Nanolight sources may have many applications, they said, including "lab on a chip" devices for identifying chemicals and biological agents, scanning-probe microscope tips for imaging objects smaller than is currently possible, or ultraprecise tools for laser surgery and electronics manufacturing.
A paper in the May 22 issue of Applied Physics Letters reports that individual nanowires grown at NIST produce sufficiently intense light to enable reliable room-temperature measurements of their important characteristics. For example, the peak wavelength of light emitted with electric field parallel to the long axis of a nanowire is shifted with respect to the peak wavelength emitted with electric field perpendicular to the wire. Such differences in emission are used to characterize the nanowire materials and also may be exploited to make sensors and other devices.
NIST researchers said they have grown a variety of nanowires and extensively characterized their structural and optical properties, finding few defects, strains or impurities, which results in high light output compared to the bulk material. The wires also can be transferred from the silicon crystal to other substrates, such as sapphire, and arranged using electric fields. The team has used the nanowires to make a number of prototype devices, including light-emitting diodes, field-effect transistors, and nanowire “bridge” structures that may be useful in sensors and nanoscale mechanical resonators.
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