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Understanding channel and contact effects on transport in 1-dimensional nanotransistors

Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Delker, Collin J.; Yoo, Jinkyoung; Janes, David B.

Nanowire transistors are generally formed by metal contacts to a uniformly doped nanowire. The transistor can be modeled as a series combination of resistances from both the channel and the contacts. In this study, a simple model is proposed consisting of a resistive channel in series with two Schottky metal-semiconductor contacts modeled using the WKB approximation. This model captures several phenomena commonly observed in nanowire transistor measurements, including the mobility as a function of gate potential, mobility reduction with respect to bulk mobility, and non-linearities in output characteristics. For example, the maximum measured mobility as a function of gate voltage in a nanowire transistor can be predicted based on the semiconductor bulk mobility in addition to barrier height and other properties of the contact. The model is then extended to nanowires with axial p-n junctions having an inde- pendent gate over each wire segment by splitting the channel resistance into a series component for each doping segment. Finally, the contact-channel model is applied to low-frequency noise analysis in nanowire devices, where the noise can be generated in both the channel and the contacts. Because contacts play a major, yet often neglected, role in nanowire transistor operation, they must be accounted for in order to extract meaningful parameters from I-V and noise measurements.

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Bio-hybrid integrated system for wide-spectrum solar energy harvesting

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Martin, Kathleen; Erdman, Matthew; Quintana, Hope; Shelnutt, John; Nogan, John N.; Martinez, Julio; Lavrova, Olga A.; Busani, Tito

An integrated hybrid photovoltaic-thermoelectric system has been developed using multiple layers of organic photosensitizers on inorganic semiconductors in order to efficiently convert UV-visible and IR energy into electricity. The hot anode of n-type ZnO nanowires was fabricated using a thermal process on pre-seeded layer and results to be crystalline with a transmittance up to 92 % and a bandgap of 3.32 eV. The visible-UV light-active organic layer was deposited between the anode and cathode at room temperature using a layer-by-layer deposition onto ITO and ZnO and Bi2Te3 nanowires from aqueous solution. The organic layer, a cooperative binary ionic (CBI) solid is composed of oppositely charged porphyrin metal (Zn(II) and Sn(IV)(OH–)2) derivatives that are separately water soluble, but when combined form a virtually insoluble solid. The electron donor/acceptor properties (energy levels, band gaps) of the solid can be controlled by the choice of metals and the nature of the peripheral substituent groups of the porphyrin ring. The highly thermoelectric structure, which acts as a cold cathode, is composed of p-type Bi2Te3 nanowires with a thermoelectric efficiency (ZT) between ~0.7 to 1, values that are twice that expected for bulk Bi2Te3. Lastly, efficiency of the integrated device, was found to be 35 at 0.2 suns illumination and thermoelectric properties are enhanced by the charge transfer between the CBI and the Bi2Te3 is presented in terms of photo- and thermogenerated current and advantages of the low cost fabrication process is discussed.

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Gallium nitride nanowire distributed feedback lasers

Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe - Technical Digest

Wright, Jeremy B.; Campione, Salvatore; Liu, Sheng L.; Martinez, Julio A.; Xu, Huiwen; Luk, Ting S.; Li, Qiming; Wang, George T.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Brener, Igal B.

We have demonstrated single-mode lasing in a single gallium nitride nanowire using distributed feedback by external coupling to a dielectric grating. By adjusting the nanowire grating alignment we achieved a mode suppression ratio of 17dB.

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Fabrication of a nanostructure thermal property measurement platform

Nanotechnology

Harris, C.T.; Martinez, Julio M.; Shaner, Eric A.; Huang, Jian Y.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Sullivan, J.P.; Chen, G.

Measurements of the electrical and thermal transport properties of one-dimensional nanostructures (e.g.nanotubes and nanowires) are typically obtained without detailed knowledge of the specimen's atomic-scale structure or defects. To address this deficiency, we have developed a microfabricated, chip-based characterization platform that enables both transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of the atomic structure and defects as well as measurement of the thermal transport properties of individual nanostructures. The platform features a suspended heater line that physically contacts the center of a suspended nanostructure/nanowire that was placed using insitu scanning electron microscope nanomanipulators. Suspension of the nanostructure across a through-hole enables TEM characterization of the atomic and defect structure (dislocations, stacking faults, etc) of the test sample. This paper explains, in detail, the processing steps involved in creating this thermal property measurement platform. As a model study, we report the use of this platform to measure the thermal conductivity and defect structure of a GaN nanowire. © 2011 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Space-and-time-resolved spectroscopy of single GaN nanowires

Optics InfoBase Conference Papers

Upadhya, Prashanth C.; Martinez, Julio A.; Li, Qiming; Wang, George T.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Taylor, Antoinette J.; Prasankumar, Rohit P.

Spatially-resolved ultrafast transient absorption measurements on a single GaN nanowire give insight into carrier relaxation dynamics as a function of the laser polarization and position on the nanowire on a femtosecond timescale. © 2011 Optical Society of America.

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A nanostructure thermal property measurement platform

Martinez, Julio M.; Shaner, Eric A.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Huang, Jian Y.; Sullivan, John P.

Measurements of the electrical and thermal transport properties of one-dimensional nanostructures (e.g., nanotubes and nanowires) typically are obtained without detailed knowledge of the specimen's atomic-scale structure or defects. To address this deficiency we have developed a microfabricated, chip-based characterization platform that enables both transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of atomic structure and defects as well as measurement of the thermal transport properties of individual nanostructures. The platform features a suspended heater line that contacts the center of a suspended nanostructure/nanowire that was placed using in-situ scanning electron microscope nanomanipulators. One key advantage of this platform is that it is possible to measure the thermal conductivity of both halves of the nanostructure (on each side of the central heater), and this feature permits identification of possible changes in thermal conductance along the wire and measurement of the thermal contact resistance. Suspension of the nanostructure across a through-hole enables TEM characterization of the atomic and defect structure (dislocations, stacking faults, etc.) of the test sample. As a model study, we report the use of this platform to measure the thermal conductivity and defect structure of GaN nanowires. The utilization of this platform for the measurements of other nanostructures will also be discussed.

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Thermoelectric characterization of suspended single silicon%3CU%2B2010%3Egermanium alloy nanowires

Martinez, Julio M.; Sullivan, John P.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.

The use of nanowires for thermoelectric energy generation has gained momentum in recent years as an approach to improve the figure of merit (ZT) due in part to larger phonon scattering at the boundary resulting in reduced thermal conductivity while electrical conductivity is not significantly affected. Silicon-germanium (SiGe) alloy nanowires are promising candidates to further reduce thermal conductivity by phonon scattering because bulk SiGe alloys already have thermal conductivity comparable to reported Si nanowires. In this work, we show that thermal and electrical conductivity can be measured for the same single nanowire eliminating the uncertainties in ZT estimation due to measuring the thermal conduction on one set of wires and the electrical conduction on another set. In order to do so, we use nanomanipulation to place vapor-liquid-solid boron-doped SiGe alloy nanowires on predefined surface structures. Furthermore, we developed a contact-annealing technique to achieve negligible electrical contact resistance for the placed nanowires that allows us, for the first time, to measure electrical and thermal properties on the same device. We observe that thermal conductivity for SiGe nanowires is dominated by alloy scattering for nanowires down to 100 nm in diameter between the temperature range 40-300 K. The estimated electronic contribution of the thermal conductivity as given by the Wiedemann-Franz relationship is about 1 order of magnitude smaller than the measured thermal conductivity which indicates that phonons carry a large portion of the heat even at such small dimensions.

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"Bottom-up" meets "top-down" : self-assembly to direct manipulation of nanostructures on length scales from atoms to microns

Swartzentruber, Brian S.

This document is the final SAND Report for the LDRD Project 102660 - 'Bottomup' meets 'top-down': Self-assembly to direct manipulation of nanostructures on length scales from atoms to microns - funded through the Strategic Partnerships investment area as part of the National Institute for Nano-Engineering (NINE) project.

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The effect of embedded Pb on Cu diffusion on Pb/Cu(111) surface alloys

Proposed for publication in Surface Science.

Dyck, Meredith L.; Bartelt, Norman C.; Feibelman, Peter J.; Swartzentruber, Brian S.; Kellogg, Gary L.

We have used scanning tunneling microscopy and low-energy electron microscopy to measure the thermal decay of two-dimensional Cu, Pb-overlayer, and Pb-Cu alloy islands on Pb-Cu(1 1 1) surface alloys. Decay rates covering 6-7 orders of magnitude are accessible by applying the two techniques to the same system. We find that Cu adatom diffusion across the surface alloy is rate-limiting for the decay of both Pb and Pb-Cu islands on the surface alloy and that this rate decreases monotonically with increasing Pb concentration in the alloy. The decrease is attributed to repulsive interactions between Cu adatoms and embedded Pb atoms in the surface alloy. The measured temperature dependences of island decay rates are consistent with first-principles calculations of the Cu binding and diffusion energies related to this 'site-blocking' effect.

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Results 26–50 of 63
Results 26–50 of 63