InP Nanowires grown by Selective-Area Metalorganic Vapour Phase Epitaxy
Date
2016
Authors
Gao, Qian
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Abstract
Semiconductor nanowires have attracted significant attention over
the past decade. InP nanowires, with a direct bandgap and high
electron mobility, are suitable materials for many electronic and
optoelectronic devices. Several techniques have been used to grow
InP nanowires, and among them, selective-area metalorganic vapour
phase epitaxy (SA-MOVPE) is a versatile and powerful method owing
to its advantages of being catalyst free, and its ability to
produce position controlled nanowire arrays with high uniformity
and excellent reproducibility, which are highly desirable for
nano-scale device applications.
This dissertation presents the growth of stacking fault-free and
taper-free wurtzite (WZ) InP nanowires with a wide range of
diameters using SA-MOVPE. This involves a systematic
investigation of the growth conditions such as growth temperature
and precursor flow rates. Furthermore, a detailed study revealing
the fundamental growth mechanisms is presented, which reveals
that selective area growth of nanowires does not necessarily lead
to the pure selective-area-epitaxy (SAE) regime. There is a
competing process between a pure SAE and a self-seeded
vapour-liquid-solid mechanism, depending on the growth conditions
and the mask opening. A comprehensive model is developed to
combine the major features of these two mechanisms to understand
the complex growth process.
The optical properties of InP nanowires are studied by
micro-photoluminescence (µ-PL) and time-resolved PL
measurements. The internal quantum efficiency (IQE) of stacking
fault-free WZ InP nanowires is quantified, with results
equivalent to the best quality 2D layers. As a result of the
excellent structural and optical quality of the nanowires, low
threshold room temperature lasing is achieved from conventional
guided modes. These nanowires can be transferred to different
targeted substrates with high spatial accuracy using a nanoscale
transfer printing technique. Lasing emission from the nanowires
is maintained after the transfer, which highlights the robustness
of our InP nanowires and the gentle nature of the transfer
process.
Doping in semiconductors is important for device applications and
is thus investigated in this thesis. Using our newly developed
optical method, doping concentration and IQE of the doped InP
nanowires are quantified. This contact-free method can spatially
resolve the doping profile along the length of the nanowire. The
effect of doping on the morphology and crystal structure of
Si-doped and Zn-doped InP nanowires are studied. It is found that
doping favours radial growth and the nanowires remain pure WZ
crystal phase after doping.
Finally, this dissertation presents the design, fabrication and
characterisation of axial p-i-n InP nanowire array solar cells.
Optical modelling is performed to optimise the nanowire array
geometry to achieve good light absorption. Electron beam induced
current measurement is used to visualize and quantify the width
and position of the p-n junction for device optimisation. It is
shown that by varying the doping profile of the solar cell
structures, the junction position and width can be adjusted and
placed towards the top of the nanowires, where light absorption
is most favourable. Solar cell devices with good efficiency (up
to 6%) are demonstrated with future improvement achievable after
further optimisation in nanowire structure design and fabrication
procedures.
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III-V semiconductors, nanowires, selective-area metalorganic vapour phase epitaxy, quantum efficiency, photoluminescence, nanowire laser, doping, nanowire array solar cells
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