Abstract
It has been reported that composition modulation is naturally formed in some of the epitaxially-grown thin films. Structural characterization of these materials is necessary for controlling their nanostructures precisely. Here, we prepared epitaxially-grown III-V semiconductor alloys and characterized their atomistic structures by means of diffraction crystallography and electron microscopy techniques. As a consequence, we found that the following quantum well structures are spontaneously formed: (1) ultrashort period lateral composition modulation (LCM) with a modulation period of ∼1 nm; (2) complex vertical composition modulated (VCM) structures consisting of two modulated structures with a different period (∼4 and ∼25 nm). The former LCM structure is created via nanoscale phase separation at the growth surface, while the shorter-period modulation in the later VCM structure is induced by rotating a substrate through an inhomogeneous distribution of the anion flux within a chamber. © 2013 The Japan Society of Applied Physics.
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CITATION STYLE
Ishimaru, M., Hasegawa, S., Asahi, H., Sato, K., & Konno, T. J. (2013). Structure analysis of composition modulation in epitaxially-grown III-V semiconductor alloys. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 52(11 PART 1). https://doi.org/10.7567/JJAP.52.110120
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