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3PNT – Photonics and Nanotechnology • Part I Quantum electronic and optical confinement (6 lectures, Prof BN Murdin) – Recap of basic semiconductor physics – Semiconductor quantum structures • Wells, wires, dots – Photonic bandgap structures – Fabrication of nanostructures • Part II Advanced Lasers and optical communications (6 lectures, Dr SJ Sweeney) – – – – Semiconductor lasers Optical amplifiers Optical fibres Telecommunications • Part III Modern Nanophotonics (8 lectures, Profs J Allam and BN Murdin) – Including: • • • • Spintronics Microcavities Polymer photonic devices Biophotonics Take a strip off the bottom of a piece of A4 paper and cut it in half, then half again….. No Cuts Length Objects on that scale 0 21.0 cm Red blood cell 2 5.25 cm Diameter of a human hair 4 1.31 cm Bacteria 6 3.28 mm 8 820 mm Toothpick 10 205 mm Cluster of atoms, a nanoparticle 12 51.2 mm Pencil 14 12.8 mm Diameter of a finger 16 3.2 mm Eight hydrogen atoms lined up 18 801 nm Kernel of corn 20 200 nm Silt 22 50.0 nm Gnat 24 12.5 nm Resolution of optical microscope 26 3.13 nm Virus, Intel’s smallest transistor 28 7.82 Å Thickness of a cell wall Tip of a needle, bee sting Take a strip off the bottom of a piece of A4 paper and cut it in half, then half again….. No Cuts Length 0 21.0 cm 2 5.25 cm 4 1.31 cm 6 3.28 mm 8 820 mm 10 205 mm 12 51.2 mm 14 12.8 mm 16 3.2 mm 18 801 nm 20 200 nm 22 50.0 nm 24 12.5 nm 26 3.13 nm 28 7.82 Å Objects on that scale Objects on that scale Pencil Toothpick Diameter of a finger Kernel of corn Gnat Tip of a needle , bee sting Diameter of a human hair Silt Red blood cell Bacteria Resolution of optical microscope Virus, Intel’s smallest transistor Thickness of a cell wall Cluster of atoms, a nanoparticle Eight hydrogen atoms lined up Nanophotonics: Nobel Prizes in Physics 1991 & 2000 • 2000 • ZI Alferov Russia, H Kroemer, Germany, JS Kilby USA • for the invention of integrated circuit, and for developing semiconductor heterostructures, including: – The heterojunction laser • 1991 • PG de Gennes, France • for generalizing the theory of order/disorder in simple systems (e.g. magnets) to complex forms of matter, in particular: – Liquid crystals Other nanotechnology Nobel prizes • 1973 tunnelling phenomena – L Esaki Japan, I Giaever USA (b. Norway) BD Josephson United Kingdom • 1985 quantum Hall effect – K von Klitzing Germany • 1986 electron microscope – E Ruska, G Binnig, Germany and H Rohrer, Switzerland Other photonics Nobel prizes • 1964 the maser/laser – CH Townes USA, NG Basov USSR, AM Prokhorov USSR • 1971 holography – D Gabor, United Kingdom (b. Hungary) • 1981 laser and electron spectroscopy – N Bloembergen USA (b Netherlands), AL Schawlow USA, KM Siegbahn Sweden • 2005 quantum theory of optical coherence and laser-based precision spectroscopy – RJ Glauber USA, JL Hall USA, TW Hänsch Germany Challenges for Nanotechnology • Nanomanufacturing – Incorporating nanoscale materials into larger scale devices (e.g. heterostructure lasers) – Designing materials with nanoscale structure (e.g. synthetic opals) – Nanomachines (microcraft and robotics) • Nanophysics – Investigation of Nano-Electronics, -Photonics, and -Magnetics • Nanotechnology applications – – – – Detection of chemical-biological-radiological-medical compounds Therapeutics (e.g. drug delivery) Instrumentation, and Metrology (e.g. gyros) Energy Conversion (e.g. solar cells, suncream) and storage (e.g. zeolytes) – Processes for environmental improvement Current photonics industries • Products in the Growing Period: commercially available technology and expanding market scale – TFT-LCD (TV, Monitor), PDP – DVD Player (Audio, Video),CD/DVD Recorder (Burner), Discs – Imaging devices (DSC, image sensor) • Products in the Emerging Period: technology under development with high market potential – Organic-EL, high brightness LED, LD – High-Density Optical Discs (bluray), LCD (LTP-Si, reflective, low power consumption), Projectors (DLP, LCoS, LCD , VR) – Advanced networking systems (Local LAN, all-optical networks) Overview of global photonics market What is Nano-Photonics? • Information technology: storage and processing (Moore’s Law), transmission and reception, displays • Sensors: identification of compounds (bio/chem/medical), nondestructive testing and evaluation • Nanomedicine: microscopy, disease detection and treatments • Power generation and efficient utilization: solar cells, Thermo-photovoltaics (TPVs), lasers, LED lighting What’s So Great About Semiconductors? • The resistance of a semiconductor structure may be fixed within a range of many orders of magnitude by various means: – Impurities (doping), homostructure design, heterostructure design etc…. • Once produced, the resistance of the structure my then also be varied over a range of many orders of magnitude by various means: – Light, electric field, current, temperature, magnetic fields, etc… Photo-Diodes Resistance = f(incident light) Transistors Resistance = f(V) or f(I) Thermo-resistors Resistance = f(Temperatur) • Finally, semiconductors can actively produce, modulate, switch and recolour light beams, and are the basis of a huge variety of useful “photonic” devices. Things that can’t be made from Si • Light emitters and optical modulators (it’s “indirect”) – Light emitting diodes, Laser diodes (any wavelength) – Amplitude modulation of light for fibre telecoms • Mid-IR, far-IR, UV detectors (interband absorption is 0.5 to1.1 μm) – – – – – Fibre communication receivers (l = 1.3 and 1.55 μm) Atmospheric “windows” (l = 3 to 5 μm and 8 to 12 μm) Infrared imaging arrays (responding to 500 K black bodies) Solar blind detectors (l ≤ 0.5 μm) Efficient solar cells • Very-high speed electronics (its “effective mass” is high) – Operating at 40 GHz and above for mobile phones and fibre telecoms • High temperature electronics (bandgap and melting point too low) – Operable at temperatures above 200˚C for process monitoring What is a heterostructure ? • A device built from different semiconductor materials, thus exploiting the differences in electronic level structure. Ohm’s Law for grown-ups 1 I V R j sF s enm • The response (j) to the drive (F) is a material property (s), which is independent of size and determined by the number of mobile charges, and the charge and the “mobility” of each. Metal semicond Insulator s (W-1m-1) >106 105-10-7 <10-8 n (m-3) 1028 1027-1016 <1015 m (mV-1s-1) 10-3 10-3-102 Why such big variation in s? • Metal s enm • Semiconductor – Continuous DoS – DoS has gap • n ≠ n(T) • n = n(EF,T) depends very sensitively on both on doping and temperature E – Drude mobility: • m = et(T)/m – Temp. dep. of s comes from t the electron scattering time EF r f r Fermi occupation function In the metal the charges that can take part in the transport are all those near EF. This number is not very sensitive to T. In the semiconductor most states near EF are missing, and the occupation of the remainder is very sensitive to T. How do we control n? • The Fermi level (or chemical potential) of the electrons falls in a gap of the band structure. • Doping allows us to control the position of EF in the gap. – Either electrons (n-type) or holes (p-type) act as carriers of charge. • We can also optically excite electron-hole pairs. • How do we calculate n? This requires knowing the Density of States (DoS) – see homework. Schroedinger Eqn in 1D E 2 2 V (r) (r) E(r) 2m n=3 10 5 • … the energy of a state is related to the curvature of the wavefunction C n=2 5 0 • Tighter confinement → Higher Energy 0 z/L 1 0 •Fixed box boundary conditions give standing waves •Periodic b.c.’s allow travelling waves • Nodes in wavefunction → Higher Energy kn n 10 n=1 0 ( z ) A sin kn z Ψ2(z) Ψ(z) • Schrodinger’s Equation… L 2 k n2 En 2m 1 Energy bands for 1-D, one atom lattice • 1D, one atom basis: each s & p forms one band. – Two atom basis: each s & p forms two bands. – 3D: p-orbitals are 3-fold degenerate, px, py, pz. Crystal structure of GaAs • FCC lattice with two atom basis: • 1 Ga & 1 As atom per lattice site – Tetrahedrally coordinated – Ga: [Ar] 3d10 4s24p1 – As: [Ar] 3d10 4s24p3 – 3 valence e- per gallium atom – 5 valence e- per arsenic atom • Germanium: – Both sites still different (different coordination) but both atoms same species – Ge: [Ar] 3d10 4s24p2 • total: 8 valence e- per unit cell – 4 bands full (x2 for spin) Bandstructure of GaAs EF 4s2 Bonding Isolated atom Two Two atom lattice atoms Energy (eV) Anti-bonding Full valence bands 4p2 Empty conduction bands L-valley G-valley X-valley 000 100 111 kz G L X ky kX wavevector, k E Effective mass • For almost all properties of semiconductors the most important states are the ones near the band edges, because that’s where the electrons and holes collect. • The bottom of the conduction band is a turning point, so odd k terms are zero : E c0 c2 k 2 c4 k 4 • We (usually) neglect higher terms (small k, small E), so we write: k 2k 2 E E0 2m G • Electrons move as if in free space, but with a mass determined by curvature: the "effective mass". 1 1 E (k ) 2 2 m * k 2 Optical transitions • Interband transitions • Intraband transitions n-type h E g h E g p-type t nanoseconds in GaAs t < ps in GaAs Direct and indirect gap transitions Direct bandgap a~104 cm-1 h E k • G valley is lowest • optical transitions are direct • ~zero momentum transfer • optical absorption length ~ 1mm Indirect bandgap a~102 cm-1 h phonon-assisted absorption •X or L valley is lowest • optical transitions are indirect • momentum supplied by phonon • optical absorption length ~ 100mm Photons carry virtually no momentum E Conduction band 2k 2 E (k ) 2mc Eg k Valence band • Q: how much is k for absorption in GaAs 5% above gap? mc=0.07 me, mv>>me EG = 1.5eV GaAs period group 2 3 4 5 6 II III IV V VI B C N O Al Si P S Zn GaGe As Se Cd In Sn Sb Te Hg larger atoms larger atoms Bandstructure of Ge and GaAs Band edges and vacuum level • Band edge energies • – The band edge energies relative to the vacuum reference level and to each vacuum reference level other are a property of the semiconductor 0 – Energy gap, EG: Valence band edge to conduction band edge Electron eF Fermi level energy – Depends additionally on doping Ec – n-type EF n N C exp -eEC -E F / kT EC -E F (kT/e) ln ( N C /n) – p-type p NV exp -eEV -E F / kT EF -EV (kT/e) ln ( NV /p) – Work function, F: Fermi level to vacuum ref. EG EG Ev Distance, z n-type: EF is near c.b. edge Homojunctions • • i.e. joining two pieces of same material, different doping Isolated n- and p-type: vacuum reference level 0 qF Ec EF qF vacuum Ec Ev n-type • • • 0 i. Have same vacuum ref., ii. Fermi levels differ iii. Both materials neutral EF Ev p-type Homojunctions • Electrically connected: 0 qF 0 qF Ec EF Ec +++ n-type - - p-type EF Ev Ev • • • i. Charge diffuses from high concentration to low across the boundary ii. Ionised dopants left behind change potential iii. Fermi levels shift until equal Growth of Heterostructures: Molecular Beam Epitaxy of GaAs/AlGaAs Heterostructures: Bandgaps/misfits • Epitaxial films may only have small lattice mismatch – the bigger the mismatch the smaller the thickness that can be grown without dislocations 1D P.E. landscapes: step • Classically, electrons with 0 < E < DE cannot pass x = 0, while all those with E > DE can. • Quantum mechanically, electrons with 0 < E < DE penetrate the barrier with an exponential depth, and those with E > DE have a finite probability of being reflected by the step. • Such a step can be created by laying a wide gap semiconductor on top of a narrow gap semiconductor DE E Potential energy landscape model • In heterojunctions electrons and holes can be modelled by the effective mass theory, even though perfect periodicity is destroyed. • In this case, the potential energy profile, V(x), seen by electrons is Ec(x) and that seen by holes is Ev(x). Heterojunctions • i.e. joining two pieces of different materials, (maybe different doping) vacuum reference level 0 0 qFn vacuum Ec EF qFp Ec EF Ev intrinsic narrow gap Ev n-type wide gap Heterojunctions • Electrically connected: 0 qF 0 qF Ec EF Ec +++ n-type p-type EF Ev Ev Discontinuity forms potential well in narrow gap material (which band depends on doping) • Q: draw band diagram for p-type wide gap and n-type narrow gap Homework • Revise Density of States for 3D system (see level 2 semiconductors 2SP, level 3 Physics of Stars 3PS etc) • Find out Density of states for 2D, 1D and 0D system. • Bring drawings and formulas to lecture