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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Ferromagnet-Halbleiter-Nanodrahtstrukturen

Hilse, Maria 27 August 2015 (has links)
Das Thema dieser Arbeit ist die Synthese von Ferromagnet-Halbleiter-Nanodraht-Strukturen in einer Kern-Hülle-Geometrie. Diese wird mittels Molekularstrahlepitaxie unter der Verwendung von GaAs und Fe3Si ausgeführt. Im Zentrum der Arbeit steht die Frage, ob sich mit derartigen Strukturen Magnetisierungen senkrecht zum Substrat realisieren lassen. Eine solche Konfiguration der Magnetisierung innerhalb bestimmter Strukturen ist wünschenswert, denn sie bildet die Grundlage einiger zukunftsweisender spintronischer Bauteilkonzepte. Aufgrund der Formanisotropie dünner Schichten ist diese Konfiguration der Magnetisierung in planaren Strukturen nur mit erheblichem Aufwand zu bewerkstelligen. Bildet sich hingegen in den Nanodraht-Hüllen eine Stabmagnetisierung aus, so führt dies direkt zur gewünschten senkrechten Magnetisierung. Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit wird der Epitaxie-Prozess vorgestellt. Abhängig von den Wachstumsparametern können Hüllen mit glatten Seitenflachen, einer hohen Kristallordnung, ebenen Grenzflachen zum GaAs-Kern und epitaktischer Ausrichtung realisiert werden. Der zweite Teil behandelt die magnetischen Eigenschaften der Nanodrahte. Ensemble-Charakterisierungen sind hierbei in diesem Fall nicht geeignet. Einzeldraht-Messungen hingegen zeigen, dass sich in den Nanodraht-Hüllen wie erhofft eine Stabmagnetisierung ausbildet. Der dritte und letzte Teil dieser Dissertation umfasst die Einführung mehrerer zukunftsweisender Bauteilkonzepte, basierend auf den speziellen magnetischen Eigenschaften der hier vorgestellten Nanodrahte. Dazu gehören dreidimensionale Speicherarchitekturen mit bislang unerreichten Speicherkapazitäten und zirkular polarisiertes Licht emittierende Leuchtdioden für einen enorm schnellen Spininformations-Transfer zur Intrachip-Kommunikation. / The subject of the present work is the synthesis of ferromagnet-semiconductor coreshell nanowires. To realize such structures molecular beam epitaxy has been employed. For the investigation the well-suited materials systems GaAs and Fe3Si are used. Within the framework of this thesis the open question whether a magnetization in the nanowires that is perpendicular to the nanowire’s substrate can be realized is of special interest. Such a configuration of the magnetization is desirable, because some spintronic device concepts rely on magnetizations perpendicular to the substrate. In general, with the exception of very limited and highly specific materials, the shape anisotropy of thin magnetic layers causes the magnetic moments to orient along an in-plane direction and therefore, perpendicular configurations of the magnetization do not occur at equilibrium conditions. In contrast, magnetic nanowires with moments pointing along the wire axis directly provide the desired out-of plane magnetization. In the first part, the epitaxial procedure to realize the core-shell nanowires is described. Nanowires with smooth side walls, smooth interface to the GaAs core, a fairly high structural ordering and an epitaxial orientation relationship are produced. In the second part, the magnetic properties of the core-shell nanowires are analyzed. It is shown that characterizations of an ensemble of wires cannot resolve magnetic properties of the shells. Investigations on single nanowires however revealed that the magnetization in the shells is indeed as desired oriented along the wires. Several innovative device concepts based on the specific magnetic properties of these core-shell nanowires are finally introduced in the third part of this work. Within these concepts three-dimensional magnetic recording devices with unsurpassed data storage capacities and circular polarized light emitting diodes for tremendously fast spin information transfer for intrachip communication can be realized.
2

Self-assembled rolled-up devices: towards on-chip sensor technologies

Smith, Elliot John 13 September 2011 (has links) (PDF)
By implementing the rolled-up microfabrication method based on strain engineering, several systems are investigated within the contents of this thesis. The structural morphing of planar geometries into three-dimensional structures opens up many doors for the creation of unique material configurations and devices. An exploration into several novel microsystems, encompassing various scientific subjects, is made and methods for on-chip integration of these devices are presented. The roll-up of a metal and oxide allows for a cylindrical hollow-core structure with a cladding layer composed of a multilayer stack, plasmonic metamaterial. This structure can be used as a platform for a number of optical metamaterial devices. By guiding light radially through this structure, a theoretical investigation into the system makeup of a rolled-up hyperlens, is given. Using the same design, but rather propagating light parallel to the cylinder, a novel device known as a metamaterial optical fiber is defined. This fiber allows light to be guided classically and plasmonically within a single device. These fibers are developed experimentally and are integrated into preexisting on-chip structures and characterized. A system known as lab-in-a-tube is introduced. The idea of lab-in-a-tube combines various rolled-up components into a single all-encompassing biosensor that can be used to detect and monitor single bio-organisms. The first device specifically tailored to this system is developed, flexible split-wall microtube resonator sensors. A method for the capturing of embryonic mouse cells into on-chip optical resonators is introduced. The sensor can optically detect, via photoluminescence, living cells confined within the resonator through the compression and expansion of a nanogap built within its walls. The rolled-up fabrication method is not limited to the well-investigated systems based on the roll-up from semiconductor material or from a photoresist layer. A new approach, relying on the delamination of polymers, is presented. This offers never-before-realized microscale structures and configurations. This includes novel magnetic configurations and flexible fluidic sensors which can be designed for on-chip and roving detector applications.
3

Self-assembled rolled-up devices: towards on-chip sensor technologies

Smith, Elliot John 29 August 2011 (has links)
By implementing the rolled-up microfabrication method based on strain engineering, several systems are investigated within the contents of this thesis. The structural morphing of planar geometries into three-dimensional structures opens up many doors for the creation of unique material configurations and devices. An exploration into several novel microsystems, encompassing various scientific subjects, is made and methods for on-chip integration of these devices are presented. The roll-up of a metal and oxide allows for a cylindrical hollow-core structure with a cladding layer composed of a multilayer stack, plasmonic metamaterial. This structure can be used as a platform for a number of optical metamaterial devices. By guiding light radially through this structure, a theoretical investigation into the system makeup of a rolled-up hyperlens, is given. Using the same design, but rather propagating light parallel to the cylinder, a novel device known as a metamaterial optical fiber is defined. This fiber allows light to be guided classically and plasmonically within a single device. These fibers are developed experimentally and are integrated into preexisting on-chip structures and characterized. A system known as lab-in-a-tube is introduced. The idea of lab-in-a-tube combines various rolled-up components into a single all-encompassing biosensor that can be used to detect and monitor single bio-organisms. The first device specifically tailored to this system is developed, flexible split-wall microtube resonator sensors. A method for the capturing of embryonic mouse cells into on-chip optical resonators is introduced. The sensor can optically detect, via photoluminescence, living cells confined within the resonator through the compression and expansion of a nanogap built within its walls. The rolled-up fabrication method is not limited to the well-investigated systems based on the roll-up from semiconductor material or from a photoresist layer. A new approach, relying on the delamination of polymers, is presented. This offers never-before-realized microscale structures and configurations. This includes novel magnetic configurations and flexible fluidic sensors which can be designed for on-chip and roving detector applications.

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