M.R. Melloch, J. Woodall, et al.
Materials Science and Engineering B
We have unpinned the Fermi level at the surface of both n- and p-type (100) GaAs in air. Light-induced photochemistry between GaAs and water unpins the surface Fermi level by reducing the surface state density. Excitation photoluminescence spectroscopy shows a substantial decrease in both surface band bending and surface recombination velocity in treated samples, consistent with a greatly reduced surface state density (≅1011 cm-2). Capacitance-voltage measurements on metal-insulator-semiconductor structures corroborate this reduction in surface state density and show that the band bending may be controlled externally, indicating an unpinned Fermi level at the insulator/GaAs interface. We discuss a possible unpinning mechanism.
M.R. Melloch, J. Woodall, et al.
Materials Science and Engineering B
M.R. Melloch, N. Otsuka, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
R.C. Gee, C.L. Lin, et al.
Electronics Letters
A. Davidson, M.J. Brady, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics