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Journal ArticleDOI

Single-nanowire electrically driven lasers

Xiangfeng Duan, +3 more
- 16 Jan 2003 - 
- Vol. 421, Iss: 6920, pp 241-245
TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigate the feasibility of achieving electrically driven lasing from individual nanowires and show that these structures can function as Fabry-Perot optical cavities with mode spacing inversely related to the nanowire length.
Abstract
Electrically driven semiconductor lasers are used in technologies ranging from telecommunications and information storage to medical diagnostics and therapeutics. The success of this class of lasers is due in part to well-developed planar semiconductor growth and processing, which enables reproducible fabrication of integrated, electrically driven devices. Yet this approach to device fabrication is also costly and difficult to integrate directly with other technologies such as silicon microelectronics. To overcome these issues for future applications, there has been considerable interest in using organic molecules, polymers, and inorganic nanostructures for lasers, because these materials can be fashioned into devices by chemical processing. Indeed, amplified stimulated emission and lasing have been reported for optically pumped organic systems and, more recently, inorganic nanocrystals and nanowires. However, electrically driven lasing, which is required in most applications, has met with several difficulties in organic systems, and has not been addressed for assembled nanocrystals or nanowires. Here we investigate the feasibility of achieving electrically driven lasing from individual nanowires. Optical and electrical measurements made on single-crystal cadmium sulphide nanowires show that these structures can function as Fabry-Perot optical cavities with mode spacing inversely related to the nanowire length. Investigations of optical and electrical pumping further indicate a threshold for lasing as characterized by optical modes with instrument-limited linewidths. Electrically driven nanowire lasers, which might be assembled in arrays capable of emitting a wide range of colours, could improve existing applications and suggest new opportunities.

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Citations
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TL;DR: Lasing performance, coupled with the facile solution growth of single-crystal nanowires and the broad stoichiometry-dependent tunability of emission colour, makes lead halide perovskites ideal materials for the development of nanophotonics, in parallel with the rapid development in photovoltaics from the same materials.
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Plasmon lasers at deep subwavelength scale

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Semiconductor nanowires and nanotubes

TL;DR: In this article, a review highlights the recent advances in the field, using work from this laboratory for illustration, and the understanding of general nanocrystal growth mechanisms serves as the foundation for the rational synthetic control of one-dimensional nanoscale building blocks, novel properties characterization and device fabrication based on nanowire building blocks.
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Nanowire electronic and optoelectronic devices

TL;DR: In this article, a broad array of nanowire building blocks available to researchers and discuss a range of electronic and optoelectronic nanodevices, as well as integrated device arrays, that could enable diverse and exciting applications in the future.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Room-temperature ultraviolet nanowire nanolasers

TL;DR: Room-temperature ultraviolet lasing in semiconductor nanowire arrays has been demonstrated and self-organized, <0001> oriented zinc oxide nanowires grown on sapphire substrates were synthesized with a simple vapor transport and condensation process.
Journal ArticleDOI

A laser ablation method for the synthesis of crystalline semiconductor nanowires

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Journal ArticleDOI

Indium phosphide nanowires as building blocks for nanoscale electronic and optoelectronic devices

TL;DR: The assembly of functional nanoscale devices from indium phosphide nanowires, the electrical properties of which are controlled by selective doping are reported, and electric-field-directed assembly can be used to create highly integrated device arrays from nanowire building blocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The facile assembly of key electronic device elements from well-defined nanoscale building blocks may represent a step toward a "bottom-up" paradigm for electronics manufacturing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum cryptography using any two nonorthogonal states

TL;DR: It is shown that in principle any two nonorthogonal quantum states suffice, and a practical interferometric realization using low-intensity coherent light pulses is described.
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