Generation of substrate-free III-V nanodisks from user-defined multilayer nanopillar arrays for integration on Si

S. Naureen, N. Shahid, A. Dev, S. Anand

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    7 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    High material quality InP-based multilayer nanopillar (NP) arrays are fabricated using a combination of self-assembly of silica particles for mask generation and dry etching. In particular, the NP arrays are made from user-defined epitaxial multilayer stacks with specific materials and layer thicknesses. An additional degree of flexibility in the structures is obtained by changing the lateral diameters of the NP multilayer stacks. Pre-defined NP arrays made from InGaAsP/InP and InGaAs/InP NPs are then used to generate substrate-free nanodisks of a chosen material from the stack by selective etching. A soft-stamping method is demonstrated to transfer the generated nanodisks with arbitrary densities onto Si. The transferred nanodisks retain their smooth surface morphologies and their designed geometrical dimensions. Both InP and InGaAsP nanodisks display excellent photoluminescence properties, with line-widths comparable to unprocessed reference epitaxial layers of similar composition. The multilayer NP arrays are potentially attractive for broad-band absorption in third-generation solar cells. The high optical quality, substrate-free InP and InGaAsP nanodisks on Si offer a new path to explore alternative ways to integrate III-V on Si by bonding nanodisks to Si. The method also has the advantage of re-usable III-V substrates for subsequent layer growth.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number225301
    JournalNanotechnology
    Volume24
    Issue number22
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 7 Jun 2013

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Generation of substrate-free III-V nanodisks from user-defined multilayer nanopillar arrays for integration on Si'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this