Anisotropic size quantization and semimetal-semiconductor phase transition in bismuth-like cylindrical nanowires
Закрыть
Conţinutul numărului revistei
Articolul precedent
Articolul urmator
142 0
SM ISO690:2012
BEJENARI, Igor, KANTSER, Valeriu, MYRONOV, Maksym, MIRONOV, O., LEADLEY, David R.. Anisotropic size quantization and semimetal-semiconductor phase transition in bismuth-like cylindrical nanowires. In: Semiconductor Science and Technology, 2004, vol. 19, pp. 106-112. ISSN 0268-1242. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1088/0268-1242/19/1/018
EXPORT metadate:
Google Scholar
Crossref
CERIF

DataCite
Dublin Core
Semiconductor Science and Technology
Volumul 19 / 2004 / ISSN 0268-1242

Anisotropic size quantization and semimetal-semiconductor phase transition in bismuth-like cylindrical nanowires

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1088/0268-1242/19/1/018

Pag. 106-112

Bejenari Igor1, Kantser Valeriu12, Myronov Maksym2, Mironov O.2, Leadley David R.2
 
1 Academy of Sciences of Moldova,
2 University of Warwick
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 1 septembrie 2023


Rezumat

The electronic subband structure of carriers in bismuth-like cylindrical nanowires is investigated analytically, using an anisotropic effective mass model. Quantum confinement effects are found to be significantly enhanced over the results of a quasi-isotropic approach, due to the correct consideration of both the mass anisotropy and the boundary shape of the wire. The size quantization problem for a carrier with anisotropic effective mass parameters in a cylindrical well is shown to be equivalent to that of a carrier with some isotropic effective mass in an elliptical well. Detailed study of the energy levels reveals their orbital degeneracy is lifted by the elliptic symmetry, where the degree of ellipticity corresponds to the mass anisotropy. Carrier motion is analysed by analogy to the geometrical optics of elliptic waveguides, with bounding caustic curves defining two groups inside the wire that correspond to 'whispering gallery' and 'jumping ball' modes. The additional confinement, arising from the mass anisotropy, leads to larger critical wire diameters for the semimetal-to-semiconductor transition, which is investigated for wires of different crystallographic orientation.

Cuvinte-cheie
Anisotropy, Approximation theory, Band structure, boundary conditions, Carrier mobility, Crystal orientation, Geometrical optics, Metalloids, Phase transitions, Semiconductor materials, Wave equations, Waveguides