2005
DOI: 10.1002/adma.200501832
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Microstructure and Composition of Focused‐Ion‐Beam‐Deposited Pt Contacts to GaN Nanowires

Abstract: GaN is a technologically important semiconductor with a wide direct bandgap (3.39 eV), and boasts strong light emission in the blue and UV regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. It finds extensive commercial applications in lasers and light-emitting diodes.[1] Because of its high melting temperature, high breakdown field, and high saturation drift velocity, it is a prime candidate for high-temperature, high-voltage, and high-power optoelectronic-device applications. In recent years, research interest in GaN … Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…36 The 17 W / m K average is surprisingly low compared to reported bulk values of 130-220 W / m K. 16,17 To verify that is not limited by the electron beam contacts, we measured several samples with different contact areas ͑different amounts of FEB deposited Pt͒ and different diameters ͑160, 100, and 181 nm͒ and found no systematic differences. If contact resistance was limiting the heat transport, we should observe a decreasing apparent with increasing NW diameter.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…36 The 17 W / m K average is surprisingly low compared to reported bulk values of 130-220 W / m K. 16,17 To verify that is not limited by the electron beam contacts, we measured several samples with different contact areas ͑different amounts of FEB deposited Pt͒ and different diameters ͑160, 100, and 181 nm͒ and found no systematic differences. If contact resistance was limiting the heat transport, we should observe a decreasing apparent with increasing NW diameter.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…FIBID tends to sputter away a few nm of the sample simultaneously to the growth of the deposit and can produce Ga implantation and amorphisation on the fi rst layers of the sample, as observed by Tham et al [ 19 ]. This was the reason why these authors observed ohmic contacts between GaAs nanowires and Pt FIBID deposits [ 20 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Metal particles can be obtained by pre-heating a very thin sputtered film which breaks up into droplet islands upon heating, or by some form of patterned deposition [27]. We have employed the catalytic VLS to the growth of Si and GaN nanowires [28][29][30][31].…”
Section: Nanowire Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pt contacts on bulk n-GaN are usually rectifying, due to the formation of a Schottky barrier at the contact interface, but using cross-sectional TEM we found that FIB-induced damage to the nanowires [30] produced sufficient disorder for Mott variable range hopping to dominate the contact conduction in sufficiently small nanowires [28].…”
Section: Device Fabrication and Assemblymentioning
confidence: 99%