Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1664556 | Thin Solid Films | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
We report an investigation into the high-frequency conductivity of optically excited charge carriers far from equilibrium with the lattice. The investigated samples consist of hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon films grown on a thin film of silicon oxide on top of a silicon substrate. For the investigation, we used an optical femtosecond pump-probe setup to measure the reflectance change of a probe beam. The pump beam ranged between 580 and 820Â nm, whereas the probe wavelength spanned 770 to 810Â nm. The pump fluence was fixed at 0.6Â mJ/cm2. We show that at a fixed delay time of 300Â fs, the conductivity of the excited electron-hole plasma is described well by a classical conductivity model of a hot charge carrier gas found at Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, while Fermi-Dirac statics is not suitable. This is corroborated by values retrieved from pump-probe reflectance measurements of the conductivity and its dependence on the excitation wavelength and carrier temperature. The conductivity decreases monotonically as a function of the excitation wavelength, as expected for a nondegenerate charge carrier gas.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
Wei He, Igor V. Yurkevich, Ammar Zakar, Andrey Kaplan,