Abstract:
We report on the possibility to prepare ZnSe porous layers with different degrees of porosity
by means of electrochemical methods. The prepared porous structures were characterized
using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), photoluminescence (PL) and
cathodoluminescence (CL) techniques. The PL of the as-grown material and porous layers
measured at low temperatures (10 K) was found to be dominated by an emission band at
2.796 eV as well as a band at 2.700 eV with several phonon replicas. The analysis of the dependence
of these bands upon the excitation power density and temperature suggests that
free-to-bound and respectively donor-acceptor electron transitions are responsible for the
emission bands involved. The comparison of SEM and CL images taken from the same porous
regions demonstrated that cathodoluminescence intensity from layers with small characteristic
sizes of the porous entities (around 50 nm) is weaker than that inherent in bulk
material, while porous layers with the pore diameter of around 500 nm exhibit much stronger
luminescence.