|
|
|
|
|
Michael
B. Santos Professor of Physics & Charles
L. Blackburn Chair in Engineering Physics ( Ph.D., Electrical Engineering ( B.S., Electrical Engineering and
Materials Science ( |
||
|
Research Interests: Since arriving at the University of
Oklahoma in 1993, my research interests have focused on InSb-based heterostructures for
electronic device applications. Because the bandgap
of InSb is the smallest of all binary III-V
compounds, two-dimensional electron systems (2DESs) in InSb
quantum wells have several extreme properties: a small effective mass,
a large g-factor, a high intrinsic mobility, and a non-parabolic dispersion
relation. Using the department's molecular beam epitaxy
(MBE) system, my research
group fabricates InSb quantum-well structures
with AlxIn1-xSb barrier layers. The
room-temperature mobility in these structures is higher than in quantum wells
made of any other semiconductor. We are exploring ways to exploit this
feature in mesoscopic magnetoresistors,
ballistic transport devices, and spin devices. Because of the extreme
properties of InSb, the behavior of our 2DESs in
the quantum Hall regime (low temperature and high applied magnetic field)
differs from that observed in more commonly studied GaAs-based
heterostructures. These fundamental studies are
being pursued in collaboration with Professors Murphy (magneto-transport)
and Doezema
(far infrared magneto-optics), researchers at NTT Basic
Research Laboratories in Since the operation of electronic devices depends on the material quality of the heterostructures, my group makes use of materials analysis techniques including transmission electron microscopy, reflection high-energy electron diffraction, Auger electron spectroscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, high-resolution x-ray diffraction, and scanning probe microscopy. Some of these materials studies are performed in collaboration with Professor Johnson's group. |
||
|
Current Research Funding: NSF DMR, “InSb Heterostructures for Spin and Quantum Electronic Experiments” NSF MRSEC, “Center for Semiconductor Physics in Nanostructures” NSF EPSCoR, “Oklahoma Nanotechnology Network” Intel Corporation Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology |
||
![]()
III-V MBE at OU | Thin Films: Heteroepitaxial Systems | OU Physics and Astronomy
Sponsor: OU Physics and
Astronomy
Developer: M.B. Santos
Updated: January 8, 2007
Disclaimer