DocumentCode
1868593
Title
Si(100) versus Ge(100): Watching the interface formation for the growth of III-V-based solar cells on abundant substrates
Author
Brückner, S. ; Supplie, O. ; Barrigón, E. ; Kleinschmidt, P. ; Dobrich, A. ; Rey-Stolle, I. ; Algora, C. ; Döscher, H. ; Hannappel, T.
Author_Institution
Helmholtz Center Berlin for Mater. & Energy, Berlin, Germany
fYear
2011
fDate
19-24 June 2011
Abstract
We investigated the atomic surface properties of differently prepared silicon and germanium (100) surfaces during metal-organic vapour phase epitaxy/chemical vapour deposition (MOVPE/MOCVD), in particular the impact of the MOVPE ambient, and applied reflectance anisotropy/difference spectroscopy (RAS/RDS) in our MOVPE reactor to in-situ watch and control the preparation on the atomic length scale for subsequent III-V-nucleation. The technological interest in the predominant opto-electronic properties of III-V-compounds drives the research for their heteroepitaxial integration on more abundant and cheaper standard substrates such as Si(100) or Ge(100). In these cases, a general task must be accomplished successfully, i.e. the growth of polar materials on non-polar substrates and, beyond that, very specific variations such as the individual interface formation and the atomic step structure, have to be controlled. Above all, the method of choice to grow industrial relevant high-performance device structures is MOVPE, not normally compatible with surface and interface sensitive characterization tools, which are commonly based on ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) ambients. A dedicated sample transfer system from MOVPE environment to UHV enabled us to benchmark the optical in-situ spectra with results from various surfaces science instruments without considering disruptive contaminants. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) provided direct observation of different terminations such as arsenic and phosphorous and verified oxide removal under various specific process parameters. Absorption lines in Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectra were used to identify specific stretch modes of coupled hydrides and the polarization dependence of the anti-symmetric stretch modes distinguished different dimer orientations. Scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) studied the atomic arrangement of dimers and steps and tip-induced H-desorption proved the saturation of dangling bonds after preparati- n. In-situ RAS was employed to display details transiently such as the presence of H on the surface at lower temperatures (T <; 800°C) and the absence of Si-H bonds at elevated annealing temperature and also surface terminations. Ge buffer growth by the use of GeH4 enables the preparation of smooth surfaces and leads to a more pronounced amplitude of the features in the spectra which indicates improvements of the surface quality.
Keywords
Fourier transform spectra; III-V semiconductors; MOCVD; X-ray photoelectron spectra; dangling bonds; desorption; elemental semiconductors; germanium; infrared spectra; nucleation; scanning tunnelling microscopy; silicon; solar cells; vapour phase epitaxial growth; Fourier transform infrared spectra; Ge; Ge buffer growth; Ge(100); H-desorption; III-V-based solar cells; III-V-nucleation; Si; Si(100); X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy; abundant substrates; annealing temperature; atomic surface properties; chemical vapour deposition; dangling bonds; difference spectroscopy; heteroepitaxial integration; metal-organic vapour phase epitaxy; nonpolar substrates; polar materials; reflectance anisotropy; scanning tunnelling microscopy; surface terminations; Annealing; Epitaxial growth; Epitaxial layers; Substrates; Surface cleaning; Surface reconstruction;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), 2011 37th IEEE
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
ISSN
0160-8371
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-9966-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVSC.2011.6186464
Filename
6186464
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