Photoluminescence Evolution with Deposition Thickness of Ge Nanostructures Embedded in GaSb
Journal article, 2022

Herein, low-temperature and temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements are carried out on highly tensile-strained Ge nanostructures embedded in GaSb matrix, and the effects of Ge deposition thickness are clarified. The direct-gap transition-related PL feature is successfully identified in the tensile-strained Ge nanostructures. While typical PL thermal quenching is observed for the tensile-strained Ge- and GaSb-related transitions in the samples with a Ge deposition being thinner than the critical thickness, a negative thermal quenching shows up for the GaSb interband transition in the samples with Ge deposition surpassing the critical thickness at which high-density nanoparticles form to relax the strain. A phenomenological thermal-injection model is established of electrons from the tensile-strained Ge layer to the GaSb matrix, the thermal quenching is accounted for, and a ladder-like function of the strain-relaxed Ge is clarified to favor the electron activation. The understanding of the effects of deposition thickness is helpful for the high-performance Ge-based light source for optoelectronic integration.

Nanostructures

Deposition

Germanium

Photoluminescence

Antimony compounds

Gallium compounds

Quenching

Temperature

Light sources

Author

Cheng Dou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

University of Shanghai for Science and Technology

X Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Q. Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Y Song

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Nan Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Liangqing Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

East China Normal University

Chuan Seng Tan

School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Li Han

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Dengguang Yu

University of Shanghai for Science and Technology

Shu Min Wang

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Photonics

J. Shao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Physica Status Solidi (B): Basic Research

0370-1972 (ISSN) 1521-3951 (eISSN)

Vol. 259 4 2100418

Subject Categories

Other Physics Topics

Other Materials Engineering

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1002/pssb.202100418

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9