Abstract
In-plane selective area growth (SAG) of III-V nanowires (NWs) has emerged as a scalable materials platform for quantum electronics and photonics applications. Most applications impose strict requirements on the material characteristics which makes optimization of the crystal quality vital. Alignment of in-plane SAG NWs with respect to the substrate symmetry is of importance due to the large substrate-NW interface as well as to obtain nanostructures with well-defined facets. Understanding the role of mis-orientation is thus important for designing devices and interpretation of electrical performance of devices. Here we study the effect of mis-orientation on morphology of selectively grown NWs oriented along the [1 (1) over bar (1) over bar] direction on GaAs(2 1 1) B. Atomic force microscopy is performed to extract facet roughness as a measure of structural quality. Further, we evaluate the dependence of material incorporation in NWs on the orientation and present the facet evolution in between two high symmetry in-plane orientations. By investigating the length dependence of NW morphology, we find that the morphology of approximate to 1 mu m long nominally aligned NWs remains unaffected by the unintentional misalignment associated with the processing and alignment of the sample under study. Finally, we show that using Sb as a surfactant during growth improves root-mean-square facet roughness for large misalignment but does not lower it for nominally aligned NWs.
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
|---|---|
| Artikelnummer | 275702 |
| Tidsskrift | Nanotechnology |
| Vol/bind | 34 |
| Udgave nummer | 27 |
| Antal sider | 7 |
| ISSN | 0957-4484 |
| DOI | |
| Status | Udgivet - 2 jul. 2023 |
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