Direct Observation of Acoustic Phonon Confinement in Free-Standing Semiconductor Nanowires
Fariborz Kargar, Bishwajit Debnath, Kakko Joona-Pekko, Antti, Saynatjoki, Harri Lipsanen, Denis Nika, Roger Lake, Alexander A. Balandin

TL;DR
This study provides direct experimental evidence of acoustic phonon confinement in free-standing GaAs nanowires, demonstrating modifications in phonon dispersion at scales larger than previously observed, with implications for nanoscale thermal and electronic control.
Contribution
It is the first to conclusively observe and measure acoustic phonon confinement in individual free-standing semiconductor nanowires using Brillouin spectroscopy.
Findings
Confined phonon polarization branches observed from 4 GHz to 40 GHz.
Phonon energy scales inversely with nanowire diameter D.
Experimental results agree with theoretical predictions.
Abstract
Similar to electron waves, the phonon states in semiconductors can undergo changes induced by external boundaries. Modification of acoustic phonon spectrum in structures with periodically modulated elastic constant or mass density - referred to as phononic crystals - has been proven experimentally and utilized in practical applications. A possibility of modifying acoustic phonon spectrum in individual nanostructures via spatial confinement would bring tremendous benefits for controlling phonon-electron interaction and thermal conduction at nanoscale. However, despite strong scientific and practical importance, conclusive experimental evidence of acoustic phonon confinement in individual free-standing nanostructures, e.g. nanowires, is still missing. The length scale, at which phonon dispersion undergoes changes and a possibility of the phonon group velocity reduction, are debated. Here,…
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