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Nanoscale engineering of photoelectron processes in quantum well and dot structures for sensing and energy conversion

  • X. Zhang
  • , V. Mitin
  • , A. Sergeev
  • , K. Sablon
  • , M. Yakimov
  • , S. Oktyabrsky
  • , J. K. Choi
  • , G. Strasser
  • SUNY Buffalo
  • U.S. Army Research Laboratory
  • SUNY Polytechnic Institute
  • SK Corporation
  • TU Wien

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

Advanced selective doping provides effective tool for nanoscale engineering of potential barriers and photoelectron processes in quantum well (QW) and quantum dot (QD) optoelectronic nanomaterials for IR sensing and wide band photovoltaic conversion. Photoelectron kinetics and device characteristics are investigated theoretically and experimentally. Asymmetrical doping of QWs is employed in a double QW structure for tuning electron transitions in QWs by voltage bias. These QW devices demonstrate bias-tunable multicolor detection and capability of remote temperature sensing. The QD structures with bipolar doping are proposed to independently control photocarrier lifetime (photocurrent) and dark current. The bipolar doping allows us to increase the height of nanoscale potential barriers around QDs without changing the electron population in QDs, which determines dark current. The QD devices with bipolar doping demonstrate significant enhancement of photocurrent, while dark current is close to that in corresponding reference devices with unipolar doping.

Original languageEnglish
Article number012026
JournalJournal of Physics: Conference Series
Volume906
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 22 2017
Event20th International Conference on Electron Dynamics in Semiconductors, Optoelectronics and Nanostructures, EDISON 2017 - Buffalo, United States
Duration: Jul 17 2017Jul 21 2017

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