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Visible-Wavelength Polarized Light Emission with Small-Diameter InN Nanowires

Dylan Bayerl, Emmanouil Kioupakis, Burlen Loring

January 29, 2015


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Figure 1: 99% probability surface of the distribution of an electron around a positively charged hole in a hexagonal INN nano-wire

Problem Statement and Goals

The efficiency of LED’s produced using conventional materials plummets in longer wavelengths, an effect dubbed the green gap. This can be seen in the plot of efficiency vs wavelength in figure 2. There are 3 major issues for quantum-well nitride optoelectronic devices:

  • Indium composition fluctuations in InGaN alloys limit the efficiency of LEDs
  • Strain from lattice mismatch in epitaxially grown in-nitride LEDs introduces dislocations and limits the thickness of the quantum-well layers and the amount of indium that can be incorporated in InGaN alloys
  • Strain gives rise to polarization fields in quantum-well layers which separates the electron and hole wave functions and reduces the efficiency for devices operating at longer wavelengths (green-gap problem)

Implementation and Results

NERSCs Edsion was used to investigate the quantum semiconducting properties of Indium Nitride (InN) nano structures in hexagonal and triangular crystalline configurations. CRD Visualization experts worked with the science team to produce compelling and informative visuals, which have appeared on journal covers, and featured on the NERSC website.

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Figure 2:The “green gap”: The efficiency of LED’s plummets in the longer visible wavelengths.

The study found that imposing quantum confinement on InN results in efficient optical emission in the visible range, including the green wavelengths where the efficiency of commercial light emitters is low. As a result InN nanostructures provide a route to III-nitride band-gap engineering at visible wavelengths that avoids the difficulties of composition fluctuation and phase segregation encountered in III-nitride alloys. Light emission and absorption are expected to be highly efficient because quantum confinement enforces strong exciton localization and leads to large exciton binding energies in excess of 1 eV. Large binding energies reduce thermal exciton dissociation, making InN nanostructures attractive for lasers and LEDs capable of operating with high efficiency at room temperature in the visible range.

The visualizations were made using a combination of tools. A custom Qt and VTK based application was made for reading the simulation data. This application converted the molecular data into POVRay primatives and the mesh based data into native VTK format. ParaView was then used to compute isosurfaces and export them into POVRay format. POVRay was then used to produce the final renderings.

Impact

This work could lead to high efficiency natural looking LED lighting.

References

[1]   Dylan Bayerl and Emmanouil Kioupakis. Visible-wavelength polarized-light emission with small-diameter inn nanowires. Nano Letters, 14(7):3709–3714, 2014. PMID: 24527880.

Contact

Burlen Loring