Self-assembled Ge nanodots with areal number density up to 2.33× 1010 cm-2 and aspect ratio larger than 0.12 are prepared by ion beam sputtering deposition. The dot density, a function of deposition rate and Ge c...Self-assembled Ge nanodots with areal number density up to 2.33× 1010 cm-2 and aspect ratio larger than 0.12 are prepared by ion beam sputtering deposition. The dot density, a function of deposition rate and Ge coverage, is observed to be limited mainly by the transformation from two-dimensional precursors to three-dimensional islands, and to be associated with the adatom behaviors of attachment and detachment from the islands. An unusual increasing temperature dependence of nanodot density is also revealed when a high ion energy is employed in sputtering deposition, and is shown to be related to the breaking down of the superstrained wetting layer. This result is attributed to the interaction between energetic atoms and the growth surface, which mediates the island nucleation.展开更多
基金Project supported by the Joint Fund of National Natural Science Foundation of China and Yunnan Province, China (Grant No. U1037604)the Applied Basic Research Foundations of Yunnan Province, China (Grant No. 2009CD003)the Scientific Research Foundation of Yunnan University, China (Grant No. 2009E28Q)
文摘Self-assembled Ge nanodots with areal number density up to 2.33× 1010 cm-2 and aspect ratio larger than 0.12 are prepared by ion beam sputtering deposition. The dot density, a function of deposition rate and Ge coverage, is observed to be limited mainly by the transformation from two-dimensional precursors to three-dimensional islands, and to be associated with the adatom behaviors of attachment and detachment from the islands. An unusual increasing temperature dependence of nanodot density is also revealed when a high ion energy is employed in sputtering deposition, and is shown to be related to the breaking down of the superstrained wetting layer. This result is attributed to the interaction between energetic atoms and the growth surface, which mediates the island nucleation.