Hot Carrier Trapping Induced Negative Photoconductance in InAs Nanowires toward Novel Nonvolatile Memory
- Authors
- Yang, Yiming; Peng, Xingyue; Kim, Hong-Seok; Kim, Taeho; Jeon, Sanghun; Kang, Hang Kyu; Choi, Wonjun; Song, Jindong; Doh, Yong-Joo; Yu, Dong
- Issue Date
- 9월-2015
- Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
- Keywords
- Nanowire; hot carriers; negative photoconductance; indium arsenide; scanning photocurrent microscopy; nonvolatile memory
- Citation
- NANO LETTERS, v.15, no.9, pp.5875 - 5882
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- NANO LETTERS
- Volume
- 15
- Number
- 9
- Start Page
- 5875
- End Page
- 5882
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/92658
- DOI
- 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01962
- ISSN
- 1530-6984
- Abstract
- We report a novel negative photoconductivity (NPC) mechanism in n-type indium arsenide nanowires (NWs). Photoexcitation significantly suppresses the conductivity with a gain up to 10(5). The origin of NPC is attributed to the depletion of conduction channels by light assisted hot electron trapping, supported by gate voltage threshold shift and wavelength-dependent photoconductance measurements. Scanning photocurrent microscopy excludes the possibility that NPC originates from the NW/metal contacts and reveals a competing positive photoconductivity. The conductivity recovery after illumination substantially slows down at low temperature, indicating a thermally activated detrapping mechanism. At 78 K, the spontaneous recovery of the conductance is completely quenched, resulting in a reversible memory device, which can be switched by light and gate voltage pulses. The novel NPC based optoelectronics may find exciting applications in photodetection and nonvolatile memory with low power consumption.
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Collections - College of Science and Technology > Display Convergence in Division of Display and Semiconductor Physics > 1. Journal Articles
- Graduate School > Department of Applied Physics > 1. Journal Articles
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