Wide-bandgap semiconductors are now leading the way to new physical phenomena and device applications at nanoscale dimensions. The impact of defects on the electronic properties of these materials increases as their size decreases, motivating new techniques to characterize and begin to control these electronic states. Leading these advances have been the semiconductors ZnO, GaN, and related materials. This paper highlights the importance of native point defects in these semiconductors and describes how a complement of spatially localized surface science and spectroscopy techniques in three dimensions can characterize, image, and begin to control these electronic states at the nanoscale. A combination of characterization techniques including depth-resolved cathodoluminescence spectroscopy, surface photovoltage spectroscopy, and hyperspectral imaging can describe the nature and distribution of defects at interfaces at both bulk and nanoscale surfaces, their metal interfaces, and inside nanostructures themselves. These features as well as temperature and mechanical strain inside wide-bandgap device structures at the nanoscale can be measured even while these devices are operating. These advanced capabilities enable several new directions for describing defects at the nanoscale, showing how they contribute to device degradation, and guiding growth processes to control them.
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Advanced Thermoluminescence Spectroscopy as a Research Tool for Semiconductor and Photonic Materials: A Review and Perspective
Thermoluminescence (TL) or thermally stimulated luminescence (TSL) spectroscopy is based on liberating charge carriers from traps in the bandgap by providing enough thermal energy to overcome the potential barrier of the traps. It provides a powerful tool to measure the positions of the localized states/traps in the bandgap. Despite that, its applications in semiconductors are very limited. Herein, the basics of TL spectroscopy and the recent advances in the technique with focus on cryogenic thermally stimulated photoemission spectroscopy (C‐TSPS) which extends TL measurements to cryogenic regime and allows the detection of very low concentrations of shallow and deep localized states is discussed. One goal herein is to introduce the reader to the use of TL and C‐TSPS in the characterization of semiconductors, explaining how it can be applied and demonstrating its advantages as a powerful tool for measuring shallow donor/acceptor ionization energies in semiconductors and as a method for characterizing compensating defects. The article also discusses interesting potential applications of C‐TSPS in new research areas such as corrosion and formation of oxide layers on metal surfaces.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2005064
- PAR ID:
- 10401008
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- physica status solidi (a)
- Volume:
- 220
- Issue:
- 10
- ISSN:
- 1862-6300
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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