Numéro |
J. Phys. I France
Volume 4, Numéro 9, September 1994
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|
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Page(s) | 1309 - 1324 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp1:1994190 |
J. Phys. I France 4 (1994) 1309-1324
Influence of kinetic roughening on the epitaxial growth of silicon
J. Chevrier, A. Cruz, N. Pinto, I. Berbezier and J. DerrienCRMC2 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, case 913, 13288 Marseille Cedex 09, France
(Received 11 February 1994, revised 17 May 1994, accepted 7 June 1994)
Abstract
The low temperature homoepitaxial growth of silicon has been probed in situ by
Reflection High Energy Electron Diffraction (RHEED) in a Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE) chamber
in the temperature range 250
C-400
C. The continuous change in the RHEED
patterns during the growth of thick films (several hundred angstroms) shows the progressive
appearance of a surface roughness during and after the decay of RHEED oscillations. This is a
clear evidence for kinetic roughening in the case of silicon epitaxial growth ai low
temperatures on the Si(l 11) face. The surface width,
, measured as the film
thickness,
h, is increased, can be described by
with
eV. This is in marked difference with the kinetic roughening behavior
measured during the growth of a metal like iron by means of the same RHEED technique (see
Chevrier et al., Europhys. Lett. 8 (1991) 737). Furthermore, an extrapolation of this
behavior to epitaxial growths at higher temperatures (
C-800
C)
suggests an effective influence of kinetic roughening in the determination of growth
temperatures generally used for silicon MBE (i.e. the empirical usual growth temperatures
C). During growth at substrate temperatures between
250
C and 400
C, the nucleation of misoriented silicon islands takes
place following the occurrence of kinetic roughening at the surface. In this range of
temperatures, this suggests that the loss of epitaxy occurs on a rough surface through the
proliferation of defects and of misoriented crystals.
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