Front cover image for Molecular beam epitaxy : from research to mass production

Molecular beam epitaxy : from research to mass production

Mohamed Henini (Editor)
This multi-contributor handbook discusses Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE), an epitaxial deposition technique which involves laying down layers of materials with atomic thicknesses on to substrates. It summarizes MBE research and application in epitaxial growth with close discussion and a 'how to' on processing molecular or atomic beams that occur on a surface of a heated crystalline substrate in a vacuum. MBE has expanded in importance over the past thirty years (in terms of unique authors, papers and conferences) from a pure research domain into commercial applications (prototype device structures and more at the advanced research stage). MBE is important because it enables new device phenomena and facilitates the production of multiple layered structures with extremely fine dimensional and compositional control. The techniques can be deployed wherever precise thin-film devices with enhanced and unique properties for computing, optics or photonics are required. This book covers the advances made by MBE both in research and mass production of electronic and optoelectronic devices. It includes new semiconductor materials, new device structures which are commercially available, and many more which are at the advanced research stage. Condenses fundamental science of MBE into a modern reference, speeding up literature reviewDiscusses new materials, novel applications and new device structures, grounding current commercial applications with modern understanding in industry and research Coverage of MBE as mass production epitaxial technology enhances processing efficiency and throughput for semiconductor industry and nanostructured semiconductor materials research community
eBook, English, 2013
Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2013
1 online resource (xi, 731 pages) : illustrations (some color)
9780123918598, 9781283734264, 0123918596, 1283734265
819506983
Machine generated contents note: 1. Molecular Beam Epitaxy: Fundamentals, Historical Background and Future Prospects; 2. Molecular Beam Epitaxy in the Ultra-Vacuum of Space: Present and Near Future; 3. Growth of Semiconductor Nanowires by Molecular Beam Epitaxy; 4. Droplet Epitaxy of Nanostructures; 5. Self-assembled Quantum Dots; 6. Migration Enhanced Epitaxy of Low Dimensional Structures; 7. Surfactant-modified Epitaxy; 8. MBE Growth of High Mobility 2DEG; 9. MBE of GaAsBi; 10. Molecular Beam Epitaxy of GaAsBi and Related Quaternary Alloys; 11. MBE of Dilute Nitride Optoelectronic Devices; 12. The Effects of Antimony During MBE Growth; 13. Nonpolar Cubic III Nitrides: From the Basics of Growth to Device Applications; 14. In-rich InGaN; 15. Molecular Beam Epitaxy of IV-VI Compounds: Heterostructures/Superlattices/Devices; 16. Epitaxial Growth f Thin Films And Quantum Structures of II-VI Visible-Band Gap Semiconductors; 17. MBE of Semiconducting Oxides; 18. ZnO Materials and Devices grown by MBE; 19. MBE of Complex Oxides; 20. Epitaxial Systems Combining Oxides and Semiconductors; 21. MBE Growth of As and Sb based Ferromagnetic III-V Semiconductor; 22. Epitaxial Magnetic Layers Grown by MBE : Model Systems to Study the Physics in Nanomagnetism and Spintronic; 23. Atomic Layer-by-Layer Molecular Beam Epitaxy of Superconducting and Magnetic Materials; 24. MBE of Semimagnetic Quantum Dots; 25. MBE Growth of Graphene; 26. Growth and Characterization of Fullerene/GaAs Interfaces and C60 Doped GaAs and AlGaAs layers; 27. Molecular Beam Epitaxial Growth and Exotic Electronic Structure of Topological Insulators; 28. Thin Films of Organic Molecules: Interfaces and Epitaxial Growth; 29. MBE of II-VI Lasers; 30. MBE Growth of Terahertz Quantum Cascade Lasers; 31. MBE as a Mass Production Technique; 32. Mass production of optoelectronic devices: LEDs, lasers, VCSELs; 33. Mass Production of Sensors Grown by MBE