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Strain and Band-Gap Engineering in Ge-Sn Alloys via P Doping

Authors :
Prucnal, S.
Berencén, Y.
Wang, M.
Grenzer, J.
Voelskow, M.
Hübner, R.
Yamamoto, Y.
Scheit, A.
Bärwolf, F.
Zviagin, V.
Schmidt-Grund, R.
Grundmann, M.
Żuk, J.
Turek, M.
Droździel, A.
Pyszniak, K.
Kudrawiec, R.
Polak, M. P.
Rebohle, L.
Skorupa, W.
Helm, M.
Zhou, S.
Source :
Physical Review Applied 10(2018), 064055
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Ge with a quasi-direct band gap can be realized by strain engineering, alloying with Sn, or ultrahigh n-type doping. In this work, we use all three approaches together to fabricate direct-band-gap Ge-Sn alloys. The heavily doped n-type Ge-Sn is realized with CMOS-compatible nonequilibrium material processing. P is used to form highly doped n-type Ge-Sn layers and to modify the lattice parameter of P-doped Ge-Sn alloys. The strain engineering in heavily-P-doped Ge-Sn films is confirmed by x-ray diffraction and micro Raman spectroscopy. The change of the band gap in P-doped Ge-Sn alloy as a function of P concentration is theoretically predicted by density functional theory and experimentally verified by near-infrared spectroscopic ellipsometry. According to the shift of the absorption edge, it is shown that for an electron concentration greater than 1x10^20 cm-3 the band-gap renormalization is partially compensated by the Burstein-Moss effect. These results indicate that Ge-based materials have high potential for use in near-infrared optoelectronic devices, fully compatible with CMOS technology.<br />20 pages, 6 figures

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review Applied 10(2018), 064055
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b4092d7e7cd772abc129e6cf03ec8c6