Stable Field Emission from Vertically Oriented SiC Nanoarrays

Silicon carbide (SiC) nanostructure is a type of promising field emitter due to high breakdown field strength, high thermal conductivity, low electron affinity, and high electron mobility. However, the fabrication of the SiC nanotips array is difficult due to its chemical inertness. Here we report a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jianfeng Xiao, Jiuzhou Zhao, Guanjiang Liu, Mattew Thomas Cole, Shenghan Zhou, Ke Chen, Xinchuan Liu, Zhenjun Li, Chi Li, Qing Dai
Format: article
Language:EN
Published: MDPI AG 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/b46dfd825cd849e8a0455cf268eb5370
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Silicon carbide (SiC) nanostructure is a type of promising field emitter due to high breakdown field strength, high thermal conductivity, low electron affinity, and high electron mobility. However, the fabrication of the SiC nanotips array is difficult due to its chemical inertness. Here we report a simple, industry-familiar reactive ion etching to fabricate well-aligned, vertically orientated SiC nanoarrays on 4H-SiC wafers. The as-synthesized nanoarrays had tapered base angles >60°, and were vertically oriented with a high packing density >10<sup>7</sup> mm<sup>−2</sup> and high-aspect ratios of approximately 35. As a result of its high geometry uniformity—5% length variation and 10% diameter variation, the field emitter array showed typical turn-on fields of 4.3 V μm<sup>−1</sup> and a high field-enhancement factor of ~1260. The 8 h current emission stability displayed a mean current fluctuation of 1.9 ± 1%, revealing excellent current emission stability. The as-synthesized emitters demonstrate competitive emission performance that highlights their potential in a variety of vacuum electronics applications. This study provides a new route to realizing scalable field electron emitter production.