CPM Seminar
When molecular beam epitaxy meets nanowires
Songrui Zhao
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering McGill University
Since the birth of molecular beam epitaxy in late 1960s, it has evolved into
a material synthesis technique for both fundamental science and device
development for modern information and communication technologies. On the
other hand, low-dimensional materials, due to their fundamentally different
structural, electrical, and optical properties, compared to their bulk
counterparts, can provide a new avenue to solve challenges in device
development and further create device technologies that did not exist
before. In this seminar, I will discuss the molecular beam epitaxy of
group-III nitride nanowire heterostructures, and I will show that using such
low-dimensional group-III nitrides by molecular beam epitaxy, quite a few
underlying material challenges for III-nitride photonic devices can be
greatly addressed, e.g., p-type doping. This further leads to devices that
were not possible previously, such as AlN LEDs with turn-on voltages only
limited by the bandgap energy, contrary to the AlN thin film LEDs that
requires 20-30 V turn-on voltages; and electrically injected AlGaN deep UV
lasers at 239 nm, whereas such short wavelength electrically pumped lasers
were not accessible before with conventional thin film technologies.
Thursday, November 22nd 2018, 10:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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