitrogen-free nanowires (Paper I). This is in stark contrast to dilute nitride epilayers, where nitrogen incorporation enhances NR recombination. The reason for this difference is that in nanowires the surface recombination, rather than recombination via point defects, is the dominant NR recombination mechanism. We suggest that the nitrogen-induced suppression of the NR surface recombination in the nanowires is due to nitridation of the nanowire surface. Another NR recombination channel common in III-V nanowires is caused by the presence of structural defects, such as rotational twin planes and stacking faults. Interestingly, while nitrogen incorporation does not appear to affect the density of such structural defects, increasing nitrogen incorporation reduces the NR recombination via the structural defects (Paper II). This is explained by competing trapping of excited carriers/excitons to the localized states characteristic to dilute nitrides, and at nitrogen-induced NR defects. This effect is, however, only present at cryogenic temperatures, while at room temperature the NR recombination via the structural defects is not the dominant recombination channel. Importance of point defects in carrier recombination is highlighted in Paper III. Using the optically detected magnetic resonance technique, we show that gallium vacancies (VGa) that are formed within the nanowire volume act as efficient NR recombination centers, degrading optical efficiency of the Ga(N)AsP-based nanowires. Interestingly, while the defect formation is promoted by nitrogen incorporation, it is also readily present in ternary GaAsP nanowires. This contrasts with previous studies on planar structures, where VGa was not formed in the absence of nitrogen, unless subjected to irradiation by high-energy particles or heavy n-type doping. This, again, highlights how the defect formation is strikingly different in nanowires as compared to planar structures, likely due to the different growth processes. Potential fluctuations in the conduction band, caused by non-uniformity of the nitrogen incorporation, is characteristic to dilute nitrides and is known to cause exciton/carrier localization. We find that in dilute nitride nanowires, such fluctuations at the short range cause three-dimensional quantum confinement of excitons, resulting in optically active quantum dots with spectrally ultranarrow and highly polarized emission lines (Paper IV). A careful investigation of such quantum dots reveals that their properties are strongly dependent on the host material (Papers V, VI). While the principal quantization axis of the quantum dots formed in the ternary GaNAs nanowires is preferably oriented along the nanowire axis (Paper V), it switches to the direction perpendicular to the nanowire axis in the quaternary GaNAsP nanowires (Paper VI). Another aspect illustrating the influence of the host material on the quantum-dot properties is the electronic character of the captured hole. In both alloys, we show coexistence of quantum dots where the captured holes are of either a pure heavy-hole character or a mixed light-hole and heavy-hole character. In the GaNAs quantum dots, the main cause of the light- and heavy-hole splitting is uniaxial tensile strain induced by a combination of lattice mismatch with the nanowire core and local alloy fluctuations (Paper V). In the GaNAsP quantum dots, however, we suggest that the main mechanism for the light- and heavy-hole splitting is local fluctuations in the P/As ratio (Paper VI). Using time correlation single-photon counting, we show that the quantum dots in these dilute nitride nanowires behave as single photon emitters (Paper VI), confirming the three-dimensional quantum confinement of the emitters. Finally, since the quantum dots are formed by fluctuations mainly in the conduction band, only electrons are preferentially captured in the 0D confinement potential, whereas holes are expected to be mainly localized through the Coulomb interaction once an electron is captured by the quantum dot. In Paper VII, we investigate this rather peculiar capture mechanism, which we show to lead to unipolar, negative charging of the quantum dot. Moreover, we demonstrate that carrier capture by some quantum dots is strongly affected by the presence of defects in their local surroundings, which further alters the charge state of the quantum dot, where formation of the negatively charged exciton is promoted at the expense of its neutral counterpart. This underlines that the local surroundings of the quantum dots may greatly affect their properties and illustrates a possible way to exploit the defects for charge engineering of the quantum dots. In summary, in this thesis work, we identify several important non-radiative recombination processes in dilute nitride nanowires that can undermine the potential of these novel nanostructures for future optoelectronic applications. The gained knowledge could be found useful for designing strategies to mitigate these harmful processes, thereby improving the efficiency of future light-emitting and photovoltaic devices based on these nanowires. Furthermore, we uncover a set of optically bright quantum dot single-photon emitters embedded in the dilute nitride nanowires, and reveal their unusual electronic structure with strikingly different confinement potentials between electrons and holes. Our findings open a new pathway for charge engineering of the quantum dots in nanowires, attractive for applications in e.g. quantum computation and optical switching.