Browsing by Subject "Semiconductor device structures"
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Item Open Access 100-GHz resonant cavity enhanced Schottky photodiodes(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, 1998) Onat, B. M.; Gökkavas, M.; Özbay, Ekmel; Ata, E. P.; Towe, E.; Ünlü, M. S.Resonant cavity enhanced (RCE) photodiodes are promising candidates for applications in optical communications and interconnects where ultrafast high-efficiency detection is desirable. We have designed and fabricated RCE Schottky photodiodes in the (Al, In) GaAs material system for 900-nm wavelength. The observed temporal response with 10-ps pulsewidth was limited by the measurement setup and a conservative estimation of the bandwidth corresponds to more than 100 GHz. A direct comparison of RCE versus conventional detector performance was performed by high speed measurements under optical excitation at resonant wavelength (895 nm) and at 840 nm where the device functions as a single-pass conventional photodiode. A more than two-fold bandwidth enhancement with the RCE detection scheme was demonstrated.Item Open Access Dynamical screening effects in hot-electron scattering from electron-hole plasma and LO-phonon modes in quantum wires(Elsevier, 1996) Bennett, C. R.; Tanatar, Bilal; Constantinou, N. C.We present a fully dynamical and finite temperature study of the hot-electron momentum relaxation rate and the power loss in a coupled system of electron-hole plasma and bulk LO-phonons in a quantum wire structure. Interactions of the scattered electron with neutral plasma components and phonons are treated on an equal footing within the random-phase approximation. Coupled mode effects substantially change the transport properties of the system at low temperatures. Particularly, the "plasmon-like" and "LO-phonon-like" excitations yield comparable rates which, as a consequence of the singular nature of the ID density of states, can be large at the threshold. This is in contrast to room temperature results where only the LO-phonon mode contributes significantly to the rate. The density and temperature dependence of the power loss reveals that dynamical screening effects are important, and energy-momentum conservation cannot be satisfied above a certain density for a given initial energy.Item Open Access Effect of cross-sectional geometry on the RPA plasmons of quantum wires(Pergamon Press, 1994) Bennett, C. R.; Tanatar, Bilal; Constantinou, N. C.; Babiker, M.The effect of cross-sectional geometry on both the intrasubband plasmon and intersubband plasmon of a quantum wire is investigated within a two-subband RPA scheme. Exact analytical electronic wavefunctions for circular, elliptical and rectangular wires are employed within the infinite barrier approximation. It is found that for fixed cross-sectional area and linear electron concentration, the intrasubband plasmon energy is only marginally dependent on the wire geometry whereas the intersubband plasmon energy may change considerably due to its dependence on the electronic subband energy difference. © 1994.Item Open Access Energy-transfer rate in a double-quantum-well system due to Coulomb coupling(Elsevier, 2002) Senger, R. T.; Tanatar, BilalWe study the energy-transfer rate for electrons in a double-quantum-well structure, where the layers are coupled through screened Coulomb interactions. The energy-transfer rate between the layers (similar to the Coulomb drag effect in which the momentum-transfer rate is considered) is calculated as functions of electron densities, interlayer spacing, the temperature difference of the 2DEGs, and the electron drift velocity in the drive layer. We employ the full wave vector and frequency-dependent random-phase approximation at finite temperature to describe the effective interlayer Coulomb interaction. We find that the collective modes (plasmons) of the system play a dominant role in the energy-transfer rates.Item Open Access High-speed widely-tunable >90% quantum-efficiency resonant cavity enhanced p-i-n photodiodes(IEEE, 1998) Bıyıklı, Necmi; Kimukin, İbrahim; Aytür, Orhan; Gökkavas, M.; Ulu, G.; Mirin, R.; Christensen, D. H.; Ünlü, M. S.; Özbay, EkmelWidely-tunable high-speed resonant cavity enhanced p-i-n photodiodes were designed, fabricated and tested for operation around 820 nm. The structure was grown by solid-source MBE on GaAs substrates and features high-reflectivity Bragg mirrors made of quarter-wave Al0.20Ga0.80As/AlAs stacks. Photoresponse and photospectral measurements were carried out. The tuning of the resonance wavelength within the Bragg mirror's upper and lower edges was observed. Quantum efficiency greater than 90% was demonstrated.Item Open Access Hot electron effects in unipolar n-type submicron structures based on GaN, AlN and their ternary alloys(The Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2003) Sevik, C.; Bulutay, C.The authors present an analysis of impact ionisation (II) and related hot electron effects in submicron sized GaN, AlN and their ternary alloys, all of which can support very high field regimes, reaching a few megavolts per centimetre (MV/cm). The proposed high field transport methodology is based on the ensemble Monte Carlo technique, with all major scattering mechanisms incorporated. As a test-bed for understanding II and hot electron effects, an n+-n-n+ channel device is employed having a 0.1 μm thick n-region. The time evolution of the electron density along the device is seen to display oscillations in the unintentionally doped n-region, until steady state is established. The fermionic degeneracy effects are observed to be operational especially at high fields within the anode n+-region. For AlxGa1-xN-based systems, it can be noted that due to alloy scattering, carriers cannot acquire the velocities attained by the GaN and AlN counterparts. Finally, at very high fields II is shown to introduce a substantial energy loss mechanism for the energetic carriers that have just traversed the unintentionally doped n-region.Item Open Access Hydrodynamic approach for modelling transport in quantum well device structures(Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd., 1998) Besikci, C.; Tanatar, Bilal; Sen, O.A semiclassical approach for modelling electron transport in quantum well structures is presented. The model is based on the balance equations governing the conservation of particle density, momentum and energy with Monte Carlo (MC) generated transport parameters. Three valleys of the conduction band, size quantization in the Γ valley, and the lowest two subbands in the quantum well are considered by taking the detailed intersubband dynamics into account. The transport parameters of the model are extracted from steady-state MC simulations based on an improved formulation of two-dimensional polar optical phonon scattering including screening effects. The predictions of the proposed model have been found to be in excellent agreement with those of the ensemble MC simulations under both time varying and spatially nonuniform fields. The calculated transport parameters which are of interest for device modelling are presented as a function of the electron energy for the AIGaAs/GaAs quantum well. The model serves as an accurate semiclassical alternative to costly ensemble MC simulations for studying the transport in quantum well structures and for the modelling and optimization of submicron devices based on these structures, such as modulation doped field-effect transistors (MODFETs).Item Open Access In-situ focused ion beam implantation for the fabrication of a hot electron transistor oscillator structure(1996) Kaya I.I.; Dellow, M.W.; Bending, S.J.; Linfield, E.H.; Rose P.D.; Ritchie, D.A.; Jones G.A.C.Recent advances using in situ focused ion beam implantation during an MBE growth interruption have been exploited to fabricate planar GaAs hot electron structures without the need for shallow ohmic contacts. This novel fabrication route shows a very high yield and has been used to demonstrate a prototype high-frequency oscillator structure based on electron multiplication in the base layer. Existing devices show transfer factors in excess of unity as well as reversal of the base current at high injection levels, which are the prerequisites for oscillator action. Future improvements in device design are discussed.Item Open Access Super-radiant surface emission from a quasi-cavity hot electron light emitter(Springer New York LLC, 1999) O'Brien, A.; Balkan, N.; Boland-Thoms, A.; Adams, M.; Bek, A.; Serpengüzel, A.; Aydınlı, A.; Roberts, J.The Hot Electron Light Emitting and Lasing in Semiconductor Heterostructure (HELLISH-1) device is a novel surface emitter which utilises hot carrier transport parallel to the layers of a Ga1 - xAlxAs p-n junction incorporating a single GaAs quantum well on the n-side of the junction plane. Non-equilibrium electrons are injected into the quantum well via tunnelling from the n-layer. In order to preserve the charge neutrality in the depletion region, the junction undergoes a self-induced internal biasing. As a result the built-in potential on the p-side is reduced and hence the injection of non-equilibrium holes into the quantum well in the active region is enhanced. The work presented here shows that a distributed Bragg reflector grown below the active region of the HELLISH device increases the emitted light intensity by two orders of magnitude and reduces the emission line-width by about a factor of 3 in comparison with the original HELLISH-1 structure. Therefore, the device can be operated as an ultrabright emitter with higher spectral purity.