# Trion-based High-speed Electroluminescence from Semiconducting Carbon   Nanotube Films

**Authors:** Hidenori Takahashi, Yuji Suzuki, Norito Yoshida, Kenta Nakagawa and, Hideyuki Maki

arXiv: 1903.01640 · 2020-05-20

## TL;DR

This paper demonstrates high-speed, on-chip electroluminescence from semiconducting carbon nanotube films, showing potential for integrated silicon photonics with GHz modulation capabilities.

## Contribution

It introduces trion-based electroluminescent emitters using carbon nanotube films, enabling high-speed, ultra-small optoelectronic devices compatible with silicon platforms.

## Key findings

- EL emission peaks are red-shifted, indicating trion emission
- Response times of ~100 ps suggest several-GHz modulation potential
- Pulsed light generation confirms high-speed operation

## Abstract

High-speed light emitters integrated on silicon chips can enable novel architectures for silicon-based optoelectronics, such as on-chip optical interconnects and silicon photonics. However, conventional light sources based on compound semiconductors face major challenges for their integration with the silicon-based platforms because of the difficulty of their direct growth on a silicon substrate. Here, we report high-brightness, high-speed, ultra-small-size on-chip electroluminescence (EL) emitters based on semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) thin films. The peaks of the EL emission spectra are 0.2-eV red-shifted from the peaks of the absorption and photoluminescence emission spectra, which suggests emission from trions. High-speed responses of ~ 100 ps were experimentally observed from the trion-based EL emitters, which indicates the possibility of several-GHz modulation. The pulsed light generation was also obtained by applying pulse voltage. These high-speed and ultra-small-size EL emitters can enable novel on-chip optoelectronic devices for highly integrated optoelectronics and silicon photonics.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.01640