Electron transport lifetimes in InSb/Al1-xInxSb quantum well 2DEGs
Author(s) -
D.G. Hayes,
Craig P. Allford,
G. V. Smith,
Christopher J. McIndo,
Laura A. Hanks,
A. M. Gilbertson,
L. F. Cohen,
S. J. Zhang,
Edmund Clarke,
P. D. Buckle
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
semiconductor science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.712
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1361-6641
pISSN - 0268-1242
DOI - 10.1088/1361-6641/aa75c8
Subject(s) - scattering , quantum well , condensed matter physics , electron , impurity , chemistry , fermi gas , shubnikov–de haas effect , doping , electron mobility , electron density , ionization , atomic physics , physics , quantum oscillations , ion , quantum mechanics , laser , organic chemistry
We report magnetotransport measurements of InSb/Al1-xInxSb modulation doped quantum well (QW) structures and the extracted transport ( ) tt and quantum (tq) lifetime of carriers at low temperature (<2K.) We consider conventional transport lifetimes over a range of samples with different doping levels and carrier densities, and deduce different transport regimes dependent on QW state filling calculated from self-consistent Schrödinger–Poisson modelling. For samples where only the lowest QW subband is occupied at electron densities of 2.13 10 ´ 11 cm−2 and 2.54 10 ´ 11 cm−2 quantum lifetimes of tq » 0.107 ps, and tq » 0.103 ps are extracted from Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations below a magnetic field of 0.8 T. The extracted ratios of transport to quantum lifetimes, t t t q » 17 and t t t q » 20 are similar to values reported in other binary QW two-dimensional electron gas systems, but are inconsistent with predictions from transport modelling which assumes that remote ionized donors are the dominant scattering mechanism. We find the low t t t q ratio and the variation in transport mobility with carrier density cannot be explained by reasonable levels of background impurities or well width fluctuations. Thus, there is at least one additional scattering mechanism unaccounted for, most likely arising from structural defects
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