Title of article :
Laser activation-modification of semiconductor surfaces (LAMSS) of
1-alkenes on silicon: A ToF-SIMS, chemometrics, and AFM analysis
Abstract :
Laser-activation-modification of semiconductor surfaces (LAMSS) was carried out on silicon with a series of 1-alkenes. These laser spots were
studied by time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS). The resulting spectra were analyzed using the multivariate curve resolution
(MCR) method within the Automated eXpert Spectral Image Analysis (AXSIA) toolkit, and also by MCR and cluster analysis using commercially
available toolboxes for Matlab: the PLS_Toolbox and the MIA_Toolbox, respectively. AXSIA based MCR generally finds three components for
the spectral images: one for the background and two for the laser-activated spots, for both the positive and negative ion images. The negative ion
component spectra from the spots show increased carbon and hydrogen signals compared to oxygen. They also show reduced chlorine and fluorine
(contamination) peaks. In order to compare AXSIA–MCR results from different images, the AXSIA component spectra of different spots were
further analyzed by principal components analysis (PCA). PCA of all of the negative ion components shows that component 1 is chemically distinct
from components 2 and 3. PCA of all of the positive ion components yields the same result. The loadings plots of this PCA analysis confirm that
component 1 generally contains fragments expected from the substrate, while components 2 and 3 contain fragments expected from an overlayer
composed of alkyl chains in the spots. A comparison of the two MCR analyses suggests that roughly the same information can be obtained from
AXSIA, which is not commercially available, and the PLS_Toolbox. Cluster analysis of the data also clearly separates the spots from the
backgrounds. A key finding from these analyses is that the degree of surface functionalization in a LAMSS spot appears to decrease radially from
the center of the spot. Finally, a comparison of atomic force microscopy (AFM) of the spots versus the AXSIA analysis of the ToF-SIMS data
produced another important result, which is that the surface morphology is only weakly correlated with the LAMSS chemistry.
Keywords :
TOF-SIMS , Chemometrics , laser , MCR , Silicon