Physica 129B (1985) 81-91 North-Holland, Amsterdam
81
CHEMICAL AND STRUCTURALCHARACTERISATIONOF III-V EPITAXIALLAYERS M.J. Cardwell Plessey Research (Caswell) Limited, Allen Clark Research Centre, Caswell, Towcester, Northants NN12 8EQ, England The accurate characterisation of epitaxial layers is a key component in the research and development of advanced I I I - V optoelectronic and high speed devices. A detailed understanding of chemical impurities and structural defects in the material and their effects on device performance and r e l i a b i l i t y must be achieved. Furthermore the modern generation of I I I - V devices demands the analysis of thinner and thinner layers of differing composition, which presents more problems to the analyst. A review of the techniques used to measure the chemical composition and impurities of epitaxial layers is made. This includes direct chemical measurement, such as secondary ion mass spectrometry and Auger electron spectroscopy, as well as indirect methods. The methods used to assess the structural perfection of layers is described and comparisons made between a variety of high resolution methods.
1. INTRODUCTION Apart from the obvious need to measure the carrier
concentration
and
thickness
(vi) Determination
is required to f u l l y characterise the epitaxial III-V
used in
the fabrication of
the
lattice
matching
of
epitaxial layers a great wealth of information layers
of
between layers.
advanced
optoelectronic and high speed devices.
A l l of this information has to be measured on epitaxial buried
layers of submicron dimensions,
beneath
layers
of
differing
composition.
The data required is: 2. IMPURITY IDENTIFICATION (i)
The
identification
of
chemical
impurities in layers.
The techniques used to identify impurities in epitaxial layers f a l l into two main groups, indirect
( i i ) The
ability
of
profile
impurities
in
layers.
and direct methods.
methods u t i l i s e
a physical
of
the
chemical impurity in the semiconductor lattice and give additional
( i i i ) T h e measurement of the matrix composition
The indirect
property
information such as the
location of the impurity within the crystal.
of different layers. (a) (iv) Measurement of interface sharpness between layers.
Indirect Methods The i d e n t i f i c a t i o n
ionisation (v)
spectroscopy.
The identification of structural defects
been described in detail
in layers.
and consists
0378-4363/85/$03.30 © Elsevier Science Publishers B.V. (North-Holland Physics Pubfishing Division)
of
shallow
donor
impurities is carried out using photothermal
of
the
This
technique
has
by Stillman et al l measurement of
the
M.J. Cardwell / IH-V epitaxial layers
82
photoconductive response of a sample at l i q u i d
bands are broad and any broadening due to other
helium
impurities is
temperatures
magnetic
field.
in
the
presence
The technique
is
of
a
extremely
l i m i t e d , however, any changes in
the position of the Fermi level
in the sample
sensitive in high purity m a t e r i a l , because the
because of excess acceptors or donors may change
photo
the charge state of the centre and hence the
response
impurity
is
almost
concentration
trations.
at
The peaks in
have been i d e n t i f i e d using
independent of very
low
the
concen-
photoluminescence spectra.
the spectra for GaAs
with
individual
donors
back doping experiments on high purity
The
third
indirect
identification
is
spectroscopy
method
deep
(3LTS).
of
level
This
impurity transient
technique
is
material by Wolfe et al 2, Low et al 3 and Ozeki
described
et al 4.
The disadvantage of this technique is
measurement of capacitance transients in a p-n
that
may only
junction or a Schottky barrier while varying the
it
be applied to
high
purity
by
Lang 9
and
consists
of
the
samples with low compensation ratios and is only
temperature.
useful as a tool to i d e n t i f y residual impurities
part of the depletion region are forced to emit
in e p i t a x i a l material.
electrons
Acceptors normally
in
near-band-edge available alloys
III-V
identified on
is
semiconductors
using
low
photoluminescence. the
III-V
extensive.
binary
are
temperature The
data
compounds and
Most of
the
acceptor
or
The deep levels within the swept holes
measured from the transient. also
define
responsible for
in
bulk
to
identify
residual
impurities
samples.
The most complete tabulation of the
and e p i t a x i a l
acceptor photoluminescence energy in been given
by Ashen et
al 5.
GaAs has
T h e s e authors
demonstrated that when the spectrum is i.e.
three
centre
parameters
adequately
to
the deep level.
An extensive
the centres observed in GaAs is
given by Mittonneau et al i°. be made q u a n t i t a t i v e insulating
The technique may
and can
samples
by
be extended to
using
optical
stimulation.
sharp,
the sample is unstrained and high p u r i t y ,
the
determine the nature of the impurity or defect catalogue of
used r o u t i n e l y
is
The capture cross
be obtained and these
normally
the
is
emission rate
section and a c t i v a t i o n energy of the centre may
species have been i d e n t i f i e d and catalogued and technique
and the
In addition the technique can be applied to field
effect
tranmsistors
by pulsing the gate
the peak positions are extremely reproducible
and measuring
from sample to sample. However, l i k e the photo-
current.
thermal ionisation spectroscopy the technique is
in the channel of the FET may be i d e n t i f i e d and
really
measured and correlations with the performance
only
applicable
to
residual
impurity
i d e n t i f i c a t i o n and because of the other variable
the
transient
in
the
drain
In this way the deep centres present
of the FET made.
recombination mechanisms in the sample, is only semi-quantitative. Deeper centres transition
metal
(b) in the m a te r i a l , caused by impurities,
h a v e also
studied using photoluminescence.
been
Most of the
data has been obtained for Cr and Mn in GaAs6, 7 and Fe in
InP 8.
The deep photoluminescence
Direct Methods The
two
methods
normally
used
for
the
i d e n t i f i c a t i o n and measurement of impurities in e p i t a x i a l layers are atomic absorption spectroscopy and secondary ion mass spectrometry.
M.J. Cardwell / III-V epitaxial layers Atomic absorption spectroscopy measurements are made on a whole wafer by completely removing the epitaxial layer.
83
TABLE 1 SIMS d e t e c t i o n l i m i t s f o r some common impurities/dopants in GaAs. (After Clegg12)
Sensitivities for heavy
metals such as Cr, Zn and Cu are at the sub and S are extremely d i f f i c u l t to measure.
The
technique is t o t a l l y destructive and is only specific to one element at a time.
The arrival
of secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) has made the use of atomic absorption obsolete in the analysis of epitaxial material, although i t is
still
used to analyse bulk samples with a
high degree of accuracy and is also used to provide calibration samples for SIMS. Early
attempts at
profiling
impurities in
epitaxial layers were restricted to radio tracer measurements.
Detection Limit (atoms cm- 3) 4x 1013 2 x 1 0 TM l x 1 0 is lx1016 4 x 1 0 ~3 4 x 1 0 TM 4 x 1 0 TM 3 x 1 0 TM 2x1013 2x1013 6x1013 l x 1 0 is 5x1015 lx1016 5x1012 l x 1 0 is 5x1012
Element Be B C 0 Mg AI Si S Cr Mn Fe Cu Zn Ge Se Sn Te
parts per million level but donors such as Si
These measurements had the
disadvantages of only being able to monitor the radio-active species, which had to be added in a special
experiment,
applicable to
and
also
relatively thick
only
and impurities in GaAs as given by Clegg12.
layers as the
being
These sensitivities, with the a b i l i t y to profile
tracer was not normally present in sufficient
in submicron layers, are unmatched by any other
concentration
competing technique.
to
allow the analysis of small
volumes of material.
Despite these problems the
Despite this advantage over any other method,
technique was very successful in the analysis of
there
outdiffusion and was used by Tuck et al 11 to
encountered with SIMS that make the accurate
demonstrate the outdiffusion of Cr from a semi-
interpretation of the data d i f f i c u l t .
insulating substrate into a growing layer.
are:
This
are
still
some problems which may be These
technique has now been replaced by SIMS except for
self diffusion experiments of the matrix
(i)
The large variation of ion sensitivity.
elements. SIMS
is
the
preferred method for
the
( i i ) Contamination in the ion beam.
identification and profiling of III-V epitaxial layers.
The technique consists of the removal
(iii)Contamination from the system.
of material using a rastered ion beam and the collection and mass analysis of the sputtered fragments.
(iv) Rougheningof the ion crater.
Commercial machines are available
which have sensitivities for some impurities in
(v)
Matrix effects.
the tenth of a part per b i l l i o n range. Table 1 shows the sensitivities of some common dopants
(vi) Ion mixing.
84
M.J. Cardwell / II1-V epitaxial layers The large v a r i a t i o n in the ion y i e l d is due
lon mixing is observed when p r o f i l i n g from a
to the i o n i s a t i o n potential of the species and
high
i t s environment, hence the y i e l d is both element
tration
and matrix
for
some of the atoms being measured and knock them
standards are required and
into the low concentration layer, where they are
dependent.
q u a n t i t a t i v e work, also that
This
means that
some elements are normally analysed
using oxygen (02+ ) and some using caesium (Cs+)
concentration region layer.
into
a low concen-
The primary ions c o l l i d e with
detected as impurities.
This leads to measured
interface broadening effects.
The f u l l analysis of a sample therefore involves an ion source change and a repeat of the experi10El7
ment, which is very time consuming. Contamination
of
the
ion
beam,
from
lOE6/~'-----
impurities in the plasma ion source, may lead to the
implantation
these species.
and subsequent
detection
,- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
of IOE-
The problem is normally overcome
by mass f i l t r a t i o n
of
/~--J
the primary beam which
~ 10E t 4
reduces the contamination by a factor of i00 13 Other sources of contamination can arise
from 10E-3
the residual gases in the vacuum system and also from
sputtering of
sample.
the
These effects
surfaces close to the may
be
reduced
1 0 E -2
by
IOEI1
maintaining an u l t r a pure vacuum, energy f i l t e r ing the detected species to discriminate against molecules such as N2 and CO and making the metal surfaces
close
to
the
As
sample from Ta or
IOE ~ 0
Ti
10
20
3'0 40
5'0
6'0
instead of stainless steel which leads to high Cr and Fe background levels. The
crater
optimising the
roughening may be
reduced
sputtering conditions
for
by each
FIGURE 1 SIMS P r o f i l e of an annealed Mg implant Si3N4 coated GaAs.
into
matrix. Because the ion y i e l d d i f f e r s from matrix to matrix,
apparent
abrupt
changes in
is
shown in Figure i ,
In I I I - V devices which depend on the presence
impurity
levels at matrix interfaces is observed. effect
3. COMPOSITIONALMEASUREMENTS
This
which is a SIMS
of heterojunctions i t
is imperative to be able
to determine the composition of the a l l o y with a
coated GaAs. The Mg has obviously r e d i s t r i b u t e d
high degree of accuracy. I f the layer is thick
in the GaAs and into the n i t r i d e cap.
I-2
profile
of
an annealed Mg implant into Si3N 4 However
the abrupt change at the Si3N4/GaAs interface is
~m)
the
layer
may
enough (greater than be
analysed
using
wavelength dispersive or energy dispersive X-ray
not real and is an a r t e f a c t of the SIMS tech-
analysis.
nique moving from one matrix to another.
This
very reproducible, provided that the electrons
The technique is highly accurate and
is obvious in a sample with large differences in
generating the X-ray emission are contained in
the matrix, but can be confusing in samples with
the layer to be analysed.
only small matrix differences as in for example
are used as standards for the analysis.
GaAs/GaAIAs heterojunctions.
The binary compounds
~~
M.Z Cardwell / III-V epitaxial layers As the demand for thinner and thinner layers grows the use of X-ray analysers has diminished and other techniques have replaced i t .
10Et7
The band
10E
gap and hence the composition of a ternary alloy may be measured by photoluminescnce or optical absorption.
This
may not
be easy in
multilayer structure and also is
85
10E -5---
a
--- As
insufficient
0 Ga
~ 10EI'4
for quaternary alloys where similar band gaps
=¢
may be obtained with differing compositions. The two direct method of analysis u t i l i s e d
...............
are SIMS and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES).
lo612
SIMS has been discussed in the previous section the sub parts per million level is obviously to
measure layer
contamination from the
composition.
~AJ
lO?
and with the a b i l i t y to determine impurities at suited
............... t
The
\
10E~0 Se 0 1() 2'0 3'0 4() 5'0 6'0 7() 8'0
beam and system are
negligible, but the other effects, roughening, matrix effects and ion mixing are s t i l l present. This is demonstrated in Figure 2, which is a SIMS profile of
a GaAs/GaAIAs heterojunction
bipolar transistor containing interface
structure.
layers
are
spikes due
epitaxial
reactor
heterojunction
The aluminium
clearly
to
FIGURE 2 SIMS P r o f i l e of GaAs/GaAIAs bipolar t r a n s i s t o r structure.
shown and
transients
in
may be observed.
Auger electron spectroscopy can under certain
the
optimised conditions reduce the effect of ion
The
mixing.
AES has a detection l i m i t of ~ 0.1
impurities being monitored (C and O) show a
atomic per cent and hence is unsuitable for the
similar increase at the interface and follow the
measurement of
Al
conductors.
signal.
This
is
not
due to
additional
impurity
However i t
profiles
for
matrix effects in the SIMS, where the sputtering
layers.
efficiency of these impurities in the GaAIAs is
exactly the same ways as SIMS.
higher than that in GaAs. Hence to obtain a
semi-
is eminently suitable
contamination at the interface, but is due to
the measurement of
in
composition in
III-V
The AES technique requires standards in
Profiling is achieved using two methods:
quantitative SIMS p r o f i l e of impurities across heterojunctions
many SIMS standards
and
(i)
Linescans along a low angle bevel.
laborious measurements have to be made. Ion mixing, in the analysis of very abrupt
( i i ) Sputter p r o f i l i n g .
interfaces, is a problem with SIMS analysis of heterojunctions. The limitations of the primary ion beam, that i t normal
to
the
should be reactive and is
surface means that
in
some
matrices and the III-V compounds in particular ion
mixing
effects
will
dominate
measurement of interface abruptness.
in
the
The technique of linescanning a bevel is a very simple and quick technique. A low angle bevel is produced by lapping or chemical etching and then sputter cleaned in the UHV apparatus. A small diameter (4 0.5 ~m) electron beam is scanned down the bevel and the Auger electron
86
M.J. ('ardwell / I11-V epHaxial layers
peak height measured f o r the elements r e q u i r e d . If
r l,
=~
Ar, 7 0 0 e V 18 ° M W J 9
the angle of the bevel and the beam diameter
i s known the l a y e r widths and i n t e r f a c e abruptness may be measured.
-g
The accurate measurement
2oo~
o f the bevel angle (< 0 . i °) is obtained by laser reflection. bevel
is
In p r a c t i c e not
a
the production of the
trivial
exercise
and
some
l a b o r a t o r i e s p r e f e r to s p u t t e r a f l a t bottomed c r a t e r and measure the Auger peaks throughout the layer s t r u c t u r e . and
obviously
may
flexible
///\/
150-
,oo0 / \/ ., ,o
/
v
-
i
=
This technique is mixing effects.
o
s i m i l a r in concept to SIMS suffer
from
the
same ion
AES systems are normally more
<
29.4A o
Sputter time
40
FIG[IRE 3 Auger s p u t t e r p o f i l e of GaAs/GaAIAs s u p e r l a t t i c e s t r u c t u r e grown by MOCVD.
in the mounting of the ion gun r e l a t i v e
to the sample and do not have the r e s t r i c t i o n choice of
ion species,
of
reduced by s p u t t e r i n g the sample w i t h heavy ions of low energy at a high angle of incidence.
The
effect
The
of t h i s may be seen in Figures 3-5.
figures
show three
Xe
700eV
9uA
18 ° M W J 9
lon mixing is normally
AES p r o f i l e s
of
GaAs/GaAIAs s u p e r l a t t i c e s t r u c t u r e .
the
same
Figure 3 is
E ~. 200 ~ 15oi ~ lOOi
obtained using an Ar + ion beam at 18 ° incidence and an i n t e r f a c e is
obtained.
sharpness (10%-90%) of 29.4 A
~ 5o
By r e p l a c i n g the Ar + beam with a
23.8A °
reduced to 23.8 A (Figure 4 ) . 5 the e f f e c t
Finally
in Figure
of i n c r e a s i n g the angle to 50 ° is
to again reduce the i n t e r f a c e width to 18 A. The
accurage
characterisation
impurity of
layers
needs
both
respect
the
systems
than competative. the
advantages
very
and thin
FIC,URE 4 Auger s p u t t e r p r o f i l e of same s t r u c t u r e as Figure 3, showing the e f f e c t o f using a heavier ion species.
compositional III-V
epitaxial
SIMS and AES and are
45 Sputter time
heavier ion Xe+ the apparent i n t e r f a c e width is
in
complementary
this
"~
Xe'
A
~
700eV,
50 °
MWJ9
147A°
rather
A more d e t a i l e d comparison of and
disadvantages
of
both
o
techniques is given by Morgan lh 4. STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISATION A d e t a i l e d study of the s t r u c t u r e and defects of
III-V
requires
epitaxial
layers
many techniques
is
which
difficult
and
vary
the
from
simple and inexpensive to the s o p h i s t i c a t e d and very time consuming and expensive. structural
information
that
is
The type of
needed is
the
18A o 22A ° 26A ° 28A ° Sputter time
40
FIGURE 5 Auger s p u t t e r p r o f i l e o f the same s t r u c t u r e as Figure 3, showing the e f f e c t of increased angle of incidence.
M.Z Cardwell / III-V epitaxial layers identification
and
distribution
of
extended
87
in the epitaxial layers.
The defects in buried
defects such as stacking faults and disloca-
hetero-epitaxial layers are normally character-
tions, micro-
ised
strain
or
precipitates and the degree of
lattice
matching between hetero-
by removing the overlying layers
using
selective etches and then dislocation etching the wafer in an etch developed for the layer in
epitaxial layers. The techniques used to characterise
these
question.
layers f a l l into three broad areas: (i)
Defect etching and optical microscopy
( i i ) X-ray techniques (iii)Electron microscopy. 5. DEFECTETCHING AND OPTICAL MICROSCOPY Defect etches offer a simple and inexpensive method by which to layers.
characterise e p i t a x i a l
The conventional etches produce pits at
defect sites on the surface and these pits are counted using an optical microscope to produce an etch p i t or defect density.
These etches
have to be calibrated against another technique, such
as X-ray
topography
or
transmission
electron microscopy to determine what type of defect is being revealed by the etch.
A typical
example of this calibration is shown in Figure 6.
FIGURE 6 Transmission electron micrograph of InP layer etched in a defect revealing etch. Note the correlation between the etch pits and stacking faults in the layer.
This sample is an InP epitaxial layer which
has been etched in a defect etch developed by Huber and Linh 15.
The sample was then thinned
Other dislocation etches, for example the AB etch 16 as used for GaAs, reveal more detail
from the back and the thinned area examined
about the type and distribution of the detects.
using both optical
This etch,
and transmission electron
instead of producing pits,
has a
The transmission electron image of
"memory effect ''17 of the defects in the layer
an area containing etch pits is shown in Figure
removed. Hence by repeated successive etching a
6.
three-dimensional image of the defects in the
microscopy.
A one to
one correlation
between the
elongated etch pits and stacking faults revealed
layer may be produced.
by TEM is obtained.
of the application of this etch is
I t is interesting to note
that only the faults in one direction etch as
A detailed description given by
Stirland IB.
elongated pits and that only the partial dislocations of the faults in the other direction are revealed by the etch.
Once a calibration of
6. X-RAY TECHNIQUES Two X-ray methods have found use in
the
this type has been carried out the etch is used
structural characterisation of III-V epitaxial
as a rapid quality control check of the defects
layers.
The f i r s t method is X-ray topography.
M.J, Cardwell / Ill-V epitaxial layers
88
Transmission X-ray topography is used r o u t i n e l y
method.
to assess GaAs and InP substrates and has the
the
advantage of resolution of a few microns in a
technique
totally
The e p i t a x i a l
addition of X-Y movement and computer control
may be analysed using
allows the mapping of mismatch and strain over
layer
non-destructive mode. on
the
reflection
surface
X-ray
topography.
However the
The strain in the layers is given by
broadening of is
the
totally
diffraction
peak.
non-destructive
The
and the
the whole sample.
technique is not easily applicable to very thin multilayer penetrate
structures several
Additionally if lattice
since
microns
there
is
parameters of
the
X-rays
into
the
will
a difference in the
any of
the
layers
Bragg condition for the topography w i l l major
use
of
X-rays
in
Electron microscopy can be applied to
the
characterisation
of
epitaxial
wafers
in
the many
modes:
not be
satisfied. The
7. ELECTRONMICROSCOPY
sample.
(i)
Cathodoluminescence
(ii)
Electron beam induced currents
multilayer
structures is double crystal d i f f r a c t i o n .
This
method is used r o u t i n e l y to measure very small differences epitaxial
in
lattice
parameter
layers and also any strain
of
the
(iii)Transmission electron microscopy.
present. The f i r s t
Figure 7 shows the X-ray d i f f r a c t i o n peaks from
two methods u t i l i s e
the spatial
One of
resolution of scanning electron microscopy and
the ternary or quaternary layers is matched to
reveal defects by t h e i r non-radiative properties
and coincident with the InP substrate peak on
and changes in c a r r i e r
the l e f t and the other layer shows a s i g n i f i c a n t
techniques are s i m i l a r to dislocation etching in
mismatch leading to the peak on the r i g h t .
the information revealed.
a InP/GalnAs/GalnAsP
layer structure.
This
dif f us io n
length.
The
Transmission electron microscopy, however, is
mismatch could not be determined using any other
the most powerful and informative of the methods used to assess structural 10000
mat er ial.
Sample: N30/198 Material: Tern/Quat/InP
(~
8000 Pos: 244.8 secs
ii
Va,ue, oo :s
4000
to
360
460
560
Relative Bragg Angle (Arc. secs)
electrons
to
be
normally achieved by The defects can be
A typical example of a TEM image is shown This example is a stacking f a u l t
in GaAIA layers. 200
the
is
seen d i r e c t l y and f u l l y analysed in the instruin Figure 8.
100
allow
and this
chemical and ion thinning. ment.
2000 0 0
The sample must be made thin enough
microns)
transmitted
Peak Data
A
~ 6000
imperfections in the
as
Any chemical impurities such
micro-precipitates
may
be
identified
by
energy dispersive X-ray analysis using a solid state X-ray detector f i t t e d to the microscope. Additional
FIGURE 7 Double crystal rocking curve GalnAs m u l t i l a y e r structure.
of
InP/GalnAsP/
precipitate
information
of
the
phase of
any
can be obtained by analysing the
electron d i f f r a c t i o n pattern of the inclusion.
M.J. Cardwell / III-V epitaxial layers This
technique was used to
precipitates arsenide19.
on
identify arsenic
dislocations
in
gallium
89
seen in the TEM micrograph because of the change in
atomic
number contrast
caused by the
variation of Al concentration.
t
E~oxy resin
2 - 3 mm
Layers
I I
I I I
Mechanicely polish I / both sides down
SiC, 6U, llJ diamond paste Ion milling
FIGURE 8 Transmission electron micrograph of faults in GaAs/GaAIAs layers. The analysis structures
is
of
sectional sample. be examined is
end up with
thin multilayer epitaxial The technique used to obtain
stuck face to
Ion 205~va20
stacking
achieved by preparing a cross-
this sample is given in Figure 9.
~15.
FIGURE 9 Schematic of the preparation technique used to produce cross-sectional TEM samples.
The wafer to face using an
epoxy. Thin bars are then cut from this double structure and thinned using polishing and ion thinning to produce a thin area in the region of interest. out
in
Electron microscopy is then carried
the normal way exceDt that a cross-
sectional obtained.
v i e w instead
of
a
p l a n view is
T h i s allows the characterisation of
interfaces and the defect relationship between layers and substrate to be observed. A typical example of Figure
10.
multilayer
a TEM cross-section This structure
sample is grown by
is a
shown in
GaAIAs/GaAs
MOCVD.
The
switching of the gases has led to a variation in the Al concentration
in the AIGaAs layer (as
shown by SIMS in Figure 2).
T h i s may be easily
FIGURE 10 Cross-sectional TEM Micrograph of GaAs/GaAIAs multilayer structure. Note the variation of Al concentration in the GaAIAs layers.
M.J, Cardwell / III-V epitaxial layers
90
The
characterisation
and
s u p e r l a t t i c e and auantum well
measurement
not be achieved without the use of TEM. measurement
of
the
of
8. CONCLUSIONS A
structures could
layer
width
The
would
be
wide
range
of
techniques
developed to allow the f u l l III-V
epitaxial
layers.
have
been
characterisation of The
difficulties
impossible by any other techninue except photo-
presented by very thin m u l t i l a y e r structures of
luminescence 2°,
differing
quantum well
However i f
structure
the layer is not a
or of
a width qreater
than a few hundred angstroms this method is not
compositions have been overcome and
the accurate feedback reauired for a high y i e l d growth process has been achieved.
applicable and electron microscopy must be used. An example of a TEM micrograph of a superlattice structure
is
shown in Figure 11.
This
ACKNOktEDGEMENTS
layer
The author acknowledges the help and advice
structure of period 125 A was grown by MOCVD and
of many colleagues at the Allen Clark Research
shows no A1 compositional v a r i a t i o n s as shown in
Centre
Figure I0.
personnel of the a n a l y t i c a l services department
The layer thickness measured by TEM
was used to c a l i b r a t e the Auger sputter p r o f i l e s
and
is
particularly
grateful
to
the
for the use of t h e i r data.
shown in Figure 5. REFERENCES
FIGURE 11 Cross-sectional TEM Micrograph of GaAs/GaAIAs s u p e r l a t t i c e , with a period of 125 A.
i.
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2.
C.M. Wolfe, G . E . Stillman and P.M. Korn, GaAs and Related Compounds, St. Louis 1976, Confo Ser. No.33b ( I n s t i t u t e of Physics, London, 1977) 120.
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atomic
arrangement
of
atoms at
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e p i t a x i a l interfaces and to determine any long range order or disorder effects in I I I - V a l l o y layers.
M.J. Cardwell / III- V epitaxial layers
91
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