Paper
16 October 1995 Surfactants in heteroepitaxy of strained semiconductor structures
Marian A. Herman
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2373, Solid State Crystals: Materials Science and Applications; (1995) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.224942
Event: Solid State Crystals: Materials Science and Applications, 1994, Zakopane, Poland
Abstract
Islanding and misfit relaxation are obstacles for MBE growth of high quality strained heteroepitaxial layers of lattice-mismatched materials. The growth mode in MBE, and thus the relaxation mechanism of such materials, is determined by balance between free energies of the substrate surface, the epilayer surface, and the interface. In order to reduce epilayer surface and interface free energies in comparison to substrate surface free energy, and thus suppress the process of island formation, use of segregating surface-active species (surfactants) during the MBE growth was proposed already in 1989. The pioneering work of Copel et al. on this subject has been followed by many experimental and theoretical works by other authors. The fundamentals of strained-layer MBE, as well as the most important physical arguments for using surfactants in MBE, are presented and discussed in the first part of this paper. The second part presents experimental examples of advantages resulting from using surfactants and, so called, virtual surfactants in MBE growth of strained heteroepitaxial structures of IV- IV and III-V semiconducting compounds.
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Marian A. Herman "Surfactants in heteroepitaxy of strained semiconductor structures", Proc. SPIE 2373, Solid State Crystals: Materials Science and Applications, (16 October 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.224942
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Germanium

Antimony

Chemical species

Interfaces

Heteroepitaxy

Diffusion

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