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Control of the position and density of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) is vital for a variety of emergent technologies, such as quantum photonics and advanced opto-electronic devices. However, established ordering methods typically call for ex-situ processing prior to growth that have a deleterious impact on the optical quality of nanostructures. Here, we apply a conventional epitaxial growth method - molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) - to achieve wafer scale positioning of optically active QDs with high reproducibility, tunable periodicity, and controlled density across an entire unpatterned 3-inch semiconductor wafer. Hereby, we exploit material thickness gradients across the wafer to modulate the QD nucleation probability and demonstrate how our approaches can be used to achieve strong periodic modulation of the local dot density tunable over length scales ranging from a few millimeters to at least a few hundred microns in one or two spatial directions. The methods are universal and are applicable to a wide variety of semiconductor material systems.
High-performance graphene field-effect transistors have been fabricated on epitaxial graphene synthesized on a two-inch SiC wafer, achieving a cutoff frequency of 100 GHz for a gate length of 240 nm. The high-frequency performance of these epitaxial
Monolayer hBN has attracted interest as a potentially weakly interacting 2D insulating layer in heterostructures. Recently, wafer-scale hBN growth on Cu(111) has been demonstrated for semiconductor chip fabrication processes and transistor action. Fo
Quantized magnetotransport is observed in 5.6 x 5.6 mm^2 epitaxial graphene devices, grown using highly constrained sublimation on the Si-face of SiC(0001) at high temperature (1900 {deg}C). The precise quantized Hall resistance of Rxy = h/2e^2 is ma
Vapor transportation is the core process in growing transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). One inevitable problem is the spatial inhomogeneity of the vapors. The non-stoichiometric supply of transition-metal prec
Graphene is a powerful playground for studying a plethora of quantum phenomena. One of the remarkable properties of graphene arises when it is strained in particular geometries and the electrons behave as if they were under the influence of a magneti