Tunable band-gap and isotropic light absorption from bismuth-containing GaAs core$-$shell and multi$-$shell nanowires
Muhammad Usman

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to demonstrate how bismuth incorporation and nanowire geometry can be tuned to control light absorption wavelength and polarization in GaAs-based core-shell nanowires, enhancing their photonic device potential.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed theoretical analysis of optoelectronic properties of bismuth-containing GaAs nanowires, highlighting tunable absorption and polarization features.
Findings
Absorption wavelength tunable from 0.9 to 1.6 micrometers.
Strain profiles induce light-hole mixing, enabling polarization-insensitive light interaction.
Low Bi compositions lead to quasi type-II carrier confinement.
Abstract
Semiconductor coreshell nanowires based on the GaAs substrate are building blocks of many photonic, photovoltaic and electronic devices, thanks to the associated direct band-gap and the highly tunable optoelectronic properties. The selection of a suitable material system is crucial for custom designed nanowires tailored for optimised device performance. The bismuth containing GaAs materials are an imminent class of semiconductors which not only enable an exquisite control over the alloy strain and electronic structure but also offer the possibility to suppress internal loss mechanisms in photonic devices. Whilst the experimental efforts to incorporate GaBiAs alloys in the nanowire active region are still in primitive stage, the theoretical understanding of the optoelectronic properties of such nanowires is only rudimentary. This work elucidates and quantifies the role of nanowire…
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