Browsing by Subject "Arsenic"
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Item Open Access Electronic structure of Te-and As-covered Si(211)(American Physical Society, 2003) Sen, P.; Batra, I. P.; Sivananthan, S.; Grein, C. H.; Dhar, N.; Çıracı, SalimElectronic and atomic structures of the clean and As- and Te-covered Si(211) surface are studied using pseudopotential density-functional method. The clean surface is found to have (2 x 1) and rebonded (1 x 1) reconstructions as stable surface structures, but no π-bonded chain reconstruction. Binding energies of As and Te adatoms at a number of symmetry sites on the ideal and (2 x 1) reconstructed surfaces have been calculated because of their importance in the epitaxial growth of CdTe and other materials on the Si(211) surface. The special symmetry sites on these surfaces having the highest binding energies for isolated As and Te adatoms are identified. But more significantly, several sites are found to be nearly degenerate in binding-energy values. This has important consequences for epitaxial growth processes. Optimal structures calculated for 0.5 monolayer of As and Te coverage reveal that the As adatoms dimerize on the surface while the Te adatoms do not. However, both As- and Te-covered surfaces are found to be metallic in nature.Item Open Access High-Speed InSb photodetectors on GaAs for mid-IR applications(IEEE, 2004) Kimukin, I.; Bıyıklı, Necmi; Kartaloǧlu, T.; Aytür, O.; Özbay, EkmelWe report p-i-n type InSb-based high-speed photodetectors grown on GaAs substrate. Electrical and optical properties of photodetectors with active areas ranging from 7.06 × 10 -6 cm 2 to 2.25 × 10 -4 cm 2 measured at 77 K and room temperature. Detectors had high zero-bias differential resistances, and the differential resistance area product was 4.5 Ω cm 2. At 77 K, spectral measurements yielded high responsivity between 3 and 5 μm with the cutoff wavelength of 5.33 μm. The maximum responsivity tor 80-μm diameter detectors was 1.00 × 10 5 V/W at 435 μm while the detectivity was 3.41×10 9 cm Hz 1/2/W. High-speed measurements were done at room temperature. An optical parametric oscillator was used to generate picosecond full-width at half-maximum pulses at 2.5 μm with the pump at 780 mm. 30-μm diameter photodetectors yielded 3-dB bandwidth of 8.5 GHz at 2.5 V bias.