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Exploring the Electronic Landscape at Interfaces and Junctions in Semiconductor Nanowire Devices with Subsurface Local Probing of Carrier Dynamics
Exploring the Electronic Landscape at Interfaces and Junctions in Semiconductor Nanowire Devices with Subsurface Local Probing of Carrier Dynamics
Details
Title
Exploring the Electronic Landscape at Interfaces and Junctions in Semiconductor Nanowire Devices with Subsurface Local Probing of Carrier Dynamics
Author(s)
McGuckin, Terrence
Advisor(s)
Spanier, Jonathan E.
;
Schauer, Caroline L.
Keywords
Materials science
;
Electron beams
;
Heterojunctions
Date
2015-07
Publisher
Drexel University
Thesis
Ph.D., Materials Science and Engineering -- Drexel University, 2015
Abstract
The solid state devices that are pervasive in our society, are based on building blocks composed of interfaces between materials and junctions that manipulate how charge carriers behave in a device. As the dimensions of these devices are reduced to the nanoscale, surfaces and interfaces play a larger role in the behavior of carriers in devices and must be thoroughly investigated to understand not only the material properties but how these materials interact. Separating the effects of these different building blocks is a challenge, as most testing methods measure the performance of the whole device. Semiconductor nanowires represent an excellent test system to explore the limits of size and novel device structures. The behavior of charge carriers in semiconductor nanowire devices under operational conditions is investigated using local probing technique electron beam induced current (EBIC). The behavior of locally excited carriers are driven by the forces of drift, from electric fields within a device at junctions, surfaces, contacts and, applied voltage bias, and diffusion. This thesis presents the results of directly measuring these effects spatially with nanometer resolution, using EBIC in Ge, Si, and complex heterostructure GaAs/AlGaAs nanowire devices. Advancements to the EBIC technique, have pushed the resolution from tens of nanometers down to 1 to 2 nanometers. Depth profiling and tuning of the interaction volume allows for the separating the signal originating from the surface and the interior of the nanowire. Radial junctions and variations in bands can now be analyzed including core/shell hetero-structures. This local carrier probing reveals a number of surprising behaviors; Most notably, directly imaging the evolution of surface traps filling with electrons causing bandbending at the surface of Ge nanowires that leads to an enhancement in the charge separation of electrons and holes, and extracting different characteristic lengths from GaAs and AlGaAs in core/shell nanowires. For new and emerging solid state materials, understanding charge carrier dynamics is crucial to designing functional devices. Presented here are examples of the wide application of EBIC, and its variants, through imaging domains in ferroelectric materials, local electric fields and defects in 2D semiconductor material MoS2, and gradients in doping profiles of solar cells. Measuring the local behavior of carrier dynamics, EBIC has the potential to be a key metrology technique in correlative microscopy, enabling a deeper understanding of materials and how they interact within devices.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1860/idea:6661
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