Abstract
Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), we investigate oxide-induced growth pits in Si thin films deposited by molecular beam epitaxy. In the transition temperature range from 2D adatom islanding to step-flow growth, systematic controlled air leaks into the growth chamber induce pits in the growth surface. We show that pits are also correlated with oxygen-contaminated flux from Si sublimation sources. From a thermodynamic standpoint, multilayer growth pits are unexpected in relaxed homoepitaxial growth, whereas oxidation is a known cause for step pinning, roughening, and faceting on elemental surfaces, both with and without growth flux. Not surprisingly, pits are thermodynamically metastable and heal by annealing to recover a smooth periodic step arrangement. STM reveals new details about the pits' atomistic origins and growth dynamics. We give a model for heterogeneous nucleation of pits by preferential adsorption of -sized oxide nuclei at intrinsic growth antiphase boundaries, and subsequent step pinning and bunching around the nuclei.
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CITATION STYLE
Yitamben, E. N., Butera, R. E., Swartzentruber, B. S., Simonson, R. J., Misra, S., Carroll, M. S., & Bussmann, E. (2017). Heterogeneous nucleation of pits via step pinning during Si(100) homoepitaxy. New Journal of Physics, 19(11). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa9397
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