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Now showing 1 - 9 of 9
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    Undiscovered Potential: Ge Catalysts for Lactide Polymerization
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2020) Rittinghaus, Ruth D.; Tremmel, Jakub; Růžička, Ales; Conrads, Christian; Albrecht, Pascal; Hoffmann, Alexander; Ksiazkiewicz, Agnieszka N.; Pich, Andrij; Jambor, Roman; Herres-Pawlis, Sonja
    Polylactide (PLA) is a high potential bioplastic that can replace oil-based plastics in a number of applications. To date, in spite of its known toxicity, a tin catalyst is used on industrial scale which should be replaced by a benign catalyst in the long run. Germanium is known to be unharmful while having similar properties as tin. Only few germylene catalysts are known so far and none has shown the potential for industrial application. We herein present Ge complexes in combination with zinc and copper, which show amazingly high polymerization activities for lactide in bulk at 150 °C. By systematical variation of the complex structure, proven by single-crystal XRD and DFT calculations, structure–property relationships are found regarding the polymerization activity. Even in the presence of zinc and copper, germanium acts as the active site for polymerizing probably through the coordination–insertion mechanism to high molar mass polymers. © 2019 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.
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    Molecular Beam Epitaxy Growth and Characterization of Germanium-Doped Cubic AlxGa1−xN
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2020) Deppe, Michael; Henksmeier, Tobias; Gerlach, Jürgen W.; Reuter, Dirk; As, Donat J.
    In cubic (c-)GaN Ge has emerged as a promising alternative to Si for n-type doping, offering the advantage of slightly improved electrical properties. Herein, a study on Ge doping of the ternary alloy c-AlxGa1−xN is presented. Ge-doped c-AlxGa1−xN layers are grown by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. In two sample series, both the Al mole fraction x and the doping level are varied. The incorporation of Ge is verified by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Ge incorporation and donor concentrations rise exponentially with increasing Ge cell temperature. A maximum donor concentration of 1.4 × 1020 cm−3 is achieved. While the incorporation of Ge is almost independent of x, incorporation of O, which acts as an unintentional donor, increases for higher x. Dislocation densities start increasing when doping levels of around 3 × 1019 cm−3 are exceeded. Also photoluminescence intensities begin to drop at these high doping levels. Optical emission of layers with x > 0.25 is found to originate from a defect level 0.9 eV below the indirect bandgap, which is not related to Ge. In the investigated range 0 ≤ x ≤ 0.6, Ge is a suitable donor in c-AlxGa1−xN up to the low 1019 cm−3 range.
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    Gate-controlled quantum dots and superconductivity in planar germanium
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018) Hendrickx, N.W.; Franke, D.P.; Sammak, A.; Kouwenhoven, M.; Sabbagh, D.; Yeoh, L.; Li, R.; Tagliaferri, M.L.V.; Virgilio, M.; Capellini, G.; Scappucci, G.; Veldhorst, M.
    Superconductors and semiconductors are crucial platforms in the field of quantum computing. They can be combined to hybrids, bringing together physical properties that enable the discovery of new emergent phenomena and provide novel strategies for quantum control. The involved semiconductor materials, however, suffer from disorder, hyperfine interactions or lack of planar technology. Here we realise an approach that overcomes these issues altogether and integrate gate-defined quantum dots and superconductivity into germanium heterostructures. In our system, heavy holes with mobilities exceeding 500,000 cm2 (Vs)−1 are confined in shallow quantum wells that are directly contacted by annealed aluminium leads. We observe proximity-induced superconductivity in the quantum well and demonstrate electric gate-control of the supercurrent. Germanium therefore has great promise for fast and coherent quantum hardware and, being compatible with standard manufacturing, could become a leading material for quantum information processing.
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    Strong confinement-induced engineering of the g factor and lifetime of conduction electron spins in Ge quantum wells
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2016) Giorgioni, Anna; Paleari, Stefano; Cecchi, Stefano; Vitiello, Elisa; Grilli, Emanuele; Isella, Giovanni; Jantsch, Wolfgang; Fanciulli, Marco; Pezzoli, Fabio
    Control of electron spin coherence via external fields is fundamental in spintronics. Its implementation demands a host material that accommodates the desirable but contrasting requirements of spin robustness against relaxation mechanisms and sizeable coupling between spin and orbital motion of the carriers. Here, we focus on Ge, which is a prominent candidate for shuttling spin quantum bits into the mainstream Si electronics. So far, however, the intrinsic spin-dependent phenomena of free electrons in conventional Ge/Si heterojunctions have proved to be elusive because of epitaxy constraints and an unfavourable band alignment. We overcome these fundamental limitations by investigating a two-dimensional electron gas in quantum wells of pure Ge grown on Si. These epitaxial systems demonstrate exceptionally long spin lifetimes. In particular, by fine-tuning quantum confinement we demonstrate that the electron Landé g factor can be engineered in our CMOS-compatible architecture over a range previously inaccessible for Si spintronics.
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    Electronic materials with a wide band gap: Recent developments
    (Chester : International Union of Crystallography, 2014) Klimm, D.
    The development of semiconductor electronics is reviewed briefly, beginning with the development of germanium devices (band gap E g = 0.66 eV) after World War II. A tendency towards alternative materials with wider band gaps quickly became apparent, starting with silicon (E g = 1.12 eV). This improved the signal-to-noise ratio for classical electronic applications. Both semiconductors have a tetrahedral coordination, and by isoelectronic alternative replacement of Ge or Si with carbon or various anions and cations, other semiconductors with wider E g were obtained. These are transparent to visible light and belong to the group of wide band gap semiconductors. Nowadays, some nitrides, especially GaN and AlN, are the most important materials for optical emission in the ultraviolet and blue regions. Oxide crystals, such as ZnO and β-Ga2O3, offer similarly good electronic properties but still suffer from significant difficulties in obtaining stable and technologically adequate p-type conductivity.
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    Modeling of edge-emitting lasers based on tensile strained germanium microstrips
    (New York, NY : IEEE, 2015) Peschka, D.; Thomas, M.; Glitzky, A.; Nürnberg, R.; Gärtner, K.; Virgilio, M.; Guha, S.; Schroeder, T.; Capellini, G.; Koprucki, Th.
    In this paper, we present a thorough modeling of an edge-emitting laser based on strained germanium (Ge) microstrips. The full-band structure of the tensile strained Ge layer enters the calculation of optical properties. Material gain for strained Ge is used in the 2D simulation of the carrier transport and of the optical field within a cross section of the microstrips orthogonal to the optical cavity. We study optoelectronic properties of the device for two different designs. The simulation results are very promising as they show feasible ways toward Ge emitter devices with lower threshold currents and higher efficiency as published insofar.
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    Shallow and Undoped Germanium Quantum Wells: A Playground for Spin and Hybrid Quantum Technology
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2019) Sammak, Amir; Sabbagh, Diego; Hendrickx, Nico W.; Lodari, Mario; Wuetz, Brian Paquelet; Tosato, Alberto; Yeoh, LaReine; Bollani, Monica; Virgilio, Michele; Schubert, Markus Andreas; Zaumseil, Peter; Capellini, Giovanni; Veldhorst, Menno; Scappucci, Giordano
    Buried-channel semiconductor heterostructures are an archetype material platform for the fabrication of gated semiconductor quantum devices. Sharp confinement potential is obtained by positioning the channel near the surface; however, nearby surface states degrade the electrical properties of the starting material. Here, a 2D hole gas of high mobility (5 × 10 5 cm 2 V −1 s −1 ) is demonstrated in a very shallow strained germanium (Ge) channel, which is located only 22 nm below the surface. The top-gate of a dopant-less field effect transistor controls the channel carrier density confined in an undoped Ge/SiGe heterostructure with reduced background contamination, sharp interfaces, and high uniformity. The high mobility leads to mean free paths ≈ 6 µm, setting new benchmarks for holes in shallow field effect transistors. The high mobility, along with a percolation density of 1.2 × 10 11 cm −2 , light effective mass (0.09m e ), and high effective g-factor (up to 9.2) highlight the potential of undoped Ge/SiGe as a low-disorder material platform for hybrid quantum technologies. © 2019 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
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    X-ray nanodiffraction on a single SiGe quantum dot inside a functioning field-effect transistor
    (Washington, DC : American Chemical Society, 2011) Hrauda, N.; Zhang, J.; Wintersberger, E.; Etzelstorfer, T.; Mandl, B.; Stangl, J.; Carbone, D.; Holý, V.; Jovanović, V.; Biasotto, C.; Nanver, L.K.; Moers, J.; Grützmacher, D.; Bauer, G.
    For advanced electronic, optoelectronic, or mechanical nanoscale devices a detailed understanding of their structural properties and in particular the strain state within their active region is of utmost importance. We demonstrate that X-ray nanodiffraction represents an excellent tool to investigate the internal structure of such devices in a nondestructive way by using a focused synchotron X-ray beam with a diameter of 400 nm. We show results on the strain fields in and around a single SiGe island, which serves as stressor for the Si-channel in a fully functioning Si-metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor.
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    Effect of Ge-doping on the short-wave, mid- and far-infrared intersubband transitions in GaN/AlGaN heterostructures
    (Bristol : IOP, 2017) Lim, Carolin B.; Ajay, Akhil; Lähnemann, Jonas; Bougerol, Catherine; Monroy, Eva
    This paper assesses the effects of Ge-doping on the structural and optical (band-to-band and intersubband (ISB)) properties of GaN/AlGaN multi-quantum wells (QWs) designed to display ISB absorption in the short-wave, mid- and far-infrared ranges (SWIR, MIR, and FIR, respectively). The standard c-plane crystallographic orientation is considered for wells absorbing in the SWIR and MIR spectral regions, whereas the FIR structures are grown along the nonpolar m-axis. In all cases, we compare the characteristics of Ge-doped and Si-doped samples with the same design and various doping levels. The use of Ge appears to improve the mosaicity of the highly lattice-mismatched GaN/AlN heterostructures. However, when reducing the lattice mismatch, the mosaicity is rather determined by the substrate and does not show any dependence on the dopant nature or concentration. From the optical point of view, by increasing the dopant density, we observe a blueshift of the photoluminescence in polar samples due to the screening of the internal electric field by free carriers. In the ISB absorption, on the other hand, there is a systematic improvement of the linewidth when using Ge as a dopant for high doping levels, whatever the spectral region under consideration (i.e. different QW size, barrier composition and crystallographic orientation).