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1.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(10): 2388-2395, 2022 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35257587

ABSTRACT

The optoelectronic properties of lead halide perovskite thin films can be tuned through compositional variations and strain, but the associated nanocrystalline structure makes it difficult to untangle the link between composition, processing conditions, and ultimately material properties and degradation. Here, we study the effect of processing conditions and degradation on the local photoconductivity dynamics in [(CsPbI3)0.05(FAPbI3)0.85(MAPbBr3)0.15] and (FA0.7Cs0.3PbI3) perovskite thin films using temporally and spectrally resolved microwave near-field microscopy with a temporal resolution as high as 5 ns and a spatial resolution better than 50 nm. For the latter FACs formulation, we find a clear effect of the process annealing temperature on film morphology, stability, and spatial photoconductivity distribution. After exposure of samples to ambient conditions and illumination, we find spectral evidence of halide segregation-induced degradation below the instrument resolution limit for the mixed halide formulation, while we find a clear spatially inhomogeneous increase in the carrier lifetime for the FACs formulation annealed at 180 °C.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 32(19): 195710, 2021 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33477125

ABSTRACT

Electrical scanning probe microscopies (SPM) use ultrasharp metallic tips to obtain nanometer spatial resolution and are a key tool for characterizing nanoscale semiconducting materials and systems. However, these tips are not passive probes; their high work functions can induce local band bending whose effects depend sensitively on the local geometry and material properties and thus are inherently difficult to quantify. We use sequential finite element simulations to first explore the magnitude and spatial distribution of charge reorganization due to tip-induced band bending (TIBB) for planar and nanostructured geometries. We demonstrate that tip-induced depletion and accumulation of carriers can be significantly modified in confined geometries such as nanowires compared to a bulk planar response. This charge reorganization is due to finite size effects that arise as the nanostructure size approaches the Debye length, with significant implications for a range of SPM techniques. We then use the reorganized charge distribution from our model to describe experimentally measured quantities, using in operando scanning microwave impedance microscopy measurements on axial p-i-n silicon nanowire devices as a specific example. By incorporating TIBB, we reveal that our experimentally observed enhancement (absence) of contrast at the p-i (i-n) junction is explained by the tip-induced accumulation (depletion) of carriers at the interface. Our results demonstrate that the inclusion of TIBB is critical for an accurate interpretation of electrical SPM measurements, and is especially important for weakly screening or low-doped materials, as well as the complex doping patterns and confined geometries commonly encountered in nanoscale systems.

3.
ACS Nano ; 14(10): 14080-14090, 2020 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33044054

ABSTRACT

The optical and electronic properties of 2D semiconductors are intrinsically linked via the strong interactions between optically excited bound species and free carriers. Here we use near-field scanning microwave microscopy (SMM) to image spatial variations in photoconductivity in MoS2-WS2 lateral multijunction heterostructures using photon energy-resolved narrowband illumination. We find that the onset of photoconductivity in individual domains corresponds to the optical absorption onset, confirming that the tightly bound excitons in transition metal dichalcogenides can nonetheless dissociate into free carriers. These photogenerated carriers are most likely n-type and are seen to persist for up to days. Informed by finite element modeling we reveal that they can increase the carrier density by up to 200 times. This persistent photoconductivity appears to be dominated by contributions from the multilayer MoS2 domains, and we attribute the flake-wide response in part to charge transfer across the heterointerface. Spatial correlation of our SMM imaging with photoluminescence (PL) mapping confirms the strong link between PL peak emission photon energy, PL intensity, and the local accumulated charge. This work reveals the spatially and temporally complex optoelectronic response of these systems and cautions that properties measured during or after illumination may not reflect the true dark state of these materials but rather a metastable charged state.

4.
Nano Lett ; 19(2): 1289-1294, 2019 02 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30673247

ABSTRACT

The development of van der Waals (vdW) homojunction devices requires materials with narrow bandgaps and simultaneously high hole and electron mobilities for bipolar transport, as well as methods to image and study spatial variations in carrier type and associated conductivity with nanometer spatial resolution. Here, we demonstrate the general capability of near-field scanning microwave microscopy (SMM) to image and study the local carrier type and associated conductivity in operando by studying ambiploar field-effect transistors (FETs) of the 1D vdW material tellurium in 2D form. To quantitatively understand electronic variations across the device, we produce nanometer-resolved maps of the local carrier equivalence backgate voltage. We show that the global device conductivity minimum determined from transport measurements does not arise from uniform carrier neutrality but rather from the continued coexistence of p-type regions at the device edge and n-type regions in the interior of our micrometer-scale devices. This work both underscores and addresses the need to image and understand spatial variations in the electronic properties of nanoscale devices.

5.
Nano Lett ; 17(3): 1796-1801, 2017 03 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28151679

ABSTRACT

We perform scanning microwave microscopy (SMM) to study the spatially varying electronic properties and related morphology of pristine and degraded methylammonium lead-halide (MAPI) perovskite films fabricated under different ambient humidity. We find that higher processing humidity leads to the emergence of increased conductivity at the grain boundaries but also correlates with the appearance of resistive grains that contain PbI2. Deteriorated films show larger and increasingly insulating grain boundaries as well as spatially localized regions of reduced conductivity within grains. These results suggest that while humidity during film fabrication primarily benefits device properties due to the passivation of traps at the grain boundaries and self-doping, it also results in the emergence of PbI2-containing grains. We further establish that MAPI film deterioration under ambient conditions proceeds via the spatially localized breakdown of film conductivity, both at grain boundaries and within grains, due to local variations in susceptibility to deterioration. These results confirm that PbI2 has both beneficial and adverse effects on device performance and provide new means for device optimization by revealing spatial variations in sample conductivity as well as morphological differences in resistance to sample deterioration.

6.
Appl Phys Lett ; 108(7)2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38486617

ABSTRACT

Despite their uniform crystallinity, the shape and faceting of semiconducting nanowires (NWs) can give rise to variations in structure and associated electronic properties. Here we develop a hybrid scanning probe-based methodology to investigate local variations in electronic structure across individual n-doped GaN NWs integrated into a transistor device. We perform scanning microwave microscopy (SMM), which we combine with scanning gate microscopy (SGM) to determine the free-carrier SMM signal contribution and image local charge carrier density variations. In particular, we find significant variations in free carriers across NWs, with a higher carrier density at the wire facets. By increasing the local carrier density through tip-gating, we find that the tip injects current into the NW with strongly localized current when positioned over the wire vertices. These results suggest that the strong variations in electronic properties observed within NWs have significant implications for device design and may lead to new paths to optimization.

7.
Nano Lett ; 15(2): 1122-7, 2015 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25625509

ABSTRACT

Optimizing new generations of two-dimensional devices based on van der Waals materials will require techniques capable of measuring variations in electronic properties in situ and with nanometer spatial resolution. We perform scanning microwave microscopy (SMM) imaging of single layers of MoS2 and n- and p-doped WSe2. By controlling the sample charge carrier concentration through the applied tip bias, we are able to reversibly control and optimize the SMM contrast to image variations in electronic structure and the localized effects of surface contaminants. By further performing tip bias-dependent point spectroscopy together with finite element simulations, we distinguish the effects of the quantum capacitance and determine the local dominant charge carrier species and dopant concentration. These results underscore the capability of SMM for the study of 2D materials to image, identify, and study electronic defects.

8.
Nanotechnology ; 25(41): 415502, 2014 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25258349

ABSTRACT

GaN nanowires were coated with tungsten by means of atomic layer deposition. These structures were then adapted as probe tips for near-field scanning microwave microscopy. These probes displayed a capacitive resolution of ~0.03 fF, which surpasses that of a commercial Pt tip. Upon imaging of MoS2 sheets with both the Pt and GaN nanowire tips, we found that the nanowire tips were comparatively immune to surface contamination and far more durable than their Pt counterparts.

9.
Nano Lett ; 7(4): 1086-90, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17375962

ABSTRACT

The electrical response of an individual multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWNT) and its contacts, welded to a coplanar waveguide (CPW), was measured up to 24 GHz using a technique that removes environment effects. This is the first time MWNT contact effects have been systematically isolated from the CPW. Each contact response was quite different and also showed a pronounced sensitivity to ambient light. Adding more contact material clearly changed the high-frequency electrical response and the sensitivity to light.


Subject(s)
Crystallization/methods , Microelectrodes , Nanotechnology/methods , Nanotubes, Carbon/chemistry , Nanotubes, Carbon/ultrastructure , Electric Conductivity , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Materials Testing , Microwaves , Particle Size , Radio Waves , Surface Properties
10.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 70(3 Pt 2): 036615, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15524664

ABSTRACT

We study the electrodynamics of materials using a Liouville-Hamiltonian-based statistical-mechanical theory. Our goal is to develop electrodynamics from an ensemble-average viewpoint that is valid for microscopic and nonequilibrium systems at molecular to submolecular scales. This approach is not based on a Taylor series expansion of the charge density to obtain the multipoles. Instead, expressions of the molecular multipoles are used in an inverse problem to obtain the averaging statistical-density function that is used to obtain the macroscopic fields. The advantages of this method are that the averaging function is constructed in a self-consistent manner and the molecules can either be treated as point multipoles or contain more microstructure. Expressions for the local and macroscopic fields are obtained, and evolution equations for the constitutive parameters are developed. We derive equations for the local field as functions of the applied, polarization, magnetization, strain density, and macroscopic fields.

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