Fabrication, Characterization and Analysis of Concentrically Strained Silicon Nanowires with Extremely-High Hole Mobility

2020 
The findings from the time-of-flight (TOF) experiment for strained silicon nanowires are reported in this article, in combination with numerical simulations demonstrating new physical features involved in the quasi-quantum regime. The drift velocity of valence holes is demonstrated to exceed greatly that of conduction electrons. These experimental data are accurately reproduced by our simulations, revealing a dramatic reduction in the hole’s effective mass as well as a significant extension of the mean-free time between two consecutive random scattering events due to combined effects of both quantum confinement and biaxial strain. Many-body theory is further introduced for calculating elastic-scattering rate of impurities with the inclusion of static screening under the random-phase approximation. Dark current, photo-current and photoluminescence spectra are all measured in our experiments, in addition to direct TOF experiment by employing a Ti-sapphire mode-locked femtosecond laser, and their data are fully analyzed and physically explained by using both simulations and many-body theory. Our observation that the Einstein’s relation does not hold true for 1-D transport under a strong electric field is supported by a quantum-statistical calculation. Our discovery with a very large hole mobility is expected to play a key role in establishing a much more straight-forward technical path towards high-performance CMOS and radio-frequency amplifiers than current ones.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    46
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []