ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Structural modifications induced in hydrogenated amorphous Si/Ge multilayers by heat treatments

110   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Attila Csik
 تاريخ النشر 2009
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

A study is presented of the structural changes occurring as a function of the annealing conditions in hydrogenated amorphous Si/Ge multilayers prepared by sputtering. Annealing changes the structure of the as-deposited multilayer except for the less severe conditions here applied (150 oC, time<22 h). For higher temperatures and/or times, the modifications consist of layer intermixing and surface degradation in the shape of bumps and craters. They are argued to be due to the formation of H bubbles upon heating. Hydrogen should be mostly released from the amorphous Ge layers.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

134 - K. Kapta , L. Daroczi , Z. Papp 2009
Microstructure changes during annealing of nano-crystalline silver and amorphous silicon multilayers (Ag/a-Si) have been studied by X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. The dc-magnetron sputtered Ag/a-Si multilayers remained stable even after annealing at 523K for 10h, and microstructural changes occurred only above 600K. The degradation of Ag/a-Si multilayers can be described by the increase of size of Ag grains, formation of grooves and pinholes at Ag grain boundaries and by the diffusion of silicon atoms through the silver grain boundaries and along the Ag/a-Si interfaces. This results in thinning of a-Si layers, and in formation of Ag granulates after longer annealing times.
118 - M. Molina-Ruiz 2018
Specific heat measurements from 2 to 300 K of hydrogenated amorphous silicon prepared by hot-wire chemical vapor deposition show a large excess specific heat at low temperature, significantly larger than the Debye specific heat calculated from the so und velocity. The as-prepared films have a Schottky anomaly that is associated with metastable hydrogen in the amorphous network, as well as large linear and excess cubic term commonly associated with tunneling two-level systems in amorphous solids. Annealing at 200 {deg}C, a temperature that enables hydrogen mobility but not evaporation, irreversibly reduces the heat capacity, eliminating the Schottky anomaly and leaving a reduced linear heat capacity. A non-monotonic dependence on growth temperature and H content is observed in all effects, except for sound velocity, which suggests that the tunneling two-level systems and the Schottky anomaly are associated with atomic hydrogen and require low density regions to form, while sound velocity is associated with the silicon network and improves with increasing growth temperature.
The nanostructure of hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a Si:H) is studied by a combination of small-angle X-ray (SAXS) and neutron scattering (SANS) with a spatial resolution of 0.8 nm. The a-Si:H materials were deposited using a range of widely varied conditions and are representative for this class of materials. We identify two different phases which are embedded in the a-Si:H matrix and quantified both according to their scattering cross-sections. First, 1.2 nm sized voids (multivacancies with more than 10 missing atoms) which form a superlattice with 1.6 nm void-to-void distance are detected. The voids are found in concentrations as high as 6*10^19 ccm in a-Si:H material that is deposited at a high rate. Second, dense ordered domains (DOD) that are depleted of hydrogen with 1 nm average diameter are found. The DOD tend to form 10-15 nm sized aggregates and are largely found in all a-Si:H materials considered here. These quantitative findings make it possible to understand the complex correlation between structure and electronic properties of a-Si:H and directly link them to the light-induced formation of defects. Finally, a structural model is derived, which verifies theoretical predictions about the nanostructure of a-Si:H.
169 - Z.Balogh , Z.Erdelyi , D. L. Beke 2009
Over the last years several experimental and theoretical studies of diffusion kinetics on the nanoscale have shown that the time evolution differs from the classical Fickian law (kc=0.5). However, all work was based on crystalline samples or models, so far. In this letter, we report on the diffusion kinetics of a thin amorphous-Si layer into amorphous-Ge to account for the rising importance of amorphous materials in nanodevices. Employing surface sensitive technics, the initial kc was found at 0.7+-0.1. Moreover, after some monolayers of Si dissolved into the Ge, kc changes to the generally expected classical Fickian law with kc=0.5.
We investigated how dimensionality affects heat transport in Si-Ge superlattices by computing the thermal conductivity of planar superlattices and arrays of Ge nanowires and nanodots embedded in Si. We studied superlattices with $sim$10 nm periods us ing a fully atomistic Monte Carlo solution of the Boltzmann transport equation in the relaxation time approximation. We found that for periods larger than 4 nm, the room temperature cross-plane conductivity of planar superlattices with equally thick Si and Ge layers is larger than that of their nanowire and dot counterparts of similar sizes (up to 100%), while the trend is reversed below 4 nm.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا