CPM Seminar
Mapping Semiconductor Nanowire Junction Potentials
Karen Kavanagh
Department of Physics Simon Fraser University
Free-standing semiconductor nanowires (NWs) formed via epitaxial growth from a
substrate often have a well-controlled bottom-end connection. Electrical probing
via a top contact, perhaps a catalyst particle, can be carried out directly
using in-situ methods in electron microscopes. In this way, we have obtained
current-density-voltage (J-V) characteristics and electron-beam-induced
current (EBIC) measurements, from many different types of semiconductor
NWs. [1, 2] The presence of space-charge
regions at axial and radial, dopant-concentration gradients (p-n junctions)
can also be mapped via measurement of electron-beam phase shifts using electron
holography. [3, 4] This talk will describe
results from GaAs, InP and Si NW p-n junctions.
[1] Rectifying characteristics of Te-doped GaAs nanowires, O.
Salehzadeh, M. X. Chen, K.L. Kavanagh, S. P. Watkins, Appl. Phys. Lett.
99, 182102 (2011).
[2] Axial EBIC oscillations at core/shell GaAs/Fe nanowire
contacts, Mingze Yang, David Dvorak, Karin Leistner, Christine Damm, S P
Watkins and K L Kavanagh, Nanotechnology 30 (2019) 025701.
[3] Direct Measurement of the Electrical Abruptness of a
Nanowire p−n Junction, Ali Darbandi, James C. McNeil, Azadeh Akhtari-Zavareh,
Simon P. Watkins, and Karen L. Kavanagh, Nano Letters 16, (2016)
3982−3988.
[4] Three-dimensional imaging of beam-induced biasing of
InP/GaInP tunnel diodes, Cristina Cordoba, Xulu Zeng, Daniel Wolf, Axel Lubk,
Enrique Barrigon, Magnus T. Borgström, and Karen L. Kavanagh, Nano Letters
196 (2019) 3490.
Thursday, March 12th 2020, 10:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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