The Si/SiGe heterosystem would be ideally suited for the realization of complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible integrated light sources, but the indirect band gap, exacerbated by a type-II band offset, makes it challenging to achieve efficient light emission. We address this problem by strain engineering in ordered arrays of vertically close-stacked SiGe quantum dot (QD) pairs. The strain induced by the respective lower QD creates a preferential nucleation site for the upper one and strains the upper QD as well as the Si cap above it. Electrons are confined in the strain pockets in the Si cap, which leads to an enhanced wave function overlap with the heavy holes near the upper QD's apex. With a thickness of the Si spacer between the stacked QDs below 5 nm, we separated the functions of the two QDs: The role of the lower one is that of a pure stressor, whereas only the upper QD facilitates radiative recombination of QD-bound excitons. We report on the design and strain engineering of the QD pairs via strain-dependent Schrödinger-Poisson simulations, their implementation by molecular beam epitaxy, and a comprehensive study of their structural and optical properties in comparison with those of single-layer SiGe QD arrays. We find that the double QD arrangement shifts the thermal quenching of the photoluminescence signal at higher temperatures. Moreover, detrimental light emission from the QD-related wetting layers is suppressed in the double-QD configuration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-99966-7 | DOI Listing |
Nano Lett
January 2025
Université Grenoble Alpes,CEA, Grenoble INP, IRIG, PHELIQS, 38000 Grenoble, France.
Gatemons are superconducting qubits resembling transmons, with a gate-tunable semiconducting weak link as the Josephson element. Here, we report a gatemon device featuring an aluminum microwave circuit on a Ge/SiGe heterostructure embedding a Ge quantum well. Owing to the superconducting proximity effect, the high-mobility two-dimensional hole gas confined in this well provides a gate-tunable superconducting weak link between two Al contacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanophotonics
April 2024
Dipartimento di Scienze, Università; degli Studi Roma Tre, Viale G. Marconi 446, Roma 00146, Italy.
A parabolic potential that confines charge carriers along the growth direction of quantum wells semiconductor systems is characterized by a single resonance frequency, associated to intersubband transitions. Motivated by fascinating quantum optics applications leveraging on this property, we use the technologically relevant SiGe material system to design, grow, and characterize n-type doped parabolic quantum wells realized by continuously grading Ge-rich Si Ge alloys, deposited on silicon wafers. An extensive structural analysis highlights the capability of the ultra-high-vacuum chemical vapor deposition technique here used to precisely control the quadratic confining potential and the target doping profile.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanophotonics
April 2024
Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy.
In this work we theoretically investigate the possibility of observing strong coupling at mid-infrared frequencies within the group-IV semiconductor material platform. Our results show that the strong coupling condition is attainable in Ge/SiGe quantum wells integrated in hybrid metal-semiconductor microcavities, featuring a highly n-doped SiGe layer as one of the mirrors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanophotonics
April 2024
Dipartimento di Fisica "E. Fermi", Università di Pisa, Largo Pontecorvo 3, 56127, Pisa, Italy.
We present a theoretical investigation of guided second harmonic generation at THz frequencies in SiGe waveguides embedding n-type Ge/SiGe asymmetric coupled quantum wells to engineer a giant second order nonlinear susceptibility. A characteristic of the chosen material system is the existence of large off-diagonal elements in the tensor, coupling optical modes with different polarization. To account for this effect, we generalize the coupled-mode theory, proposing a theoretical model suitable for concurrently resolving every second harmonic generation interaction among guide-sustained modes, regardless of which tensor elements it originates from.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe introduce the world's first SPAD family design in 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS process. At 1.8 µm, we achieved the smallest pitch on record thanks to guard-ring sharing techniques, while keeping a relatively high fill factor of 24.
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