| Literature DB >> 29257698 |
Pierre Corfdir1, Hong Li1,2, Oliver Marquardt1, Guanhui Gao1, Maciej R Molas3, Johannes K Zettler1, David van Treeck1, Timur Flissikowski1, Marek Potemski3, Claudia Draxl2, Achim Trampert1, Sergio Fernández-Garrido1, Holger T Grahn1, Oliver Brandt1.
Abstract
In semiconductor quantum-wire heterostructures, interface roughness leads to exciton localization and to a radiative decay rate much smaller than that expected for structures with flat interfaces. Here, we uncover the electronic and optical properties of the one-dimensional extended defects that form at the intersection between stacking faults and inversion domain boundaries in GaN nanowires. We show that they act as crystal-phase quantum wires, a novel one-dimensional quantum system with atomically flat interfaces. These quantum wires efficiently capture excitons whose radiative decay gives rise to an optical doublet at 3.36 eV at 4.2 K. The binding energy of excitons confined in crystal-phase quantum wires is measured to be more than twice larger than that of the bulk. As a result of their unprecedented interface quality, these crystal-phase quantum wires constitute a model system for the study of one-dimensional excitons.Keywords: GaN nanowires; crystal-phase engineering; density functional theory; excitons; photoluminescence; quantum wires
Year: 2017 PMID: 29257698 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b03997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189