Integrated III-V/Si Visible and IR Nanowire Photodetectors
ORAL
Abstract
Self-assembled nanowires can support optical resonant modes and act as very effective waveguides that concentrate and absorb light over only a few microns of nanowire length, enabling highly efficient photodetection. The resonant absorption shows wavelength selectivity that can be tuned continuously across the visible and IR wavelengths by adjusting the nanowire diameter during molecular beam epitaxy growth on silicon wafers1. Thus, ordered arrays of III-V semiconductor nanowires, integrated with standard Si technology, could provide low-cost, high-performance multi-spectral photodetectors.
We realized photodetectors from ordered arrays of InAs (~120 nm diameter) and GaAs (~300 nm diameter) nanowires grown on Si(111) substrates. The nanowires grow out of holes etched into a thin oxide layer down to the Si layer. These holes are lithographically patterned and allow control of the nanowire diameter, pitch and array size, the latter being adjustable down to a single nanowire. The nanowires show a wavelength-dependent response, with a peak centered at ~450 nm for InAs and ~750 nm for GaAs.
1. Rahman et. al., Nanotechnology 26(2015)295202
We realized photodetectors from ordered arrays of InAs (~120 nm diameter) and GaAs (~300 nm diameter) nanowires grown on Si(111) substrates. The nanowires grow out of holes etched into a thin oxide layer down to the Si layer. These holes are lithographically patterned and allow control of the nanowire diameter, pitch and array size, the latter being adjustable down to a single nanowire. The nanowires show a wavelength-dependent response, with a peak centered at ~450 nm for InAs and ~750 nm for GaAs.
1. Rahman et. al., Nanotechnology 26(2015)295202
*We thank NSERC, the Canada First Research Excellence Fund, the Quantum NanoFab facility, and the Centre for Emerging Device Technologies at McMaster.
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Presenters
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Arjun Shetty
- Institute for Quantum Computing, University of Waterloo
- Institute for Quantum Computing, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada