학술논문

How do InAs quantum dots relax when the InAs growth thickness exceeds the dislocation-induced critical thickness?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Applied Physics. Jan2012, Vol. 111 Issue 1, p013709. 7p. 1 Color Photograph, 1 Black and White Photograph, 1 Diagram, 9 Graphs.
Subject
*QUANTUM dots
*INDIUM arsenide
*CRYSTAL defects
*DIFFUSION
*TRANSMISSION electron microscopy
*INDIUM
*ANNEALING of crystals
*ELECTRON emission
Language
ISSN
0021-8979
Abstract
A simple critical thickness for generating lattice misfits is insufficient to describe the onset strain relaxation in InAs quantum dots (QDs). A predominant dot family is shown to relieve its strain by In/Ga interdiffusion, rather than by lattice misfits, at the onset of strain relaxation. This argument is based on photoluminescence spectra, which show the emergence of a fine blueshifted transition at the onset of strain relaxation, along with a low-energy transition from a dot family degraded by lattice misfits. From the analysis of the temperature-dependent blueshift and energy separation between the ground and excited-state transitions, the blueshift is attributed to In/Ga interdiffusion. Transmission electron microscopy suggests a relaxation-induced indium migration from the interdiffused dot family to the dislocated dot family. Post-growth thermal annealing can further relieve strain by inducing more In/Ga interdiffusion in the interdiffused dot family and more dislocations in the dislocated dot family. This study explains the co-existence of strong carrier confinement in the QDs and enormous misfit-related traps in the capacitance-voltage spectra, and an elongated QD electron-emission time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]