AIP Advances (Jan 2016)

Protective capping and surface passivation of III-V nanowires by atomic layer deposition

  • Veer Dhaka,
  • Alexander Perros,
  • Shagufta Naureen,
  • Naeem Shahid,
  • Hua Jiang,
  • Joona-Pekko Kakko,
  • Tuomas Haggren,
  • Esko Kauppinen,
  • Anand Srinivasan,
  • Harri Lipsanen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4941063
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 015016 – 015016-7

Abstract

Read online

Low temperature (∼200 °C) grown atomic layer deposition (ALD) films of AlN, TiN, Al2O3, GaN, and TiO2 were tested for protective capping and surface passivation of bottom-up grown III-V (GaAs and InP) nanowires (NWs), and top-down fabricated InP nanopillars. For as-grown GaAs NWs, only the AlN material passivated the GaAs surface as measured by photoluminescence (PL) at low temperatures (15K), and the best passivation was achieved with a few monolayer thick (2Å) film. For InP NWs, the best passivation (∼2x enhancement in room-temperature PL) was achieved with a capping of 2nm thick Al2O3. All other ALD capping layers resulted in a de-passivation effect and possible damage to the InP surface. Top-down fabricated InP nanopillars show similar passivation effects as InP NWs. In particular, capping with a 2 nm thick Al2O3 layer increased the carrier decay time from 251 ps (as-etched nanopillars) to about 525 ps. Tests after six months ageing reveal that the capped nanostructures retain their optical properties. Overall, capping of GaAs and InP NWs with high-k dielectrics AlN and Al2O3 provides moderate surface passivation as well as long term protection from oxidation and environmental attack.