Publication | Closed Access
Electrically Induced Optical Emission from a Carbon Nanotube FET
924
Citations
20
References
2003
Year
EngineeringNanotube Fet ModelOptoelectronic DevicesSemiconductor DeviceCarbon-based MaterialNanoelectronicsInduced Optical EmissionCarbon NanotubesCompound SemiconductorNanophotonicsPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringPhotoluminescencePhysicsElectro-optics DeviceApplied PhysicsNanotube DeviceQuantum Photonic DeviceInfrared Optical EmissionOptoelectronics
Polarized infrared optical emission was observed from a carbon nanotube ambipolar field-effect transistor (FET). An effective forward-biased p-n junction, without chemical dopants, was created in the nanotube by appropriately biasing the nanotube device. Electrical measurements show that the observed optical emission originates from radiative recombination of electrons and holes that are simultaneously injected into the undoped nanotube. These observations are consistent with a nanotube FET model in which thin Schottky barriers form at the source and drain contacts. This arrangement is a novel optical recombination radiation source in which the electrons and holes are injected into a nearly field-free region. Sucha source may form the basis for ultrasmall integrated photonic devices.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1