2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session H46: Focus Session: Wide Band Gap Semiconductors IV
11:15 AM–2:45 PM,
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 349
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Michael Stavola, Lehigh University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.H46.1
Abstract: H46.00001 : Gallium Nitride-Based Nanowire Radial Heterostructures for Nanophotonics
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Fang Qian
(Harvard University)
Semiconductor nanowires are attractive building blocks for the
assembly of
active photonics devices, providing a unique and flexible pathway
for
creating multicolor integrated nanophotonic systems beyond the
limit of
conventional planar structures. Realizing this potential will
require novel
electrically driven and interconnected nanowire building blocks with
emission wavelengths that can be rationally tuned. To achieve
this goal, we
have exploited the controlled growth of well-defined GaN-based
nanowire
radial heterostructures, and their application as efficient and
synthetically tunable multicolor light sources. Prepared by
metal-organic
chemical vapor deposition, these nanowire heterostructures
consist of an
n-GaN core and diverse multishells, including n-GaN/InGaN/p-GaN
double
heterostructures, n-GaN/InGaN/GaN/p-AlGaN/p-GaN single quantum
well, and
n-GaN/(InGaN/GaN)m/p-AlGaN/p-GaN multi-quantum well structures,
where
variation of indium mole fraction is used to tune emission
wavelength.
Transmission electron microscopy analysis shows that these
nanowires are
dislocation-free single crystals with triangular cross-sections and
chemically distinct shells, while composition and thickness of
individual
shells are well controlled during synthesis. Under optical
excitation, they
exhibit strong photoluminescence consistent with bandgap emission
of InGaN
inner shell, and behave as freestanding Febry-P\'{e}rot optical
cavities.
Moreover, by contacting simultaneously n-GaN core and p-GaN shell,
electroluminescence results demonstrate that in forward bias they
function
as high-brightness light-emitting diodes with tunable emission
from 365 to
600 nm and high quantum efficiencies. The ability to synthesize
rationally
GaN-based nanowire radial heterostructures as
electrically-driven, efficient
and color-tunable light sources should open up significant
potential for
integrated photonics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.H46.1