Strain Engineering Germanium-tin in Group IV Photonics
Title | Strain Engineering Germanium-tin in Group IV Photonics PDF eBook |
Author | Colleen Shang Fenrich |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2018 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The scaling of technology nodes to smaller length scales has enabled unprecedented growth for silicon integrated circuits (IC). The reduction of critical feature dimensions has allowed larger densities of integrated components and improved performance on the device level. At the same time, however, scaling has presented increasing challenges for the performance of global electrical interconnects, which comprise the longest wire lengths on a chip. One solution to overcoming the limitations of electrical interconnect technology is the integration of optical interconnects. While optical communications has already been employed on much larger length scales, the application of optical interconnects for chip-to-chip and on-chip communications has yet to be realized. In the IC industry, the silicon (Si) complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) platform has unified and enabled large-scale integration, but Si performs poorly as an active optical material due to its indirect band gap. As a result, an integrated Si laser has remained elusive in Si photonics, although the ability to leverage this platform for photonic integration has the potential to achieve low cost and high-throughput manufacturing, while maintaining compatibility with CMOS electronics. Developing a tunable direct band gap group IV semiconductor can instead be achieved using the binary germanium-tin system. The incorporation of Sn into the Ge crystal reduces the energy difference between the direct and indirect conduction band minima. A major challenge of the germanium-tin system is lattice mismatch with respect to Si or Ge-buffered Si substrates. Significant compressive strain arises from the coherent epitaxial growth of germanium-tin on these substrates, which inhibits the onset of the fundamental direct gap. This dissertation explores methods of strain engineering pseudomorphic germanium-tin epitaxy to relieve lattice mismatch strain that inhibits the onset of the fundamental direct band gap.
Germanium-tin
Title | Germanium-tin PDF eBook |
Author | Robert Chen |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2014 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The germanium-tin (GeSn) alloy system is a highly engineerable, Group-IV material system that has the potential to yield a useful direct bandgap, making it a desirable material for developing light emitters and other photonic devices. Furthermore, its Group-IV nature makes it electronically compatible with silicon and is important for ubiquitous integration into current silicon-based chips. In this dissertation, we explore several properties, features, design, and integration of GeSn alloys on silicon for photonics. Heterostructure devices with GeSn/Ge are developed in quantum-well microdisk resonators and quantum-well light-emitting diodes emitting beyond 2-[mu] m wavelength. Designs, considerations, and strategies towards developing GeSn-based lasers are presented and discussed.
SiGe, Ge, and Related Compounds 6: Materials, Processing, and Devices
Title | SiGe, Ge, and Related Compounds 6: Materials, Processing, and Devices PDF eBook |
Author | D. Harame |
Publisher | The Electrochemical Society |
Pages | 1042 |
Release | |
Genre | |
ISBN | 1607685434 |
Silicon Photonics IV
Title | Silicon Photonics IV PDF eBook |
Author | David J. Lockwood |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 512 |
Release | 2021-06-08 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 3030682226 |
This fourth book in the series Silicon Photonics gathers together reviews of recent advances in the field of silicon photonics that go beyond already established and applied concepts in this technology. The field of research and development in silicon photonics has moved beyond improvements of integrated circuits fabricated with complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology to applications in engineering, physics, chemistry, materials science, biology, and medicine. The chapters provided in this book by experts in their fields thus cover not only new research into the highly desired goal of light production in Group IV materials, but also new measurement regimes and novel technologies, particularly in information processing and telecommunication. The book is suited for graduate students, established scientists, and research engineers who want to update their knowledge in these new topics.
Optical Characterization of Group IV Heterostructures Based on Silicon, Germanium and Tin
Title | Optical Characterization of Group IV Heterostructures Based on Silicon, Germanium and Tin PDF eBook |
Author | Candi S. Cook |
Publisher | |
Pages | 106 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | Germanium alloys |
ISBN |
Molecular Beam Epitaxy
Title | Molecular Beam Epitaxy PDF eBook |
Author | Mohamed Henini |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Pages | 790 |
Release | 2018-06-27 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 0128121378 |
Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE): From Research to Mass Production, Second Edition, provides a comprehensive overview of the latest MBE research and applications in epitaxial growth, along with a detailed discussion and 'how to' on processing molecular or atomic beams that occur on the surface of a heated crystalline substrate in a vacuum. The techniques addressed in the book can be deployed wherever precise thin-film devices with enhanced and unique properties for computing, optics or photonics are required. It includes new semiconductor materials, new device structures that are commercially available, and many that are at the advanced research stage. This second edition covers the advances made by MBE, both in research and in the mass production of electronic and optoelectronic devices. Enhancements include new chapters on MBE growth of 2D materials, Si-Ge materials, AIN and GaN materials, and hybrid ferromagnet and semiconductor structures. - Condenses the fundamental science of MBE into a modern reference, speeding up literature review - Discusses new materials, novel applications and new device structures, grounding current commercial applications with modern understanding in industry and research - Includes coverage of MBE as mass production epitaxial technology and how it enhances processing efficiency and throughput for the semiconductor industry and nanostructured semiconductor materials research community
Photonic Integration and Photonics-Electronics Convergence on Silicon Platform
Title | Photonic Integration and Photonics-Electronics Convergence on Silicon Platform PDF eBook |
Author | Koji Yamada |
Publisher | Frontiers Media SA |
Pages | 111 |
Release | 2015-11-10 |
Genre | Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) |
ISBN | 2889196933 |
Silicon photonics technology, which has the DNA of silicon electronics technology, promises to provide a compact photonic integration platform with high integration density, mass-producibility, and excellent cost performance. This technology has been used to develop and to integrate various photonic functions on silicon substrate. Moreover, photonics-electronics convergence based on silicon substrate is now being pursued. Thanks to these features, silicon photonics will have the potential to be a superior technology used in the construction of energy-efficient cost-effective apparatuses for various applications, such as communications, information processing, and sensing. Considering the material characteristics of silicon and difficulties in microfabrication technology, however, silicon by itself is not necessarily an ideal material. For example, silicon is not suitable for light emitting devices because it is an indirect transition material. The resolution and dynamic range of silicon-based interference devices, such as wavelength filters, are significantly limited by fabrication errors in microfabrication processes. For further performance improvement, therefore, various assisting materials, such as indium-phosphide, silicon-nitride, germanium-tin, are now being imported into silicon photonics by using various heterogeneous integration technologies, such as low-temperature film deposition and wafer/die bonding. These assisting materials and heterogeneous integration technologies would also expand the application field of silicon photonics technology. Fortunately, silicon photonics technology has superior flexibility and robustness for heterogeneous integration. Moreover, along with photonic functions, silicon photonics technology has an ability of integration of electronic functions. In other words, we are on the verge of obtaining an ultimate technology that can integrate all photonic and electronic functions on a single Si chip. This e-Book aims at covering recent developments of the silicon photonic platform and novel functionalities with heterogeneous material integrations on this platform.