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The formation of a Sn monolayer on Ge(1 0 0) studied at the atomic scale

Authors :
Taylor J. Z. Stock
Wolfgang M. Klesse
Francesco Montalenti
Neil J. Curson
Emilio Scalise
Steven R. Schofield
Emily V.S. Hofmann
Leo Miglio
Giovanni Capellini
Hofmann, E. V. S.
Scalise, E.
Montalenti, F.
Stock, T. J. Z.
Schofield, S. R.
Capellini, G.
Miglio, L.
Curson, N. J.
Klesse, W. M.
Hofmann, E
Scalise, E
Montalenti, F
Stock, T
Schofield, S
Capellini, G
Miglio, L
Curson, N
Klesse, W
Source :
Applied Surface Science. 561:149961
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

The growth of multi-layer germanium-tin (GeSn) quantum wells offers an intriguing pathway towards the integration of lasers in a CMOS platform. An important step in growing high quality quantum well interfaces is the formation of an initial wetting layer. However, key atomic-scale details of this process have not previously been discussed. We use scanning tunneling microscopy combined with density functional theory to study the deposition of Sn on Ge(1 0 0) at room temperature over a coverage range of 0.01 to 1.24 monolayers. We demonstrate the formation of a sub-2% Ge content GeSn wetting layer from three atomic-scale characteristic ad-dimer structural components, and show that small quantities of Sn incorporate into the Ge surface forming two atomic configurations. The ratio of the ad-dimer structures changes with increasing Sn coverage, indicating a change in growth kinetics. At sub-monolayer coverage, the least densely packing ad-dimer structure is most abundant. As the layer closes, forming a two-dimensional wetting layer, the more densely packing ad-dimer structure become dominant. These results demonstrate the capability to form an atomically smooth wetting layer at room temperature, and provide critical atomic-scale insights for the optimization of growth processes of GeSn multi-quantum-wells to meet the quality requirements of optical GeSn-based devices.

Details

ISSN :
01694332
Volume :
561
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Surface Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....83074cfdc10a59aa738004aa7aea2fb9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2021.149961