A review of the electrical properties of semiconductor nanowires: insights gained from terahertz conductivity spectroscopy

Hannah J. Joyce, Jessica L. Boland, Christopher L. Davies, Sarwat A. Baig, Michael B. Johnston

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Accurately measuring and controlling the electrical properties of semiconductor nanowires is of paramount importance in the development of novel nanowire-based devices. In light of this, terahertz (THz) conductivity spectroscopy has emerged as an ideal non-contact technique for probing nanowire electrical conductivity and is showing tremendous value in the targeted development of nanowire devices. THz spectroscopic measurements of nanowires enable charge carrier lifetimes, mobilities, dopant concentrations and surface recombination velocities to be measured with high accuracy and high throughput in a contact-free fashion. This review spans seminal and recent studies of the electronic properties of nanowires using THz spectroscopy. A didactic description of THz time-domain spectroscopy, optical pump–THz probe spectroscopy, and their application to nanowires is included. We review a variety of technologically important nanowire materials, including GaAs, InAs, InP, GaN and InN nanowires, Si and Ge nanowires, ZnO nanowires, nanowire heterostructures, doped nanowires and modulation-doped nanowires. Finally, we discuss how THz measurements are guiding the development of nanowire-based devices, with the example of single-nanowire photoconductive THz receivers.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalSemiconductor Science and Technology
    Volume31
    Issue number10
    Early online date15 Sept 2016
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Oct 2016

    Keywords

    • terahertz
    • nanowire
    • semiconductor
    • mobility
    • lifetime
    • ultrafast
    • contact-free

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