
Measuring, controlling and exploiting heterogeneity in optoelectronic nanowires
Author(s) -
Ruqaiya AlAbri,
Ho Yeon Choi,
Patrick Parkinson
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jphys photonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2515-7647
DOI - 10.1088/2515-7647/abe282
Subject(s) - nanowire , materials science , chalcogenide , heterojunction , optoelectronics , substrate (aquarium) , lasing threshold , semiconductor , nanotechnology , electroluminescence , wavelength , layer (electronics) , oceanography , geology
Fabricated from ZnO, III-N, chalcogenide-based, III-V, hybrid perovskite or other materials, semiconductor nanowires offer single-element and array functionality as photovoltaic, non-linear, electroluminescent and lasing components. In many applications their advantageous properties emerge from their geometry; a high surface-to-volume ratio for facile access to carriers, wavelength-scale dimensions for waveguiding or a small nanowire-substrate footprint enabling heterogeneous growth. However, inhomogeneity during bottom-up growth is ubiquitous and can impact morphology, geometry, crystal structure, defect density, heterostructure dimensions and ultimately functional performance. In this topical review, we discuss the origin and impact of heterogeneity within and between optoelectronic nanowires, and introduce methods to assess, optimise and ultimately exploit wire-to-wire disorder.