Sapphire has various applications in photonics due to its broadband transparency, high-contrast index, and chemical and physical stability. Photonics integration on the sapphire platform has been proposed, along with potentially high-performance lasers made of group III-V materials. In parallel with developing active devices for photonics integration applications, in this work, silicon nitride optical waveguides on a sapphire substrate were analyzed using the commercial software Comsol Multiphysics in a spectral window of 800~2400 nm, covering the operating wavelengths of III-V lasers, which could be monolithically or hybridly integrated on the same substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe growth of high-composition GeSn films in the future will likely be guided by algorithms. In this study, we show how a logarithmic-based algorithm can be used to obtain high-quality GeSn compositions up to 16% on GaAs (001) substrates via molecular beam epitaxy. Herein, we use composition targeting and logarithmic Sn cell temperature control to achieve linearly graded pseudomorph GeSn compositions up to 10% before partial relaxation of the structure and a continued gradient up to 16% GeSn.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGermanium tin (GeSn) is a tuneable narrow bandgap material, which has shown remarkable promise for the industry of near- and mid-infrared technologies for high efficiency photodetectors and laser devices. Its synthesis is challenged by the lattice mismatch between the GeSn alloy and the substrate on which it is grown, sensitively affecting its crystalline and optical qualities. In this article, we investigate the growth of Ge and GeSn on GaAs (001) substrates using two different buffer layers consisting of Ge/GaAs and Ge/AlAs molecular beam epitaxy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe band offsets for the β-(AlGa)O/β-GaO (010) heterojunction have been experimentally measured by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. High-quality β-(AlGa)O films were grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition for characterization. The indirect band gap of β-(AlGa)O was determined by optical transmission to be 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPiezoresponse force microscopy is used to study the velocity of the polarization domain wall in ultrathin ferroelectric barium titanate (BTO) films grown on strontium titanate (STO) substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. The electric field due to the cone of the atomic force microscope tip is demonstrated as the dominant electric field for domain expansion in thin films at lateral distances greater than about one tip diameter away from the tip. The velocity of the domain wall under the applied electric field by the tip in BTO for thin films (less than 40 nm) followed an expanding process given by Merz's law.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF