Energetic Pinning of Magnetic Impurity Levels in Quantum-Confined Semiconductors
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2006 papers
Abstract
Donor- and acceptor-type (D/A) impurities play central roles in controlling the physical properties of semiconductors. With continued miniaturization of information processing devices, the relationship between quantum confinement and D/A ionization energies becomes increasingly important. Here, we provide direct spectroscopic evidence that impurity D/A levels in doped semiconductor nanostructures are energetically pinned, resulting in variations in D/A binding energies with increasing quantum confinement. Using magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy, the donor binding energies of Co2+ ions in colloidal ZnSe quantum dots have been measured as a function of quantum confinement and analyzed in conjunction with ab initio density functional theory calculations. The resulting experimental demonstration of pinned impurity levels in quantum dots has far-reaching implications for physical phenomena involving impurity-carrier interactions in doped semiconductor nanostructures, including in the emerging field of semiconductor spintronics where magnetic-dopant-carrier exchange interactions define the functionally relevant properties of diluted magnetic semiconductors.
Related Papers
- → Room temperature dilute magnetic semiconductor response in (Gd, Co) co-doped ZnO for efficient spintronics applications(2022)38 cited
- → Quest for high-Curie temperature Mn Ge1− diluted magnetic semiconductors for room-temperature spintronics applications(2015)29 cited
- → Spintronic nanostructures(2006)
- Diluted magnetic semiconductors——bridging spin and charge(2004)