Atomic Earthworms
2/5/1998
ScienceNOW
A group of materials scientists has unleashed atomic-scale earthworms, which
eat meandering trenches just a few atoms wide through a semiconductor. Spawned
when the researchers mixed two elements in a thin film and let it cool, the
worms might one day serve to mass-produce chip patterns so tiny that they would
alter the quantum behavior of the electrons they confine. Such "quantum
wires" could lead to improved sensing devices or lasers.
Semiconductor lasers like those in CD players already exploit quantum mechanics
by trapping electrons in an atoms-thick layer called a quantum well. By the
laws of quantum physics, the close confinement only allows the electrons a few
distinct energy states. Because a laser works by forcing electrons to jump
between energy states, better confinement translates to a more efficient
laser--one that fits in your living room instead of a physics lab. Now
materials scientists are dreaming of the next step in electron
confinement--quantum wires, which would trap electrons in one dimension and
lead to even more efficient lasers, for example.
"The trick," says Mohan Krishnamurthy, a materials engineer at
Michigan Technological University in Houghton, is "to come up with
something that produces high-quality wires in an elegant and relatively
high-throughput manner." So Krishnamurthy tried to create conditions in
which the wires would assemble themselves. As he and his colleagues report in
this week's Physical Review Letters, they started by producing a thin film from
an alloy of germanium and tin--two semiconductors that do not like to mix.
Predictably, the tin separated out as the mixture cooled, but what happened
next as the tin sought to lower its energy was unexpected. "Like an
earthworm, the globs of tin eat up the [alloy], spit out the germanium, and
keep the tin," Krishnamurthy says. In their wake they left wiggly trenches
of germanium.
An obvious problem remains before the trenches--or their walls--can be turned
into mass-produced quantum wires: controlling the meandering tin droplets so
they form straighter paths. "The chance of this particular thing working
is zero," says Max Lagally, a materials scientist at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison. But if you could control the density of the tin droplets
and the direction they travel, he says, the approach "could be
useful" for devices that don't require a precise wiring pattern--such as
infrared detectors.
Copyright © 1998 by the American Association for the Advancement of Science
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