Minority-carrier diffusion length, minority-carrier lifetime, and photoresponsivity of β-FeSi2 layers grown by molecular-beam epitaxy
Author(s) -
Keiichi Akutsu,
Hideki Kawakami,
Mitsushi Suzuno,
Takashi Yaguchi,
Karolin Jiptner,
Jun Chen,
Takashi Sekiguchi,
Teruhisa Ootsuka,
Takashi Suemasu
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of applied physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1089-7550
pISSN - 0021-8979
DOI - 10.1063/1.3596565
Subject(s) - molecular beam epitaxy , hydrogen , analytical chemistry (journal) , diffusion , epitaxy , materials science , carrier lifetime , molecular beam , chemistry , atomic physics , optoelectronics , silicon , nanotechnology , physics , organic chemistry , layer (electronics) , chromatography , thermodynamics , molecule
We have epitaxially grown undoped β-FeSi2 films on Si(111) substrates via atomic-hydrogen-assisted molecular-beam epitaxy. β-FeSi2 films grown without atomic hydrogen exhibited p-type conduction with a hole density of over 1019 cm−3 at room temperature (RT). In contrast, those prepared with atomic hydrogen showed n-type conduction and had a residual electron density that was more than two orders of magnitude lower than the hole density of films grown without atomic hydrogen (of the order of 1016 cm−3 at RT). The minority-carrier diffusion length was estimated to be approximately 16 μm using an electron-beam-induced current technique; this value is twice as large as that for β-FeSi2 prepared without atomic hydrogen. This result could be well explained in terms of the minority-carrier lifetimes measured by a microwave photoconductance decay technique. The 1/e decay time using a 904 nm laser pulse was approximately 17 μs, which is much longer than that for β-FeSi2 prepared without atomic hydrogen (3 μs). The photoresponsivity reached 13 mA/W at 1.31 μm, which is the highest value ever reported for β-FeSi2 films
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