Band-gap engineering at a semiconductor - crystalline oxide interface

ORAL

Abstract

Abstract: The epitaxial growth of crystalline oxides on semiconductors provides a pathway to introduce new functionalities to semiconductor devices. Key to electrically coupling crystalline oxides with semiconductors to realize functional behavior is controlling the manner in which their bands align at interfaces. Here we apply principles of band gap engineering traditionally used at heterojunctions between conventional semiconductors to control the band offset between a single crystalline oxide and a semiconductor. Reactive molecular beam epitaxy is used to realize atomically abrupt and structurally coherent interfaces between SrZrxTi1$-$xO3 and Ge, in which the band-gap of the former is enhanced with Zr content x. We present structural and electrical characterization of SrZrxTi1$-$xO3-Ge heterojunctions for x $=$ 0.2 to 0.75 and demonstrate the band offset can be tuned from type-II to type-I, with the latter being verified using photoemission measurements. The type-I band offset provides a platform to integrate the dielectric, ferroelectric and ferromagnetic functionalities of oxides with semiconducting devices.

Authors

  • Kamyar Ahmadi-Majlan

    Univ of Texas, Arlington

  • Mohammadreza Jahangir-Moghadam

    Univ of Texas, Arlington

  • Xuan Shen

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Timothy C. Droubay

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

  • Mark Bowden

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

  • Matthew Chrysler

    Univ of Texas, Arlington

  • Dong Su

    Center for Functional Nanomaterials, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Scott Chambers

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

  • Joseph Ngai

    Univ of Texas, Arlington, Univ of Texas at Arlington