The electrical and optical properties of low-dimensional nanostructures depend critically on size and geometry and may differ distinctly from those of their bulk counterparts. In particular, ultrathin semiconducting layers as… Click to show full abstract
The electrical and optical properties of low-dimensional nanostructures depend critically on size and geometry and may differ distinctly from those of their bulk counterparts. In particular, ultrathin semiconducting layers as well as nanowires have already proven the feasibility to realize and study quantum size effects enabling novel ultrascaled devices. Further, plasmonic metal nanostructures attracted recently a lot of attention because of appealing near-field-mediated enhancement effects. Thus, combining metal and semiconducting constituents in quasi one-dimensional heterostructures will pave the way for ultrascaled systems and high-performance devices with exceptional electrical, optical, and plasmonic functionality. This Letter reports on the sophisticated fabrication and structural properties of axial and radial Al-Ge and Al-Si nanowire heterostructures, synthesized by a thermally induced exchange reaction of single-crystalline Ge-Si core-shell nanowires and Al pads. This enables a self-aligned metallic contact formation to Ge segments beyond lithographic limitations as well as ultrathin semiconducting layers wrapped around monocrystalline Al core nanowires. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and μ-Raman measurements proved the composition and perfect crystallinity of these metal-semiconductor nanowire heterostructures. This exemplary selective replacement of Ge by Al represents a general approach for the elaboration of radial and axial metal-semiconductor heterostructures in various Ge-semiconductor heterostructures.
               
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