This alone has created the need to develop a radically new, nondestructive method for doping. Doping alters the electrical properties of a semiconductor, related to the access resistance. Low access resistance is necessary for high performance technology and reduced power consumption. In this work the authors reduced access resistance in top-down patterned Ge nanowires and Ge substrates by a non-destructive dopant in-diffusion process. Furthermore, an innovative electrical characterisation methodology is developed for nanowire and fin-based test structures to extract important parameters that are related to access resistance such as nanowire resistivity, sheet resistance, and active doping levels. Phosphine or arsine was flowed in a Metalorganic Vapour Phase Epitaxy reactor over heated Ge samples in the range of 650-700 C. Dopants were incorporated and activated in this single step. No Ge growth accompanied this process. Active doping levels were determined by electrochemical capacitance-voltage free carrier profiling to be in the range of 10 19 cm À3 . The nanowires were patterned in an array of widths from 20-1000 nm. Cross-sectional Transmission Electron Microscopy of the doped nanowires showed minimal crystal damage. Electrical characterisation of the Ge nanowires was performed to contrast doping activation in thin-body structures with that in bulk substrates. Despite the high As dose incorporation on unpatterned samples, the nanowire analysis determined that the P-based process was the better choice for scaled features.