Room-Temperature Ballistic Transport in III-Nitride
Heterostructures
Posted on 2015-02-11 - 00:00
Room-temperature
(RT) ballistic transport of electrons is experimentally observed and
theoretically investigated in III-nitrides. This has been largely
investigated at low temperatures in low band gap III–V materials
due to their high electron mobilities. However, their application
to RT ballistic devices is limited by their low optical phonon energies,
close to KT at 300 K. In addition, the short electron mean-free-path
at RT requires nanoscale devices for which surface effects are a limitation
in these materials. We explore the unique properties of wide band-gap
III-nitride semiconductors to demonstrate RT ballistic devices. A
theoretical model is proposed to corroborate experimentally their
optical phonon energy of 92 meV, which is ∼4× larger than
in other III–V semiconductors. This allows RT ballistic devices
operating at larger voltages and currents. An additional model is
described to determine experimentally a characteristic dimension for
ballistic transport of 188 nm. Another remarkable property is their
short carrier depletion at device sidewalls, down to 13 nm, which
allows top-down nanofabrication of very narrow ballistic devices.
These results open a wealth of new systems and basic transport studies
possible at RT.
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Matioli, Elison; Palacios, Tomás (2016). Room-Temperature Ballistic Transport in III-Nitride
Heterostructures. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/nl504029r