O. Steuer, D. Schwarz, M. Oehme, F. Bärwolf, Y. Cheng, F. Ganss, R. Hübner, R. Heller, S. Zhou, M. Helm, G. Cuniberti, Y. M. Georgiev, S. Prucnal
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ge1−xSnx and Si1−x−yGeySnx alloys are promising materials for future opto- and nanoelectronics applications. These alloys enable effective bandgap engineering, broad adjustability of their lattice parameter, exhibit much higher carrier mobility than pure Si, and are compatible with the complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology. Unfortunately, the equilibrium solid solubility of Sn in Si1−xGex is less than 1% and the pseudomorphic growth of Si1−x−yGeySnx on Ge or Si can cause in-plane compressive strain in the grown layer, degrading the superior properties of these alloys. Therefore, post-growth strain engineering by ultrafast non-equilibrium thermal treatments like pulse laser annealing (PLA) is needed to improve the layer quality. In this article, Ge0.94Sn0.06 and Si0.14Ge0.8Sn0.06 thin films grown on silicon-on-insulator substrates by molecular beam epitaxy were post-growth thermally treated by PLA. The material is analyzed before and after the thermal treatments by transmission electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction (XRD), Rutherford backscattering spectrometry, secondary ion mass spectrometry, and Hall-effect measurements. It is shown that after annealing, the material is single-crystalline with improved crystallinity than the as-grown layer. This is reflected in a significantly increased XRD reflection intensity, well-ordered atomic pillars, and increased active carrier concentrations up to 4 × 1019 cm−3.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Physics (JAP) is an influential international journal publishing significant new experimental and theoretical results of applied physics research.
Topics covered in JAP are diverse and reflect the most current applied physics research, including:
Dielectrics, ferroelectrics, and multiferroics-
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Emerging, interdisciplinary, and other fields of applied physics-
Magnetism, spintronics, and superconductivity-
Organic-Inorganic systems, including organic electronics-
Photonics, plasmonics, photovoltaics, lasers, optical materials, and phenomena-
Physics of devices and sensors-
Physics of materials, including electrical, thermal, mechanical and other properties-
Physics of matter under extreme conditions-
Physics of nanoscale and low-dimensional systems, including atomic and quantum phenomena-
Physics of semiconductors-
Soft matter, fluids, and biophysics-
Thin films, interfaces, and surfaces