Abstract
Though III-V/Si(100) heterointerfaces are essential for future epitaxial high-performance devices, their atomic structure is an open historical question. Benchmarking of transient optical in situ spectroscopy during chemical vapor deposition to chemical analysis by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy enables us to distinguish between formation of surfaces and of the heterointerface. A terrace-related optical anisotropy signal evolves during pulsed GaP nucleation on single-domain Si(100) surfaces. This dielectric anisotropy agrees well with the one calculated for buried GaP/Si(100) interfaces from differently thick GaP epilayers. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy reveals a chemically shifted contribution of the P and Si emission lines, which quantitatively corresponds to one monolayer and establishes simultaneously with the nucleation-related optical in situ signal. We attribute that contribution to the existence of Si-P bonds at the buried heterointerface. During further pulsing and annealing in phosphorus ambient, dielectric anisotropies known from atomically well-ordered GaP(100) surfaces super-impose the nucleation-related optical in situ spectra. (Figure Presented).
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CITATION STYLE
Supplie, O., May, M. M., Steinbach, G., Romanyuk, O., Grosse, F., Nägelein, A., … Hannappel, T. (2015). Time-resolved in situ spectroscopy during formation of the GaP/Si(100) heterointerface. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 6(3), 464–469. https://doi.org/10.1021/jz502526e
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