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Recently, hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) layers have generated a lot of interest as ideal substrates for 2D stacked devices. Sapphire-supported thin hBN films of different thicknesses are grown using metalorganic vapour phase epitaxy technique by following a flow modulation scheme. Though these films of relatively large size are potential candidates to be employed in designing real devices, they exhibit wrinkling. The formation of wrinkles is a key signature of strain distribution in a film. Raman imaging has been utilized to study the residual strain distribution in these wrinkled hBN films. An increase in the overall compressive strain in the films with an increase in the layer thickness has been observed. To find whether the residual lattice strain in the films can be removed by a thermal treatment, temperature dependent Raman measurements of these films are carried out. The study demonstrates that the thermal rate of strain evolution is higher in the films of lower thickness than in the thicker films. This observation further provides a possible explanation for the variation of strain in the as-grown films. An empirical relation has been proposed for estimating the residual strain from the morphology of the films. We have also shown that the residual strain can be partially released by the delamination of the films.
We present a selection of stack designs for MOVPE grown InxGa1-xAs metamorphic buffer layers following various convex-down compositional continuous gradients of the In content, showing that defect generation and strain can be managed in a variety of
The mean-field Landau-type theory is used to analyze the polarization properties of epitaxial ferroelectric thin films grown on dissimilar cubic substrates, which induce biaxial compressive stress in the film plane. The intrinsic effect of the film s
The epitaxy of MoO2 on c_plane sapphire substrates is examined. A theoretical approach, based on density functional theory calculations of the strain energy, allowed to predict the preferred layer/substrate epitaxial relationships. To test the result
High-index Bi2Se3(221) film has been grown on In2Se3-buffered GaAs(001), in which a much retarded strain relaxation dynamics is recorded. The slow strain-relaxation process of in epitaxial Bi2Se3(221) can be attributed to the layered structure of Bi2
Domain structures of 320 nm thin epitaxial films of ferroelectric PbTiO3 grown by MOCVD technique in identical conditions on SmScO3 and TbScO3 perovskite sub- strates have been investigated by Raman spectroscopy and piezoresponse force microscopy tec