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      Phase Transformation in Radially Merged Wurtzite GaAs Nanowires

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          Abstract

          III–V Nanowires (NWs) grown with metal–organic chemical vapor deposition commonly show a polytypic crystal structure, allowing growth of structures not found in the bulk counterpart. In this paper we studied the radial overgrowth of pure wurtzite (WZ) GaAs nanowires and characterized the samples with high resolution X-ray diffraction (XRD) to reveal the crystal structure of the grown material. In particular, we investigated what happens when adjacent WZ NWs radially merge with each other by analyzing the evolution of XRD peaks for different amounts of radial overgrowth and merging. By preparing cross-sectional lamella samples we also analyzed the local crystal structure of partly merged NWs by transmission electron microscopy. Once individual NWs start to merge, the crystal structure of the merged segments is transformed progressively from initial pure WZ to a mixed WZ/ZB structure. The merging process is then modeled using a simple combinatorial approach, which predicts that merging of two or more WZ NWs will result in a mixed crystal structure containing WZ, ZB, and 4H. The existence large and relaxed segments of 4H structure within the merged NWs was confirmed by XRD, allowing us to accurately determine the lattice parameters of GaAs 4H. We compare the measured WZ and 4H unit cells with an ideal tetrahedron and find that both the polytypes are elongated in the c-axis and compressed in the a-axis compared to the geometrically converted cubic ZB unit cell.

          Abstract

          GaAs nanowires are possible to grow in metastable crystal phases, such as wurtzite, not achievable in thin film growth. Here, we show that metastable wurtzite nanowires undergo a crystal phase transformation as two or more nanowires are radially grown together. Using X-ray diffraction, the lattice constants of GaAs wurtzite and 4H are accurately measured.

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          Photo-induced charge transfer across the interface between organic molecular crystals and polymers

          Photo-induced charge transfer of positive and negative charges across the interface between an ordered organic semiconductor and a polymeric insulator is observed in the field-effect experiments. Immobilization of the transferred charge in the polymer results in a shift of the field-effect threshold of polaronic conduction along the interface in the semiconductor, which allows for direct measurements of the charge transfer rate. The transfer occurs when the photon energy exceeds the absorption edge of the semiconductor. The direction of the transverse electric field at the interface determines the sign of the transferred charge; the transfer rate is controlled by the field magnitude and light intensity.
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            Simple analytical expression for the peak-frequency shifts of plasmonic resonances for sensing

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              Caustic activation of rain showers

              We show quantitatively how the collision rate of droplets of visible moisture in turbulent air increases very abruptly as the intensity of the turbulence passes a threshold, due to the formation of fold caustics in their velocity field. The formation of caustics is an activated process, in which a measure of the intensity of the turbulence, termed the Stokes number St, is analogous to temperature in a chemical reaction: the rate of collision contains a factor exp(-C/St). Our results are relevant to the long-standing problem of explaining the rapid onset of rainfall from convecting clouds. Our theory does not involve spatial clustering of particles.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cryst Growth Des
                Cryst Growth Des
                cg
                cgdefu
                Crystal Growth & Design
                American Chemical Society
                1528-7483
                1528-7505
                24 August 2015
                07 October 2015
                : 15
                : 10
                : 4795-4803
                Affiliations
                []Solid State Physics/The Nanometer Structure Consortium, Lund University , Box 118, 221 00 Lund, Sweden
                []AZUR Space Solar Power GmbH , Theresienstrasse 2, 74072 Heilbronn, Germany
                [§ ]nCHREM/Centre for Analysis and Synthesis, Lund University , Box 124, 221 00 Lund, Sweden
                []Semiconductor and Solid State Physics, Johannes Kepler University Linz , Altenbergerstrasse 69, A-4040 Linz, Austria
                []Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Charles University in Prague , Ke Karlovu 5, 121 16, Praha 2, Czech Republic
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acs.cgd.5b00507
                4601050
                26494983
                5a7dda9b-aecf-4375-950d-ca59a2f96a83
                Copyright © 2015 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 13 April 2015
                : 09 August 2015
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                Materials technology
                Materials technology

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