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Manipulated Growth of GaAs Nanowires: Controllable Crystal Quality and Growth Orientations via a Supersaturation-Controlled Engineering Process
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Citations
27
References
2012
Year
Crystal StructureManipulated GrowthGrowth OrientationsEngineeringCrystal Growth TechnologyLow Ga SupersaturationSemiconductor NanostructuresSemiconductorsNanostructure SynthesisMolecular Beam EpitaxyEpitaxial GrowthCompound SemiconductorMaterials ScienceCrystalline DefectsNanotechnologyHigh Ga SupersaturationNanocrystalline MaterialApplied PhysicsGaas Nanowires
Controlling the crystal quality and growth orientation of high performance III–V compound semiconductor nanowires (NWs) in a large-scale synthesis is still challenging, which could restrict the implementation of nanowires for practical applications. Here we present a facile approach to control the crystal structure, defects, orientation, growth rate and density of GaAs NWs via a supersaturation-controlled engineering process by tailoring the chemical composition and dimension of starting AuxGay catalysts. For the high Ga supersaturation (catalyst diameter < 40 nm), NWs can be manipulated to grow unidirectionally along ⟨111⟩ with the pure zinc blende phase with a high growth rate, density and minimal amount of defect concentration utilizing the low-melting-point catalytic alloys (AuGa, Au2Ga, and Au7Ga3 with Ga atomic concentration > 30%), whereas for the low Ga supersaturation (catalyst diameter > 40 nm), NWs are grown inevitably with a mixed crystal orientation and high concentration of defects from high-melting-point alloys (Au7Ga2 with Ga atomic concentration < 30%). In addition to the complicated control of processing parameters, the ability to tune the composition of catalytic alloys by tailoring the starting Au film thickness demonstrates a versatile approach to control the crystal quality and orientation for the uniform NW growth.
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