Title of article :
Effect of thermal annealing on r.f. sputtering-deposited nanocrystalline GaNxAs1x thin films
Author/Authors :
Cardona-Bedoya، Jairo A. نويسنده , , Cruz-Orea، Alfredo نويسنده , , Zelaya-Angel، Orlando نويسنده , , Mendoza-Alvarez، Julio G. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
GaNAs thin films were deposited on
Corning glass substrates by radio frequency (r.f.)
sputtering in molecular nitrogen ambient. The stoichiometry
in the GaNAs alloy was controlled by
changing the nitrogen incorporation in the film during
the growth process, through the variation of the r.f.
power in the range 30–80 watts which produced films
with N concentrations in the range: x = 0.85–0.90.
The structural and optical properties of the GaNAs
thin films were studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD),
photoacoustic (PA) and photoluminescence (PL)
spectroscopies. XRD measurements show a broad
diffraction band with a peak close to the (002)
diffraction line of the GaN hexagonal phase, and a
slight shoulder at the position corresponding to the
(111) GaAs cubic phase. The PA absorption spectra
showed a remarkable shift to higher energies of the
absorption edge as the r.f. power decreases corresponding
to the films with higher N concentrations.
Thermal annealing of the GaNAs films at temperatures
of 450 C produced a GaAs nanocrystalline
phase with grain sizes in the range 10–13 nm, as
confirmed by the XRD measurements that showed a
well-defined peak in the (111) GaAs direction, and
also by the PA spectra which showed an absorption
band at energies around 1.45 eV due to the quantum
confinement effects. PL spectra of thermal-annealed
GaNAs films showed a very intense emission at
1.5 eV which we have associated to transitions
between the first electron excited level and acceptor
states in the GaAs nanocrystallites.
Keywords :
GaNAs semiconductors , Photoluminescence of nitride compounds , Optical properties of nanocrystals
Journal title :
Journal of Nanoparticle Research
Journal title :
Journal of Nanoparticle Research