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A New Advance in Gallium Nitride Nanowires
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Peidong
Yang
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BERKELEY,
CA – A significant breakthrough in the development
of the highly prized semiconductor gallium nitride
as a building block for nanotechnology has been achieved
by a team of scientists with the U.S. Department of
Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley
Lab) and the University of California at Berkeley.
For the first time ever, the researchers have been
able control the direction in which a gallium nitride
nanowire grows. Growth direction is critical to determining
the wire's electrical and thermal conductivity and
other important properties.
"Our
results will come as a surprise to those who have
said that growth direction can't be controlled, that
you get what you get when you grow semiconductor nanowires,"
says Peidong Yang, a chemist with Berkeley Lab's Materials
Sciences Division and a professor with UC Berkeley's
Chemistry Department, who led the research.
A report discussing these research results first appeared
in the online edition of the journal Nature Materials
on July 25. In addition to Yang, co-authors of the
report, "Crystallographic alignment of high-density
gallium nitride nanowire arrays," were Yanfeng
Zhang, Donald Sirbuly, and Jonathan Denlinger of Berkeley
Lab, and Tevye Kuykendall, Peter Pauzauskie, and Joshua
Goldberger of UC Berkeley.
Nanotechnologists are eager to tap into the enormous
potential of gallium nitride for use in high-power,
high-performance optoelectronic devices. Already,
single-crystalline gallium nitride nanowires and nanotubes
have shown promise in blue light emitting diodes,
short-wavelength ultraviolet nanolasers, and nanofluidic
biochemical sensors.
"Control over nanowire growth direction is extremely
desirable, in that anisotropic parameters such as
thermal and electrical conductivity, index of refraction,
piezoelectric polarization, and band gap may be used
to tune the physical properties of nanowires made
from a given material," Yang says.
Yang and his research group have been pioneers in
the fabrication of semiconductor nanowires, especially
gallium nitride, zinc oxide, and silicon/germanium.
The wires they've produced measure only a few nanometers
in diameter but stretch out to several microns in
length. For this experimental work, they grew single-crystal
gallium nitride nanowires using a metal–organic chemical
vapor deposition (MOCVD) technique that was similar
to an earlier technique they used to produce nanowire
lasers.
In their earlier work, Yang and his group demonstrated
the ability to control the size, aspect ratio, position,
and composition of their nanowires. Now they've added
the ability to control crystallographic growth direction.
The key to this new capability is the selection of
a choice substrate.
Explains Yang, "In nanowires made from the exact
same gallium nitride material but grown on different
substrates, the light-emission of these wires was
blue-shifted by 100 meV (milli-electron volts). We
believe the emission difference is a clear manifestation
of the different crystal growth directions."
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When
grown on a substrate of lithium aluminum oxide, gallium
nitride nanowires are triangular in cross section. |

The
cross section of gallium nitride nanowires grown on
a magnesium oxide substrate is hexagonal. Although
compositionally identical, the electronic properties
of nanowires differ with different crystal orientations. |
For
this study, Yang and his group used substrates of lithium
aluminum oxide and magnesium oxide. The crystals of
both materials are geometrically compatible with gallium
nitride crystals, but the lithium aluminum oxide features
a two-fold symmetry that matches the symmetry along
one plane of the gallium nitride crystals, whereas the
magnesium oxide has a three-fold symmetry that matches
gallium nitride symmetry along a different plane.
As a result, when a vapor of gallium nitride condenses
on either of these substrates, the resulting nanowires
grow perpendicular to the substrate but aligned in a
direction unique to each substrate. Because of the different
growth directions, cross sections of the gallium nitride
nanowires grown on lithium aluminum oxide form an isosceles
triangle, while the cross sections of those grown on
magnesium oxide are hexagonal.
"Our goal is to put together a generic scheme for
controlling the directional growth of all semiconductor
nanowires," says Yang. "When we can do this,
we will be able to answer some important fundamental
questions, such as how would the carrier mobility, light
emission, and thermoconductivity differ along different
crystallographic directions for nanowires with the same
compositions and crystal structures. The use of MOCVD
for gallium nitride nanowire growth will also allow
us to integrate nanowires and thin films of various
compositions so we can start making real devices."
Yang believes that he and his group are within a few
months of being able to produce a light-emission diode,
a transistor, or a hybrid, nanowire-thin film laser.
This research effort was funded by the U.S. Department
of Energy's Office of Science, the Camille and Henry
Dreyfus Foundation, the Beckman Foundation, and the
National Science Foundation.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national
laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research and is managed by the
University of California. Visit our website at www.lbl.gov/.
Additional information
• "Crystallographic alignment of high-density gallium
nitride nanowire arrays," by Tevye Kuykendall,
Peter J. Pauzauskie, Yanfeng Zhang, Joshua Goldberger,
Donald Sirbuly, Jonathan Denlinger, and Peidong Yang,
appeared 25 July 2004 in the online edition of Nature
Materials
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This
story has been adapted from a news release -
Diese Meldung basiert auf einer Pressemitteilung -
Deze
tekst is gebaseerd op een nieuwsbericht - |
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