
Claes Thelander
Associate Professor

Electron transport in InAs nanowires and heterostructure nanowire devices
Author
Summary, in English
Nanowires in the InAs/InP material system are grown with catalyst-assisted chemical beam epitaxy. Ohmic contacts are then fabricated to selected wires, allowing electron transport measurements to be carried out at room-temperature as well as at low T. InAs nanowires show strong quantum confinement effects, where thin wires (<30nm) are depleted from carriers. Measurements on InAs wires with a quantum point contact configuration indicate a scattering length in the order of 100 nm. Heterostructure barriers of InP are also incorporated into InAs wires to produce resonant tunneling diodes and single-electron transistors (SETs) with different dot lengths. Wires containing dots with a length of 100 nm function as ideal SETs, whereas the transport in wires with 15 nm long dots is strongly governed by quantum confinement and resonant tunneling. For the smaller dots it is possible to observe electron transport through excited states. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Department/s
- Solid State Physics
- Centre for Analysis and Synthesis
Publishing year
2004
Language
English
Pages
573-579
Publication/Series
Solid State Communications
Volume
131
Issue
9-10
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Pergamon Press Ltd.
Topic
- Chemical Sciences
- Condensed Matter Physics
Keywords
- A. Semiconductors
- A. Nanostructures
- B. Crystal growth
- D. Electronic transport
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1879-2766