Showing posts with label molecular beam epitaxy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label molecular beam epitaxy. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Abstract-Enhanced Crystal Quality of AlxIn1-xAsySb1-y for Terahertz Quantum Cascade Lasers




1 TU Wien, Institude of Solid State Electronics, Floragasse 7, 1040 Wien, Austria2 Austrian Academy of Sciences, Dr. Ignaz Seipel-Platz 2, 1010 Wien, Austria3 TU Wien, Center for Micro and Nano Structures, Floragasse 7, 1040 Wien, Austria
* Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Received: 31 March 2016 / Revised: 14 April 2016 / Accepted: 15 April 2016 / Published: 20 April 2016
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quantum Cascade Lasers - Advances and New Applications)
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This work provides a detailed study on the growth of AlxIn1-xAsySb1-y lattice-matched to InAs by Molecular Beam Epitaxy. In order to find the conditions which lead to high crystal quality deep within the miscibility gap, AlxIn1-xAsySb1-y with x = 0.462 was grown at different growth temperatures as well as As2 and Sb2 beam equivalent pressures. The crystal quality of the grown layers was examined by high-resolution X-ray diffraction and atomic force microscopy. It was found that the incorporation of Sb into Al0.462In0.538AsySb1-y is strongly temperature-dependent and reduced growth temperatures are necessary in order to achieve significant Sb mole fractions in the grown layers. At 480  lattice matching to InAs could not be achieved. At 410  lattice matching was possible and high quality films of Al0.462In0.538AsySb1-y were obtained.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Novel quantum dot laser paves the way for lower-cost photonics


http://phys.org/news/2014-03-quantum-dot-laser-paves-lower-cost.html

With the explosive growth of bandwidth demand in telecommunications networks, experts are continually seeking new ways to transmit increasingly large amounts of data in the quickest and cheapest ways possible. Photonic devices—which convert light to electricity and vice versa—offer an energy-efficient alternative to traditional copper network links for information transmission. Unfortunately, these devices are also almost always prohibitively pricey.

One way to bring those costs down is to make photonics compatible with the existing silicon microelectronics industry. A promising way to do that is by growing "quantum dot" lasers directly on silicon substrates, according to graduate student Alan Y. Liu of the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB) and his colleagues, who include UCSB professors John E. Bowers and Arthur C. Gossard. Although such quantum dot lasers have been grown on silicon before, their performance has not equaled that of quantum dot lasers grown on their native substrates, which are platforms made of similar materials as the quantum dot lasers themselves.
Now Liu and his collaborators in Bowers and Gossard's groups have demonstrated a novel quantum dot laser that not only is grown on silicon but that performs as well as similar lasers grown on their native substrates. The team will discuss its record-breaking results achieved using such lasers at this year's OFC Conference and Exposition, being held March 9-13 in San Francisco, Calif., USA.
The researchers believe the work is an important step towards large-scale photonic integration in an ultra low-cost platform.
Currently, so-called "quantum well" lasers are used for data transmission. They consist of nanometers-thick layers of light-emitting material, representing the quantum well, sandwiched between other materials that serve to guide both the injected electrical current as well as the output light. A quantum dot laser is similar in design, but the sheets of quantum well materials are replaced with a high density of smaller dots, each a few nanometers high and tens of nanometers across. To put it in perspective, 50 billion of them would fit onto one side of a penny.
"Quantum wells are continuous in two dimensions, so imperfections in one part of the well can affect the entire layer. Quantum dots, however, are independent of each other, and as such they are less sensitive to the crystal imperfections resulting from the growth of laser material on silicon," Liu said.
"Because of this, we can grow these lasers on larger and cheaper silicon substrates. And because of their small size," Liu added, "they require less power to operate than quantum well lasers while outputting more light, so they would enable low-cost silicon photonics."
In their new work, the team grew quantum dots directly on silicon substrates using a technique known as molecular beam epitaxy, or MBE ("epitaxy" refers to the process of growing one crystal on top of another, with the orientation of the top layer determined by that of the bottom).
"The major advantage of epitaxial growth is that it enables us to exploit the existing economies of scale for silicon, which would drive down cost," Liu said. He added that "MBE is the best method for creating high-quality quantum dots that are suitable for use in lasers" and that "the entire laser can be grown continuously in a single run, which minimizes potential contamination."
More information: Presentation W4C.5. titled "High Performance 1.3μm InAs Quantum Dot Lasers Epitaxially Grown on Silicon" will take place Wednesday, March 12 at 5:00 p.m. in room 121 of the Moscone Center. (www.ofcconference.org/)
This work was recently published in Applied Physics Letters: Liu, A. Y., et al. "High performance continuous wave 1.3 μm quantum dot lasers on silicon." Applied Physics Letters, 104, 041104 (2014)
Journal reference: Applied Physics Letters search and more info website



Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Narrow gap MCT materials: towards terahertz detection



Can MCT based photoconductors be applicable for radiation wavelengths of more than 20 microns?
http://iopscience.iop.org/0268-1242/labtalk-article/55395
It is known that effective THz sources and detectors would be of great use for a number of applications, such as security, medicine, spectroscopy, wireless communication, etc. One of the candidates for radiation detection in the FIR/THz range is a Hg1-xCdxTe solid solution which has been the number one material in the fabrication of photoelectric IR detectors for the spectral range of 8-18 μm (x ≥ 0.2) over the last two decades. Until now, extending the operating spectral range to longer wavelengths has been complicated by strong composition fluctuations that lead to the high dark concentration of carriers, which degrades the detector sensitivity. Recent progress in molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE) has made it possible to produce high quality Hg1-xCdxTe films with a molar fraction of Cd below 0.2, which corresponds to photosensitivity at wavelengths longer than 18 μm. Such structures have not been sufficiently studied before, yet they show promise as a material for photodetectors in the FIR/THz range. One of the most important parameters for the development of a photoelectric detector besides the spectral range of the photoresponse is the nonequilibrium carriers lifetime that determines the detector’s speed and responsivity.
In our paper we investigated the spectra and relaxation kinetics of far-infrared photoconductors in MBE-grown Hg1-xCdxTe epitaxial films with x from 0.192 to 0.152 (the latter corresponds to a gapless material) and compared them with structures produced by chemical vapor deposition. Spectral studies demonstrate a complex pattern of photoresponse including optical phonon absorption and transitions into resonant impurity/defect states, resulting in sharp peaks in the photoconductivity spectra. Investigation into the kinetics of photoconductivity were performed with 1 ns time resolution and revealed that minority carrier lifetime increases with the bandgap. Lifetime values allow estimation of responsivity and NEP that reach 5 A/W and 6 × 10 −12 W/Hz1/2, respectively, at 19 μm and T = 77 K.

About the author

Vladimir Rumyantsev is a junior research associate at the Institute for Physics of Microstructures of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Nizhny Novgorod. This work was conducted under the guidance of Professor Vladimir Gavrilenko at the laboratory of physics of semiconductor heterostructures and superlattices. His group currently focuses on terahertz spectroscopy of narrow gap MCT related structures by means of magneto-optical, photoconductivity and photoluminescence studies. Structures under study are grown at the A.V. Rzhanov Institute of Semiconductor Physics, Siberian Branch of Russian academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk.