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DTSTART;TZID=US/Eastern:20220217T155500
DTEND;TZID=US/Eastern:20220217T165500
SUMMARY:Near-field microscopy for nanoscale materials characterization -- Dr. Joanna Atkin
DESCRIPTION:Departmental Colloquium. Semiconducting nanostructures have been proposed as material platforms for a wide variety of photonic, electronic, and photovoltaic elements. In order to realize these applications, careful design and characterization of electronic properties such as dopant concentration, activation, and distribution are needed. I will discuss the use of near-field optical microscopy as a non-destructive method for chemical, structural, and electronic imaging in nanomaterials, focusing on a specific application, the study of axially-doped silicon nanowires (SiNWs). We can detect local changes in the electrically-active doping concentration from the free-carrier absorption in both n- type and p-type doped SiNWs. The &lt; 20 nm spatial resolution allows us to directly measure dopant transition abruptness and charge carrier properties in the vicinity of interfaces in single and multi-junction SiNWs, both in the infrared and the microwave spectral regimes. However, the tip is perturbative in terms of both the electromagnetic wave (frequency-resolved) and electrostatic (charge carrier redistribution) interactions, and this affects the measured results, an important consideration in nanostructured materials especially. Our results demonstrate the utility of near-field spectroscopy in probing local properties of nanomaterials, but emphasize the little-understood convolutional role of the tip in many forms of scanning probe microscopy.
LOCATION:Zoom Meeting
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