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Van der Waals Integrated Silicon/Graphene/AlGaN Based Vertical Heterostructured Hot Electron Light Emitting Diodes

Silicon-based light emitting diodes (LED) are indispensable elements for the rapidly growing field of silicon compatible photonic integration platforms. In the present study, graphene has been utilized as an interfacial layer to realize a unique illumination mechanism for the silicon-based LEDs. We...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Manjunath, Nallappagari Krishnamurthy, Liu, Chang, Lu, Yanghua, Yu, Xutao, Lin, Shisheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7767542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33371474
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10122568
Descripción
Sumario:Silicon-based light emitting diodes (LED) are indispensable elements for the rapidly growing field of silicon compatible photonic integration platforms. In the present study, graphene has been utilized as an interfacial layer to realize a unique illumination mechanism for the silicon-based LEDs. We designed a Si/thick dielectric layer/graphene/AlGaN heterostructured LED via the van der Waals integration method. In forward bias, the Si/thick dielectric (HfO(2)-50 nm or SiO(2)-90 nm) heterostructure accumulates numerous hot electrons at the interface. At sufficient operational voltages, the hot electrons from the interface of the Si/dielectric can cross the thick dielectric barrier via the electron-impact ionization mechanism, which results in the emission of more electrons that can be injected into graphene. The injected hot electrons in graphene can ignite the multiplication exciton effect, and the created electrons can transfer into p-type AlGaN and recombine with holes resulting a broadband yellow-color electroluminescence (EL) with a center peak at 580 nm. In comparison, the n-Si/thick dielectric/p-AlGaN LED without graphene result in a negligible blue color EL at 430 nm in forward bias. This work demonstrates the key role of graphene as a hot electron active layer that enables the intense EL from silicon-based compound semiconductor LEDs. Such a simple LED structure may find applications in silicon compatible electronics and optoelectronics.