A.H. Verbruggen, R.H. Koch, et al.
Physical Review B
The authors report the first successful fabrication of a lateral hot-electron transistor. Using energy spectroscopy, they have demonstrated the existence of ballistic transport in the plane of a 2DEG. The structure has been made by deposition of two metallic gates, each some 50 nm long, separated by 80-200 nm, on a selectively doped high-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. By applying negative bias to the gates, two potential barriers were formed under them that divided the plane into three regions--injection, transport, and collection-all contacted with ohmic contacts. One barrier served as a tunneling injector while the other played the role of a spectrometer. Operating the device as a hot-electron theta device and performing energy spectroscopy, hot-electron distributions, no more than 5 meV wide, were measured at the collector.
A.H. Verbruggen, R.H. Koch, et al.
Physical Review B
A. Palevski, C.P. Umbach, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
M. Heiblum, W.I. Wang, et al.
Journal of Applied Physics
A. Davidson, A. Palevski, et al.
Applied Physics Letters