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Phys. Rev. E 77, 031606 (2008) [7 pages]

Shape modification of III-V nanowires: The role of nucleation on sidewalls

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V. G. Dubrovskii1,2,*, N. V. Sibirev1, G. E. Cirlin1,2,3, M. Tchernycheva4, J. C. Harmand3, and V. M. Ustinov1,2
1St.-Petersburg Physical Technological Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences for Research and Education, Khlopina 8/3, 195220, St.-Petersburg, Russia
2Ioffe Physical Technical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Politekhnicheskaya 26, 194021, St.-Petersburg, Russia
3CNRS-LPN, Route de Nozay, 91460 Marcoussis, France
4Department OptoGaN, Institut d’Electronique Fondamentale, UMR 8622 CNRS, Université Paris-Sud, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France

Received 14 September 2007; revised 18 January 2008; published 14 March 2008

The effect of sidewall nucleation on nanowire morphology is studied theoretically. The model provides a semiquantitative description of nanowire radius as a function of its length and the distance from the surface. It is demonstrated that the wire shape critically depends on the diffusion flux of adatoms from the substrate and on the rate of direct impingement to the sidewalls. At high diffusion flux the wire shape is cylindrical. A decrease of diffusion from the surface leads to the onset of nucleation on the sidewalls resulting in the lateral extension and in the reduction of wire length. The wire shape changes from cylindrical to conical, because the supersaturation of adatoms driving the nucleation is higher at the wire foot than at the top. It is shown that the shape modification becomes pronounced at low growth temperatures. Theoretical results are used to model the experimentally observed shapes of GaAs and GaP wires, grown by Au-assisted molecular beam epitaxy at different temperatures.

© 2008 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.77.031606
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.77.031606
PACS:
81.10.Aj, 68.70.+w

*dubrovskii@mail.ioffe.ru