Efforts to adapt and extend graphic arts printing techniques for demanding device applications in electronics, biotechnology and microelectromechanical systems have grown rapidly in recent years. Here, we describe the use of electrohydrodynamically induced fluid flows through fine microcapillary nozzles for jet printing of patterns and functional devices with submicrometre resolution. Key aspects of the physics of this approach, which has some features in common with related but comparatively low-resolution techniques for graphic arts, are revealed through direct high-speed imaging of the droplet formation processes. Printing of complex patterns of inks, ranging from insulating and conducting polymers, to solution suspensions of silicon nanoparticles and rods, to single-walled carbon nanotubes, using integrated computer-controlled printer systems illustrates some of the capabilities. High-resolution printed metal interconnects, electrodes and probing pads for representative circuit patterns and functional transistors with critical dimensions as small as 1 mum demonstrate potential applications in printed electronics.
Surface phonon polaritons (SPhPs), the surface-bound electromagnetic modes of a polar material resulting from the coupling of light with optic phonons, offer immense technological opportunities for nanophotonics in the infrared (IR) spectral region. However, once a particular material is chosen, the SPhP characteristics are fixed by the spectral positions of the optic phonon frequencies. Here, we provide a demonstration of how the frequency of these optic phonons can be altered by employing atomic-scale superlattices (SLs) of polar semiconductors using AlN/GaN SLs as an example. Using second harmonic generation (SHG) spectroscopy, we show that the optic phonon frequencies of the SLs exhibit a strong dependence on the layer thicknesses of the constituent materials. Furthermore, new vibrational modes emerge that are confined to the layers, while others are centered at the AlN/GaN interfaces. As the IR dielectric function is governed by the optic phonon behavior in polar materials, controlling the optic phonons provides a means to induce and potentially design a dielectric function distinct from the constituent materials and from the effective-medium approximation of the SL. We show that atomic-scale AlN/GaN SLs instead have multiple Reststrahlen bands featuring spectral regions that exhibit either normal or extreme hyperbolic dispersion with both positive and negative permittivities dispersing rapidly with frequency. Apart from the ability to engineer the SPhP properties, SL structures may also lead to multifunctional devices that combine the mechanical, electrical, thermal, or optoelectronic functionality of the constituent layers. We propose that this effort is another step toward realizing user-defined, actively tunable IR optics and sources.
ScxAl1-xN is a promising ultra-wide bandgap material with a variety of potential applications in electronic, optoelectronic, and acoustoelectric devices related to its large piezoelectric and spontaneous polarization coefficients. We demonstrate growth of ScxAl1-xN on GaN and SiC substrates using plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy with x = 0.14–0.24. For metal-rich growth conditions, mixed cubic and wurtzite phases formed, while excellent film quality was demonstrated under N-rich growth conditions at temperatures between 520 and 730 °C. An rms roughness as low as 0.7 nm and 0002 rocking curve full-width at half maximum as low as 265 arc sec were measured for a Sc0.16Al0.84 N film on GaN. To further demonstrate the quality of the ScAlN material, a high-electron-mobility transistor heterostructure with a Sc0.14Al0.86 N barrier, GaN/AlN interlayers, and a GaN buffer was grown on SiC, which showed the presence of a two-dimensional electron gas with a sheet charge density of 3.4 × 1013 cm−2 and a Hall mobility of 910 cm2/V·s, resulting in a low sheet resistance of 213 Ω/◻.
We demonstrate electrically driven InGaN based laser diodes (LDs), with a simple AlGaN-cladding-free epitaxial structure, grown on semipolar (2021) GaN substrates. The devices employed In0.06Ga0.94N waveguiding layers to provide transverse optical mode confinement. A maximum lasing wavelength of 506.4 nm was observed under pulsed operation, which is the longest reported for AlGaN-cladding-free III-nitride LDs. The threshold current density (Jth) for index-guided LDs with uncoated etched facets was 23 kA/cm2, and 19 kA/cm2 after application of high-reflectivity (HR) coatings. A characteristic temperature (T0) value of ∼130 K and wavelength red-shift of ∼0.05 nm/K were confirmed.
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