Abstract
We demonstrate that vertically aligned InN nanorods have been grown on Si(111) substrates by plasma-assisted molecular-beam epitaxy (PA-MBE) at low and high growth temperatures (LT- and HT-InN nanorods). High-resolution scanning electron microscopy images clearly show that InN nanorods grown on Si(111) are hexagonal in shape, vertically aligned, well separated and densely distributed on the substrate. The size distribution of LT-InN nanorods is quite uniform, while the HT-InN nanorods exhibit a broad, bimodal distribution. The structural analysis performed by Raman scattering indicates that PA-MBE grown InN nanorods have the wurtzite-type InN single-crystal structure with the rod axis (growth direction) along the c-axis. In addition, both types of nanorods contain high concentrations of electrons (unintentionally doped). Compared to the HT-InN nanorods and the PA-MBE-grown InN epitaxial film, the LT-grown InN nanorods have a considerable number of structural defects. Near-infrared photoluminescence (PL) from LT- (∼ 0.77 eV) and HT-InN (∼ 0.70 eV) nanorods is clearly observed at room temperature. In comparison with the LT-InN nanorods, the PL efficiency of HT-InN nanorods is better and the PL peak energy is closer to that of InN-on-Si epitaxial films (∼ 0.66 eV). We also find that the PL band at low temperatures from nanorods is significantly weaker (compared to the InN film case) and exhibits anomalous temperature effects. We propose that these PL properties are results of considerable structural disorder (especially for the LT-InN nanorods) and strong surface electron accumulation effect (for both types of nanorods).
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