posted on 2015-02-19, 15:53authored bySimon P.A. Gill
Self-assembled nanorings have recently been identified in a number of heteroepitaxially strained
material systems. Under some circumstances these rings have been observed to break up into ringshaped
quantum dot molecules. A general non-linear model for the elastic strain energy of nonaxisymmetric
epitaxially strained nanostructures beyond the small slope assumption is developed.
This model is then used to investigate the stability of strained nanorings evolving via surface
diffusion subject to perturbations around their circumference. An expression for the fastest growing
mode is determined and related to experimental observations. The model predicts a region of
stability for rings below a critical radius, and also a region for larger rings which have a
proportionally small thickness. The predictions of the model are shown to be consistent with the
available results. For the heteroepitaxial InP on In0.5Ga0.5P system investigated by Jevasuwan et al.
(2013), the nanorings are found to be stable below a certain critical size. This is in good quantitative
agreement with the model predictions. At larger sizes, the rings are unstable. The number of dots in
the resulting quantum dot molecule is similar to the mode number for the fastest growing mode.
Second order terms show that the number of dots is expected to reduce as the height of the ring
increases in proportion to its thickness. The strained In0.4Ga0.6As on GaAs nanorings of Hanke et al
(2007) are always stable and this is in accordance with the findings of the analysis. The Au nanorings
of Ruffino et al. (2011) are stable as well, even as they expand during annealing. This observation is
also shown to be consistent with the proposed model, which is expected to be useful in the design
and tailoring of heteroepitaxial systems for the self-organisation of quantum dot molecules.
History
Citation
Simon P.A. Gill, The stability of elastically strained nanorings and the formation of quantum dot molecules, Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Engineering