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  • 1
    ISSN: 1089-7550
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Epitaxial metastable Ge1−xSnx alloys with x up to 0.26 (the equilibrium solid solubility of Sn in Ge is 〈0.01) were grown on Ge(001)2×1 by low-temperature molecular beam epitaxy. Film growth temperatures Ts in these experiments were limited to a relatively narrow range around 100 °C by the combination of increased kinetic surface roughening at low temperatures and Sn surface segregation at high temperatures. All Ge1−xSnx films consisted of three distinct sublayers: the first is a highly perfect epitaxial region followed by a sublayer, with an increasingly rough surface, containing 111 stacking faults and microtwins, while the terminal sublayer is amorphous. Based upon reflection high energy electron diffraction and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (XTEM) analyses, critical epitaxial thicknesses tepi, defined as the onset of amorphous growth, were found to decrease from 1080 Å for pure Ge to (similar, equals)35 Å for alloys with x=0.26. TEM and XTEM analyses revealed no indication of misfit dislocations (except in Ge0.74Sn0.26 samples) and high-resolution x-ray reciprocal lattice mapping showed that epitaxial Ge1−xSnx layers were essentially fully strained. From an analysis of tepi(x) results, surface morphological evolution leading to epitaxial breakdown is controlled by kinetic roughening for alloys with x(approximately-less-than)0.09 and by strain-induced roughening at higher Sn concentrations. We propose that the thermal activation required for the cross-over, reported here for the first time, from kinetic to strain-induced roughening is partially overcome by the fact that kinetic roughening provides local surface chemical potential gradients over lateral length scales which are sufficiently small to initiate strain-induced roughening even at these low temperatures. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1077-3118
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Single-crystal metastable diamond-structure Ge1−xSnx/Ge strained-layer superlattices (SLS) with x up to 0.24 (the equilibrium solid solubility of Sn in Ge is 〈0.01) have been grown on Ge(001)2×1 substrates using temperature-modulated molecular-beam epitaxy with maximum growth temperatures Ts≤150 °C. In situ reflection high energy electron diffraction combined with postdeposition high-resolution x-ray diffraction (HR-XRD) and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy results show that the Ge1−xSnx(001)2×1 alloy and Ge(001)2×1 spacer layers are commensurate. In fact, the alloy layers are essentially fully strained with an average in-plane lattice constant mismatch of (1±2)×10−5 and an average tetragonal strain in the growth direction of (1.39±0.03)×10−2 as determined from HR-XRD reciprocal-space lattice maps obtained using asymmetric (113) reflections. ω broadening of the zero-order SLS peak was only 30.1 arc sec FWHM, indicating that the degree of mosaicity in these structures is negligible. The intensities and positions of the satellite reflections and finite-thickness interference fringes in HR-XRD 004 rocking curve ω-2θ scans are in good agreement with simulated patterns obtained using a dynamical scattering model. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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