Affiliation:
1. Materials Department University of California Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA 93106 USA
2. Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy University of Cambridge 27 Charles Babbage Road Cambridge CB3 0FS UK
3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA
Abstract
This study probes the extent to which dislocations reduce carrier lifetimes and alter growth morphology and luminescence in InAs quantum dots (QD) grown on silicon. These heterostructures are key ingredients to achieving a highly reliable monolithically integrated light source on silicon necessary for photonic‐integrated circuits. Around 20%–30% shorter carrier lifetimes are found at spatially resolved individual dislocations at room temperature using time‐resolved cathodoluminescence spectroscopy, highlighting the strong nonradiative impact of dislocations even against the three‐dimensional confinement of QDs. Beyond these direct effects of increased nonradiative recombination, it is found that misfit dislocations in the defect filter layers employed during III–V/Si growth alter the QD growth environment to induce a crosshatch‐like variation in QD emission color and intensity when the filter layer is positioned sufficiently close to the QD emitter layer. Sessile threading dislocations generate even more egregious hillock defects that also reduce emission intensities by altering layer thicknesses, as measured by transmission electron microscopy and atom probe tomography. This work presents a more complete picture of the impacts of dislocations relevant to the development of light sources for scalable silicon photonic integrated circuits.
Funder
Advanced Research Projects Agency
National Science Foundation
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Subject
Materials Chemistry,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Surfaces, Coatings and Films,Surfaces and Interfaces,Condensed Matter Physics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
3 articles.
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