posted on 2025-03-11, 16:05authored bySoumya Tiwari, Tikendra Kumar, Deb Kumar Rath, Siddharth Raj Gupta, Rajesh Kumar, Rajiv Prakash, Anjali Chaudhary
Silicon continues to be a leading semiconductor material
in the
microelectronics industry, offering significant potential for advancing
electronic and optoelectronic technologies. However, its indirect
energy band gap (1.1 eV) poses a fundamental limitation to achieving
high efficiency in next-generation devices. Strain engineering has
emerged as a promising technique for modifying the energy band gap,
enabling silicon’s application in advanced electronic and photonic
devices. In this work, we present a viable method to apply varied
tensile strain to a silicon nanomembrane (Si NM) only by eliminating
the substrate’s effect and investigate the resulting strain
variations using in situ Raman spectroscopy. Moreover, deformation
potential theory is used to calculate the variation of the energy
band lineup of tensilely strained Si NM. Our findings reveal a substantial
significant energy band reduction of approximately 0.24 eV at 0.9%
tensile strain. The roughness of the Si NM remains unaltered after
we transfer it to a polyimide substrate, with a hole, to achieve a
variable and controllable amount of tensile strain. However, the reported
method is easily adaptable and can be extended to other NMs bonded
to any flexible substrate. These results underscore the potential
of tensilely strained Si NMs as versatile and controlled platforms
for band structure engineering, offering a precise and efficient approach
for enhancing the performance of next-generation devices.