AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied the enhancement of photoluminescence in 1.3 μm InAs quantum dots grown on a thin 250 nm GaAs buffer on a Si substrate.
  • Thinning the GaAs buffer from 1000 nm to 250 nm increased the density of the coalesced quantum dots but caused a significant drop in photoluminescence intensity.
  • The introduction of an AlGaAs barrier layer helped maintain strong photoluminescence by reducing carrier leakage, and a light-emitting diode was successfully created, showing promising electroluminescence results.

Article Abstract

We report on the photoluminescence enhancement of 1.3 μm InAs quantum dots (QDs) epitaxially grown on an ultrathin 250 nm GaAs buffer on a Si substrate. Decreasing the GaAs buffer thickness from 1000 to 250 nm was found to not only increase the coalesced QD density from 6.5 × 10 to 1.9 × 10 cm but also decrease the QD photoluminescence emission intensity dramatically. Inserting an AlGaAs potential barrier layer maintained strong photoluminescence from the QDs by effectively suppressing carrier leakage to the GaAs/Si interfacial region even when the GaAs buffer was thinned to 250 nm. We then fabricated a light-emitting diode using the ultrathin 250 nm GaAs buffer on Si and confirmed strong electroluminescence peaking at 1.28 μm without interfacial defect emission at room temperature. We believe that this work is promising for monolithically integrated evanescent Si lasers using InAs/GaAs QDs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c14492DOI Listing

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