Publications by authors named "C Coinon"

InSb is a material of choice for infrared as well as spintronic devices but its integration on large lattice mismatched semi-insulating III-V substrates has so far altered its exceptional properties. Here, we investigate the direct growth of InSb on InP(111)substrates with molecular beam epitaxy. Despite the lack of a thick metamorphic buffer layer for accommodation, we show that quasi-continuous thin films can be grown using a very high Sb/In flux ratio.

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Increasing quantum confinement in semiconductor quantum dot (QD) systems is essential to perform robust simulations of many-body physics. By combining molecular beam epitaxy and lithographic techniques, we developed an approach consisting of a twofold selective area growth to build QD chains. Starting from 15 nm-thick and 65 nm-wide in-plane InGaAs nanowires on InP substrates, linear arrays of InGaAs QDs were grown on top, with tunable lengths and separations.

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Raman spectroscopy is well-suited for the characterization of semiconductor materials. However, due the weakness of the Raman signal, the studies of thin semiconductor layers in complex environments, such as ultrahigh vacuum, are rather scarce. Here, we have designed a Raman apparatus based on the use of a fiber optic probe, with a lens collecting the backscattered light directly inserted in ultrahigh vacuum.

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The nanoscale intrinsic electrical properties of in-plane InAs nanowires grown by selective area epitaxy are investigated using a process-free method involving a multi-probe scanning tunneling microscope. The resistance of oxide-free InAs nanowires grown on an InP(111)substrate and the resistance of InAs/GaSb core-shell nanowires grown on an InP(001) substrate are measured using a collinear four-point probe arrangement in ultrahigh vacuum. They are compared with the resistance of two-dimensional electron gas reference samples measured using the same method and with the Van der Pauw geometry for validation.

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Narrow bandgap nanocrystals (NCs) are now used as infrared light absorbers, making them competitors to epitaxially grown semiconductors. However, these two types of materials could benefit from one another. While bulk materials are more effective in transporting carriers and give a high degree of doping tunability, NCs offer a larger spectral tunability without lattice-matching constraints.

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