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Strong suppression of surface recombination in InGaAs nanopillars

Authors :
E. Smalbrugge
S. Birindelli
P.J. van Veldhoven
Bruno Romeira
Andrea Fiore
A. Higuera-Rodriguez
Wilhelmus M. M. Kessels
MK Meint Smit
Lachlan E. Black
Photonics and Semiconductor Nanophysics
Photonic Integration
Plasma & Materials Processing
NanoLab@TU/e
Semiconductor Nanophotonics
Atomic scale processing
Processing of low-dimensional nanomaterials
Source :
2017 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe & European Quantum Electronics Conference (CLEO/Europe-EQEC), 25-29 June 2017, Munich, Germany, Scopus-Elsevier, CIÊNCIAVITAE
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical Engineers, 2017.

Abstract

Summary form only given. In this work, we report a remarkable suppression of the surface recombination rates in passivated III-V undoped InGaAs nanopillars on InP (inset of Fig. 1a). The surface passivation comprises ammonium sulfide, (NH4)2S, chemical treatment followed by encapsulation with a 50 nm layer of SiOx by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition performed at 300°C. Before passivation, fabricated nanopillars with -300 nm lateral width, d, show a very poor photoluminescence (PL) emission (blue curve in Fig. 1a). The corresponding carrier dynamics, measured by time-correlated single-photon counting, Fig 1b, reveal an extremely short lifetime of ~130 ps, related to the well-known strong surface recombination velocity at InGaAs surfaces [3]. After the sulfur treatment followed by SiOx, we observe a substantial increase by almost two orders of magnitude of the PL intensity (red curve in Fig. 1a), while the carrier lifetime increases by more than two orders of magnitude to a value ~23 ns, red curve in Fig 1b. The estimated surface recombination velocity, S, decreases from about 2×104 cm/s in the untreated nanopillars down to around 260 cm/s (inset of Fig. 1b). To our knowledge, this is a record low value in undoped InGaAs semiconductors. Most importantly, our passivation studies reveal that the SiOx capping layer not only protects the pillars' sidewalls against oxidation, as reported in [5], but actively takes part in the passivation process, a result never previously reported.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2017 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe & European Quantum Electronics Conference (CLEO/Europe-EQEC), 25-29 June 2017, Munich, Germany, Scopus-Elsevier, CIÊNCIAVITAE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ced2ea216d901abdfc2a94ef19933de4