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Vapor-Liquid-Solid Growth of Semiconductor SiC Nanowires for Electronics applications

While investigations of semiconductor nanowires (NWs) has a long history, a significant progress is yet to be made in silicon carbide (SiC) NW technologies before they are ready to be utilized in electronic applications. In this dissertation work, SiC NW polytype control, NW axis orientation with respect to the growth substrate and other issues of potential technological importance are investigated. A new method for growing SiC NWs by vapor-liquid-solid mechanism was developed. The method is based on an in-situ vapor phase delivery of a metal catalyst to the growth surface during chemical vapor deposition. This approach is an alternative to the existing seeded catalyst method based on ex-situ catalyst deposition on the target substrate. The new SiC NW growth method provided an improved control of the NW density. It was established that the NW density is influenced by the distance from the catalyst source to the substrate and is affected by both the gas flow rate and the catalyst diffusion in the gas phase. An important convenience of the new method is that it yields NW growth on the horizontal substrate surfaces as well as on titled and vertical sidewalls of 4H-SiC mesas. This feature facilitates investigation of the NW growth trends on SiC substrate surfaces having different crystallographic orientations simultaneously, which is very promising for future NW device applications. It was established that only certain orientations of the NW axes were allowed when growing on a SiC substrate. The allowed orientations of NWs of a particular polytype were determined by the crystallographic orientation of the substrate. This substrate-dependent (i.e., epitaxial) growth resulted in growth of 3C-SiC NWs in total six allowed crystallographic orientations with respect to the 4H-SiC substrate. This NW axis alignment offers an opportunity to achieve a limited number of NW axis directions depending on the surface orientation of the substrate. The ease of controlling the NW density enabled by the vapor-phase catalyst delivery approach developed in this work, combined with the newly obtained knowledge about how to grow unidirectional (wellaligned) NW arrays, offer new opportunities for developing novel SiC NW electronic and photonic devices.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MSSTATE/oai:scholarsjunction.msstate.edu:td-5945
Date17 August 2013
CreatorsThirumalai, Rooban Venkatesh K G
PublisherScholars Junction
Source SetsMississippi State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceTheses and Dissertations

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