posted on 2024-11-04, 16:27authored byHyowon W. Jeong, Stephen A. Church, Markus Döblinger, Akhil Ajay, Benjamin Haubmann, Nikesh Patel, Jonathan J. Finley, Patrick W. Parkinson, Gregor Koblmüller
Predicting the optical properties of large-scale ensembles
of luminescent
nanowire arrays that host active quantum heterostructures is of paramount
interest for on-chip integrated photonic and quantum photonic devices.
However, this has remained challenging due to the vast geometrical
parameter space and variations at the single object level. Here, we
demonstrate high-throughput spectroscopy on 16800 individual InGaAs
quantum heterostructures grown by site-selective epitaxy on silicon,
with varying geometrical parameters to assess uniformity/yield in
luminescence efficiency, and emission energy trends. The luminescence
uniformity/yield enhances significantly at prepatterned array mask
opening diameters (d0) greater than 50
nm. Additionally, the emission energy exhibits anomalous behavior
with respect to d0, which is notably attributed
to rotational twinning within the InGaAs region, inducing significant
energy shifts due to quantum confinement effects. These findings provide
useful insights for mapping and optimizing the interdependencies between
geometrical parameters and electronic/optical properties of widely
tunable sets of quantum nanowire heterostructures.