Hot-carrier optoelectronic devices based on semiconductor nanowires
Jonatan Fast, Urs Aeberhard, Stephen P. Bremner, Heiner Linke

TL;DR
This review discusses how semiconductor nanowires can be engineered to improve hot-carrier extraction in optoelectronic devices, aiming to enhance efficiency by addressing hot-carrier relaxation challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of hot-carrier dynamics in nanowires, combining theoretical insights, experimental status, and modeling approaches to guide future research.
Findings
Nanowires offer unique heterostructure engineering opportunities.
Recent experiments demonstrate proof-of-concept hot-carrier photovoltaics.
Modeling helps interpret photocurrent extraction mechanisms.
Abstract
In optoelectronic devices such as solar cells and photodetectors, a portion of electron-hole pairs are generated as so called hot carriers with an excess energy that is typically lost as heat. The long standing aim to harvest this excess energy to enhance device performance has proven to be very challenging, largely due to the extremely short-lived nature of hot carriers. Efforts thus focus on increasing the hot carrier relaxation time, and on tailoring heterostructures that allow for hot-carrier extraction on short time- and length-scales. Recently, semiconductor nanowires have emerged as a promising system to achieve these aims, because they offer unique opportunities for heterostructure engineering as well as for potentially modified phononic properties that can lead to increased relaxation times. In this review we assess the current state of theory and experiments relating to…
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