Strain-Induced Pseudoheterostructure Nanowires Confining Carriers at Room Temperature with Nanoscale-Tunable Band Profiles

Semiconductor heterostructures play a vital role in photonics and electronics. They are typically realized by growing layers of different materials, complicating fabrication and limiting the number of unique heterojunctions on a wafer. In this Letter, we present single-material nanowires which behav...

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Published inNano letters Vol. 13; no. 7; pp. 3118 - 3123
Main Authors Nam, Donguk, Sukhdeo, David S, Kang, Ju-Hyung, Petykiewicz, Jan, Lee, Jae Hyung, Jung, Woo Shik, Vučković, Jelena, Brongersma, Mark L, Saraswat, Krishna C
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC American Chemical Society 10.07.2013
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Summary:Semiconductor heterostructures play a vital role in photonics and electronics. They are typically realized by growing layers of different materials, complicating fabrication and limiting the number of unique heterojunctions on a wafer. In this Letter, we present single-material nanowires which behave exactly like traditional heterostructures. These pseudo­heterostructures have electronic band profiles that are custom-designed at the nanoscale by strain engineering. Since the band profile depends only on the nanowire geometry with this approach, arbitrary band profiles can be individually tailored at the nanoscale using existing nanolithography. We report the first experimental observations of spatially confined, greatly enhanced (>200×), and wavelength-shifted (>500 nm) emission from strain-induced potential wells that facilitate effective carrier collection at room temperature. This work represents a fundamentally new paradigm for creating nanoscale devices with full heterostructure behavior in photonics and electronics.
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ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/nl401042n