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Growing Glowing Nanowires to Light Up the Nanoworld
The nano world is getting brighter. Nanowires
made of semiconductor materials are being used to make
prototype lasers and light-emitting diodes with emission
apertures roughly 100 nm in diameter—about 50
times narrower than conventional counterparts. Nanolight
sources may have many applications, including “lab
on a chip” devices for identifying chemicals and
biological agents, scanning-probe microscope tips for
imaging objects smaller than is currently possible,
or ultra-precise tools for laser surgery and electronics
manufacturing.
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) are growing nanowires made of gallium
nitride alloys and making prototype devices and nanometrology
tools. The wires are grown under high vacuum by depositing
atoms layer by layer on a silicon crystal. NIST is one
of few laboratories capable of growing such semiconductor
nanowires without using metal catalysts, an approach
believed to enhance luminescence and flexibility in
crystal design. The wires are generally between 30 and
500 nanometers (nm) in diameter and up to 12 micrometers
long. When excited with a laser or electric current,
the wires emit an intense glow in the ultraviolet or
visible parts of the spectrum, depending on the alloy
composition.

NIST "grows" semiconductor
nanowires that emit ultraviolet light as part of a project
to make prototype nano-lasers and other devices and
the measurement tools needed to characterize them. Electron
micrograph shows the gallium nitride wires growing on
a silicon substrate (color added for contrast.)
(Image credit: Lorelle Mansfield/NIST)
Individual nanowires grown at NIST produce
sufficiently intense light to enable reliable room-temperature
measurements of their important characteristics. For
example, the peak wavelength of light emitted with electric
field parallel to the long axis of a nanowire is shifted
with respect to the peak wavelength emitted with electric
field perpendicular to the wire. Such differences in
emission are used to characterize the nanowire materials
and also may be exploited to make sensors and other
devices.
NIST has grown a variety of nanowires and extensively
characterized their structural and optical properties,
finding few defects, strains or impurities, which results
in high light output compared to the bulk material.**
The wires also can be transferred from the silicon crystal
to other substrates, such as sapphire, and arranged
using electric fields. The NIST team has used the nanowires
to make a number of prototype devices, including light-emitting
diodes, field-effect transistors, and nanowire “bridge”
structures that may be useful in sensors and nanoscale
mechanical resonators.
Visit www.nist.gov
Caption – NIST.jpg:

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