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This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE Proceedings Volume 8106, including the Title Page, Copyright information, Table of Contents, Introduction, and the Conference Committee listing.
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In this paper the fundamental properties of heterostructures based on semiconductor nanowires synthesized
with molecular beam epitaxy are reviewed. Special focus is given on surface passivation mechanisms with radial
epitaxial passivation shells. The growth of radial p-i-n junctions in GaAs nanowires is discussed. Characterization
of such nanowires on a single nanowire level is presented. The fundamental limits of single nanowire optical device
performance are obtained by numerical simulation and discussed.
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Devices fabricated using nanowire structures can provide performance enhancement as well as open new
applications. Integration of electronics into textile, referred to as e-textile, offers an opportunity for future electronics.
Herein, copper and copper oxide based nanostructures are embedded for e-textile. Metallic copper wire is utilized as a
growth substrate, which is simultaneously used as the fiber of mesh textiles. Among various metals, copper is promising
as it is non-toxic and relatively abundant on earth. The motivating factor is ease of growth of nanostructures; the
nanowire and thin-film forms are synthesized by self-catalytic vapor-solid growth. Simply heating with oxygen gas can
form copper oxide nanowires or thin-film depending on the growth conditions. As key building blocks in e-textile,
memory, transistor, and interconnect are presented. The resistive memory is comprised of copper oxide thin-film
sandwiched within two orthogonal fibers. For a metal semiconductor field effect transistor (MESFET), a Schottky
junction is used as the gate to channel barrier. The copper fiber and copper oxide thin-film are devoted to the gate and
channel, respectively. For an interconnection, the neighboring fibers are electrically connected by transforming copper
oxide nanowires into copper nanowires. Hydrogen thermal reduction of copper oxide is proved to be effective to make
conductive nanowires.Inp
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For over one decade, numerous research have been performed on field-effect transistor (FET) sensors with a quasi-onedimensional
(1D) nanostructure channel demonstrating highly sensitive surface and bulk sensing. The high surface and
bulk sensing sensitivity respectively arises from the inherently large surface area-to-volume ratio and tiny channel
volume. The generic nanowire FET sensors, however, have limitations such as impractically low output current levels
especially near the limit of detection (LOD) that would require downstream remote amplification with an appreciable
amount of added noise. We have recently proposed and experimentally demonstrated an innovative amplifying nanowire
FET sensor structure that seamlessly integrates therein a sensing nanowire and a nanowire FET amplifier. This novel
sensor structure embraces the same geometrical advantage in quasi-1D nanostructure yet it offers unprecedented closeproximity
signal amplification with the lowest possible added noise. In this paper, we review the device operating
principle and amplification mechanism. We also present the prototype fabrication procedures, and surface and bulk
sensing experimental results showing significantly enhanced output current level difference as predicted.
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This paper presents our on-going nano-epitaxial efforts to grow tin oxide (SnO2), zinc oxide (ZnO), and lead
zirconate titanate (PZT) for nanotechnology-enhanced devices. The applicable devices involve piezoelectric energy
harvesting devices and nanomaterial-enhanced chemical sensors, with the Systems-level vision involving the
piezoelectric energy harvesting devices that could self-power chemical sensors for a stand-alone, self-powered device
that could harvest its own power from mechanical vibrations. To this end, device concepts are presented herein and
preliminary details for ZnO, SnO2, and PZT material synthesis are presented. The growth of nanowires and
nanotetrapods are presented for said device applications using vapor-liquid-solid (VLS), solution synthesis, as well as
the results from other synthesis processes. Characterization was done by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and
energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS).
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In this paper, we report on a new method of synthesis for ZnO nanowires on arbitrary substrates and nanowalls on
aluminum coated substrates at ambient conditions. Our method is based on sonochemical reaction of Zinc acetate
dihydrate (Zn(O2CCH3)2-2H2O) Zinc nitrate hexahydrate (Zn(NO3)2-6H2O) and hexamethylenetetramine (HMT,
(CH2).6N4) in aqueous solutions. Repetitive growth cycles resulted in synthesis of ZnO nanowires and nanowalls with
controlled dimensions and large aspect ratios. Extensive analysis by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), energy
dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDS) and UV-Visible spectroscopy revealed the crystalline ZnO composition of the
synthesized nanostructures. The proposed method is a rapid, inexpensive, low-temperature, catalyst-free, CMOS
compatible and environmentally benign alternative to existing growth techniques.
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Novel Characterization for Nanoepitaxial Materials
Electron transport is discussed for an ensemble of fused conical indium phosphide nanowires bridging two hydrogenated
n+-silicon electrodes. The current-voltage (Id-Vd) characteristics exhibit a Coulomb staircase in dark with a period of ~ 1
V but it disappears under light illumination in some devices, while Id-Vd is featureless smooth monotonic curve in other
devices. It is shown that transport is dominated by a single NW pair in dark, while many NW pairs will contribute to
transport under illumination.sentati
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Scanning photocurrent microscopy (SPCM) is a powerful technique for investigating local electronic structures and
charge transport in semiconductor nanowires. Here we apply this technique to explore colloidal PbSe nanowires and
VO2 nanobeams. Field effect transistors incorporating single colloidal PbSe nanowires were fabricated. A fast, sensitive
polarization-dependent photoresponse was observed. SPCM of as-grown PbSe nanowires showed a downward band
bending towards the metal electrodes, consistent with their p-type nature. At 54 °C, SPCM of VO2 nanobeams revealed
band bending at the metallic/insulating domain boundaries. At room temperature, we observed photocurrent spots in the
middle of the VO2 nanobeams, indicating local electric fields likely caused by defects.
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We have investigated the growth of ZnO nanowires on curved BaTiO3 retroreflector beads,
as well as growth of ZnO nanowires on flat substrates. Results indicate that the growth of ZnO
aligned nanowire arrays occurs farther away from the Zn source in the retroreflectors, while the
results are opposite for the flat Si substrates. In the case of the ZnO nanowires on flat Si, the
nanowires formed in nearly aligned arrays are short and significantly thicker, suggesting that the
growth occurs both longitudinally and laterally in this process, which is not the case for the growth
on the retroreflector beads. The SERS response of the nanowire arrays on the retroreflectors has
been compared to random nanowires on flat Si substrates, and results show that the signal strength
is 29 times greater in the case of the wires grown on the retroreflectors. Since one would only
expect a factor of 4 enhancement due to the light reflecting properties of the retroreflector, it is
believed that the enhancement in the SERS signal is due to light channeling by the aligned nanowire
arrays.
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This proceeding summarizes the materials preparation of position-controlled ZnO-based nanorod heterostructures and
fabrication of vertically-aligned wide band gap semiconductor nanorod light-emitting devices. Especially the fabrication
of GaN/InxGa1-xN/GaN/ZnO nanorod heterostructured visible-light-emitter arrays on sapphire and Si substrates,
representing important progress in the field of nanoheteroepitaxy and photonic devices in nanoscale, are reported.
Particularly, position-controlled vertical nanostructure arrays make those possible to prepare high-quality material
systems without stress or strain accumulation and to fabricate high-performance light-emitting devices (LEDs) with a
three-dimensional device configuration. Our method based on nanoheteroepitaxy and position-controlled nanodevice
integration for fabricating GaN-based micro-LED arrays constitutes a promising strategy for resolving the issues of
conventional GaN LEDs and fabricating high-performance LEDs on various substrates for potential optoelectronic
integrated circuits and solid-state lighting applications.
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We investigate the electrical conductivity of GaAs-based tunnel junctions enhanced with semimetallic ErAs nanoparticles. In particular, we examine the effects of digitally-graded InGaAs alloys on the n-type side of the tunnel junction, along with different p-type doping levels. Device characteristics of the graded structures indicate that the n-type Schottky barrier may not be the limiting factor in the tunneling current as initially hypothesized. Moreover, significantly improved forward and reverse bias tunneling currents were observed with increased p-type doping, suggesting p-side limitation.
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Thermoelectric figure of merit (ZT) depends on three material properties; electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity,
and Seebeck coefficient. Maximizing ZT simply requires that electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient be high to
reduce Joule heating and to increase energy conversion efficiency while thermal conductivity needs to be low to
maintain temperature gradient across a thermoelectric material. Unfortunately these three material properties are closely
correlated each other in homogeneous bulk semiconductors. Recent demonstrations that employ various semiconductor
materials tuned at the nanometer-scale (nanomaterials) have shown great promise in advancing thermoelectrics. Among
a wide range of nanomaterials, we focus on "nanocomposites" in which semimetallic nanostructures are epitaxially
embedded in a ternary compound semiconductor matrix to attempt tuning the three material properties independently.
We demonstrated co-deposition of erbium monoantimonide (ErSb) and In1-xGaxSb or InSb1-yAsy ternary alloy to form
nanometer-scale semimetallic ErSb structures within these ternary alloys "nanocomposite" using low-pressure metal
organic chemical vapor deposition. The grown nanocomposites were structurally and thermoelectrically analyzed to
assess their potential for advanced thermoelectric power generation.
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We present models for the growth and electrical conductivity of ErAs films grown with the nanoparticle-seeded
film growth technique. This growth mode overcomes the mismatch in rotational symmetry between the rocksalt
ErAs crystal structure and the zincblende GaAs crystal structure. This results in films of ErAs grown through a
thin film of GaAs that preserves the symmetry of the substrate. The conductivity of the films, as a function of
film thickness, are investigated and a surface roughness model is used to explain observed trends. Transmission
electron micrographs confirm the suppression of anti-phase domains. A simple diffusion model is developed to
describe the diffusion and incorporation of surface erbium into subsurface ErAs layers and predict potential
failure mechanisms of the growth method.
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We have demonstrated the growth of a group III-V semiconductor binary alloy, indium phosphide (InP), directly on
carbon fibers thereby enabling a union of semiconductor and structural materials. Carbon fibers were prepared by
electrospinning solutions of polyacrilonitrile (PAN) and dimethylformamide (DMF) followed by carbonization at 750 °C
in inert atmosphere. Gold nanoparticles dispersed on the fibers catalyzed nanowire growth by metal organic chemical
vapor deposition. X-ray diffraction suggests that the nanowires appear to be epitaxially grown along the (110) direction.
Geometrical parameters have been determined by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy
and elemental analysis has been carried out using energy dispersive spectroscopy. The nanowires grown from carbon
fibers are composed of an amorphous shell and crystalline core which alternates at high spatial frequency.mountai
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