E. M. Krivoy
University of Texas at Austin
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Featured researches published by E. M. Krivoy.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
E. M. Krivoy; Hari P. Nair; Adam M. Crook; Somayyeh Rahimi; Scott J. Maddox; Rodolfo Salas; Domingo Ferrer; V. D. Dasika; Deji Akinwande; Seth R. Bank
We report the growth and characterization of nearly lattice-matched LuAs/GaAs heterostructures. Electrical conductivity, optical transmission, and reflectivity measurements of epitaxial LuAs films indicate that LuAs is semimetallic, with a room-temperature resistivity of 90 μΩ cm. Cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy confirms that LuAs nucleates as self-assembled nanoparticles, which can be overgrown with high-quality GaAs. The growth and material properties are very similar to those of the more established ErAs/GaAs system; however, we observe important differences in the magnitude and wavelength of the peak optical transparency, making LuAs superior for certain device applications, particularly for thick epitaxially embedded Ohmic contacts that are transparent in the near-IR telecommunications window around 1.3 μm.
Optics Express | 2015
Nezih Tolga Yardimci; Rodolfo Salas; E. M. Krivoy; Hari P. Nair; Seth R. Bank; Mona Jarrahi
We present a comprehensive analysis of terahertz radiation from large area plasmonic photoconductive emitters in relation with characteristics of device substrate. Specifically, we investigate the radiation properties of large area plasmonic photoconductive emitters fabricated on GaAs substrates that exhibit short carrier lifetimes through low-temperature substrate growth and through epitaxially embedded rare-earth arsenide (ErAs and LuAs) nanoparticles in superlattice structures. Our analysis indicates that the utilized substrate composition and growth process for achieving short carrier lifetimes are crucial in determining substrate resistivity, carrier drift velocity, and carrier lifetime, which directly impact optical-to-terahertz conversion efficiency, radiation power, radiation bandwidth, and reliability of large area plasmonic photoconductive emitters.
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Rodolfo Salas; Samaresh Guchhait; Scott D. Sifferman; Kyle M. McNicholas; V. D. Dasika; E. M. Krivoy; Daehwan Jung; Minjoo Larry Lee; Seth R. Bank
We explore the electrical, optical, and structural properties of fast photoconductors of In0.53Ga0.47As containing a number of different rare-earth arsenide nanostructures. The rare-earth species provides a route to tailor the properties of the photoconductive materials. LuAs, GdAs, and LaAs nanostructures were embedded into InGaAs in a superlattice structure and compared to the relatively well-studied ErAs:InGaAs system. LaAs:InGaAs was found to have the highest dark resistivities, while GdAs:InGaAs had the lowest carrier lifetimes and highest carrier mobility at moderate depositions. The quality of the InGaAs overgrowth appears to have the most significant effect on the properties of these candidate fast photoconductors.
Applied Physics Letters | 2012
E. M. Krivoy; Somayyeh Rahimi; Hari P. Nair; Rodolfo Salas; Scott J. Maddox; Daniel J. Ironside; Y. Jiang; V. D. Dasika; Domingo Ferrer; Glen Kelp; Gennady Shvets; Deji Akinwande; Seth R. Bank
We demonstrate the growth of high‐quality, single crystal, rocksalt LaAs on III‐V substrates; employing thin well-behaved LuAs barriers layers at the III-V/LaAs interfaces to suppress nucleation of other LaAs phases, interfacial reactions between GaAs and LaAs, and polycrystalline LaAs growth. This method enables growth of single crystal epitaxial rocksalt LaAs with enhanced structural and electrical properties. Temperature-dependent resistivity and optical reflectivity measurements suggest that epitaxial LaAs is semimetallic, consistent with bandstructure calculations in literature. LaAs exhibits distinct electrical and optical properties, as compared with previously reported rare-earth arsenide materials, with a room-temperature resistivity of ∼459 μΩ-cm and an optical transmission window >50% between ∼3-5 μm.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
Rodolfo Salas; Samaresh Guchhait; Kyle M. McNicholas; Scott D. Sifferman; V. D. Dasika; Daehwan Jung; E. M. Krivoy; Minjoo Larry Lee; Seth R. Bank
We explore the effects of surfactant-mediated epitaxy on the structural, electrical, and optical properties of fast metal-semiconductor superlattice photoconductors. Specifically, application of a bismuth flux during growth was found to significantly improve the properties of superlattices of LuAs nanoparticles embedded in In0.53Ga0.47As. These improvements are attributed to the enhanced structural quality of the overgrown InGaAs over the LuAs nanoparticles. The use of bismuth enabled a 30% increase in the number of monolayers of LuAs that could be deposited before the InGaAs overgrowth degraded. Dark resistivity increased by up to ∼15× while carrier mobility remained over 2300 cm2/V-s and carrier lifetimes were reduced by >2× at comparable levels of LuAs deposition. These findings demonstrate that surfactant-mediated epitaxy is a promising approach to enhance the properties of ultrafast photoconductors for terahert generation.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
V. D. Dasika; E. M. Krivoy; Hari P. Nair; Scott J. Maddox; K. Park; Daehwan Jung; Minjoo Larry Lee; E. T. Yu; Seth R. Bank
We have investigated the growth of self-assembled InAs quantum dots using bismuth as a surfactant to control the dot size and density. We find that the bismuth surfactant increases the quantum dot density, size, and uniformity, enabling the extension of the emission wavelength with increasing InAs deposition without a concomitant reduction in dot density. We show that these effects are due to bismuth acting as a reactive surfactant to kinetically suppress the surface adatom mobility. This mechanism for controlling quantum dot density and size has the potential to extend the operating wavelength and enhance the performance of various optoelectronic devices.
AIP Advances | 2013
Somayyeh Rahimi; E. M. Krivoy; Jeong-Soo Lee; M. E. Michael; Seth R. Bank; D. Akinwande
We investigate the temperature-dependent resistivity of single-crystalline films of LaxLu1-xAs over the 5–300 K range. The resistivity was separated into lattice, carrier and impurity scattering regions. The effect of impurity scattering is significant below 20 K, while carrier scattering dominates at 20–80 K and lattice scattering dominates above 80 K. All scattering regions show strong dependence on the La content of the films. While the resistivity of 600 nm LuAs films agree well with the reported bulk resistivity values, 3 nm films possessed significantly higher resistivity, suggesting that interfacial roughness significantly impacts the scattering of carriers at the nanoscale limit.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2011
Rodolfo Salas; E. M. Krivoy; Adam M. Crook; Hari P. Nair; Seth R. Bank
We investigate the electrical conductivity of GaAs-based tunnel junctions enhanced with semimetallic ErAs nanoparticles. In particular, we examine the effects of digitally-graded InGaAs alloys on the n-type side of the tunnel junction, along with different p-type doping levels. Device characteristics of the graded structures indicate that the n-type Schottky barrier may not be the limiting factor in the tunneling current as initially hypothesized. Moreover, significantly improved forward and reverse bias tunneling currents were observed with increased p-type doping, suggesting p-side limitation.
APL Materials | 2017
Rodolfo Salas; Samaresh Guchhait; Scott D. Sifferman; Kyle M. McNicholas; V. D. Dasika; Daehwan Jung; E. M. Krivoy; Minjoo Larry Lee; Seth R. Bank
We report the effects of the growth rate on the properties of iii-v nanocomposites containing rare-earth-monopnictide nanoparticles. In particular, the beneficial effects of surfactant-assisted growth of LuAs:In0.53Ga0.47As nanocomposites were found to be most profound at reduced LuAs growth rates. Substantial enhancement in the electrical and optical properties that are beneficial for ultrafast photoconductors was observed and is attributed to the higher structural quality of the InGaAs matrix in this new growth regime. The combined enhancements enabled a >50% increase in the amount of LuAs that could be grown without degrading the quality of the InGaAs overgrowth. Dark resistivity increased by ∼25× while maintaining carrier mobilities over 3000 cm2/V s; carrier lifetimes were reduced by >2×, even at high depositions of LuAs. The combined growth rate and surfactant enhancements offer a previously unexplored regime to enable high-performance fast photoconductors that may be integrated with telecom compone...
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2013
V. D. Dasika; E. M. Krivoy; Hari P. Nair; Scott J. Maddox; Keun Woo Park; Daehwan Jung; Minjoo Larry Lee; E. T. Yu; Seth R. Bank
We report the use of a bismuth surfactant to increase self-assembled InAs quantum dot emission intensity, decrease the linewidth, and extend the emission wavelength with increasing InAs deposition, without the concomitant loss of dot density.