115 research outputs found

    Low-energy ion irradiation of solid surfaces

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    Ion beam sputtering of silicon: Energy distributions of sputtered and scattered ions

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    The properties of sputtered and scattered ions are studied for ion beam sputtering of Si by bombardment with noble gas ions. The energy distributions in dependence on ion beam parameters (ion energy: 0.5-1 keV; ion species: Ne, Ar, Xe) and geometrical parameters (ion incidence angle, polar emission angle, and scattering angle) are measured by means of energy-selective mass spectrometry. The presence of anisotropic effects due to direct sputtering and scattering is discussed and correlated with process parameters. The experimental results are compared to calculations based on a simple elastic binary collision model and to simulations using the Monte-Carlo code sdtrimsp. The influence of the contribution of implanted primary ions on energy distributions of sputtered and scattered particles is studied in simulations. It is found that a 10% variation of the target composition leads to detectable but small differences in the energy distributions of scattered ions. Comparison with previously reported data for other ion/target configurations confirms the presence of similar trends and anisotropic effects: The number of high-energy sputtered ions increases with increasing energy of incident ions and decreasing scattering angle. The effect of the ion/target mass ratio is additionally investigated. Small differences are observed with the change of the primary ion species: The closer the mass ratio to unity, the higher the average energy of sputtered ions. The presence of peaks, assigned to different mechanisms of direct scattering, strongly depends on the ion/target mass ratio

    Nitrogen incorporation and trace element analysis of nanocrystalline diamond thin films by secondary ion mass spectrometry

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    Nitrogen has been successfully incorporated into nanocrystalline diamond films produced by a CH4/N-2 microwave plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition method. High mass resolution secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) characterization shows that the density of the incorporated nitrogen, monitored via CN-, can be as high as 10(21) atoms/cm(3) depending on the ratio of CH4 to N-2 in the reactant gas and on the substrate temperature used for the film preparation. SIMS depth profiles demonstrate that the incorporated nitrogen is uniform within the diamond films (about 1.5 mu m thick) except at the surfaces and at the interface between film and substrate. Furthermore, the SIMS analyses reveal that alkali elements such as Na, K, and Li appear to be contaminants at the surface of nanocrystalline diamond films produced using a CH4/Ar or CH4/H-2 discharge, but are bulk impurities only for the films prepared using a CH4/N-2 plasma. These alkali impurities can play an important role in electronic properties such as electron field emissions of nanocrystalline diamond thin films

    Kinetic simulation of an extreme ultraviolet radiation driven plasma near a multilayer mirror

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    Future generation lithog. tools will use extreme UV radiation to enable the printing of sub-50 nm features on silicon wafers. The extreme UV radiation, coming from a pulsed discharge, photoionizes the low pressure background gas in the tool. A weakly ionized plasma is formed, which will be in contact with the optical components of the lithog. device. In the plasma sheath region ions will be accelerated towards the surfaces of multilayer mirrors. A self-consistent kinetic particle-in-cell model has been applied to describe a radiation driven plasma. The simulations predict the plasma parameters and notably the energy at which ions impact on the plasma boundaries. We have studied the influence of photoelectron emission from the mirror on the sheath dynamics and on the ion impact energy. Furthermore, the ion impact energy distribution has been convoluted with the formula of Yamamura and Tawara [At. Data Nucl. Data Tables 62, 149 (1996)] for the sputter yield to obtain the rate of phys. sputtering. The model predicts that the sputter rate is dominated by the presence of doubly ionized argon ions. [on SciFinder (R)

    Electron attachment to valence-excited CO

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    The possibility of electron attachment to the valence 3Π^{3}\Pi state of CO is examined using an {\it ab initio} bound-state multireference configuration interaction approach. The resulting resonance has 4Σ^{4}\Sigma^{-} symmetry; the higher vibrational levels of this resonance state coincide with, or are nearly coincident with, levels of the parent a3Πa^{3}\Pi state. Collisional relaxation to the lowest vibrational levels in hot plasma situations might yield the possibility of a long-lived CO^- state.Comment: Revtex file + postscript file for one figur

    Pattern formation on ion-irradiated Si surface at energies where sputtering is negligible

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    The effect of low energy irradiation, where the sputtering is imperceptible, has not been deeply studied in the pattern formation. In this work, we want to address this question by analyzing the nanoscale topography formation on a Si surface, which is irradiated at room temperature by Arthorn ions near the displacement threshold energy, for incidence angles ranging from 0 degrees to 85 degrees. The transition from the smooth to ripple patterned surface, i.e., the stability/instability bifurcation angle is observed at 55 degrees, whereas the ripples with their wave-vector is parallel to the ion beam projection in the angular window of 60 degrees-70 degrees, and with 90 degrees rotation with respect to the ion beam projection at the grazing angles of incidence. A similar irradiation setup has been simulated by means of molecular dynamics, which made it possible, first, to quantify the effect of the irradiation in terms of erosion and redistribution using sequential irradiation and, second, to evaluate the ripple wavelength using the crater function formalism. The ripple formation results can be solely attributed to the mass redistribution based mechanism, as erosion due to ion sputtering near or above the threshold energy is practically negligible. Published by AIP Publishing.Peer reviewe

    Synthesis and electron field emission of nanocrystalline diamond thin films grown from N2/CH4 microwave plasmas

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    Nanocrystalline diamond films have been synthesized by microwave plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition using N2/CH4 as the reactant gas without additional H2. The nanocrystalline diamond phase has been identified by x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy analyses. High resolution secondary ion mass spectroscopy has been employed to measure incorporated nitrogen concentrations up to 8 ×1020 atoms/cm3. Electron field emission measurements give an onset field as low as 3.2 V/μm. The effect of the incorporated nitrogen on the field emission characteristics of the nanocrystalline films is discussed

    One-dimensional pattern of Au nanodots by ion-beam-sputtering: formation and mechanism

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    Highly ordered one-dimensional arrays of nanodots, or nanobeads, are fabricated by forming nanoripples and nanodots in sequence, entirely by ion-beamsputtering (IBS) of Au(001). This demonstrates the capability of IBS for the fabrication of sophisticated nanostructures via hierarchical self-assembly. The intricate nanobead pattern ideally serves to identify the governing mechanisms for the pattern formation: Non-linear effects, especially local redeposition and surface-confined transport, are essential both for the formation and the preservation of the pattern order

    Location and electronic nature of phosphorus in the Si nanocrystal - SiO₂ system

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    Up to now, no consensus exists about the electronic nature of phosphorus (P) as donor for SiO2_{2}- embedded silicon nanocrystals (SiNCs). Here, we report on hybrid density functional theory (h-DFT) calculations of P in the SiNC/SiO2_{2} system matching our experimental findings. Relevant P configurations within SiNCs, at SiNC surfaces, within the sub-oxide interface shell and in the SiO2_{2} matrix were evaluated. Atom probe tomography (APT) and its statistical evaluation provide detailed spatial P distributions. For the first time, we obtain ionisation states of P atoms in the SiNC/SiO2_{2} system at room temperature using X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, eliminating structural artefacts due to sputtering as occurring in XPS. K energies of P in SiO2_{2} and SiNC/SiO2_{2} superlattices (SLs) were calibrated with non-degenerate P-doped Si wafers. Ab−initio results confirm measured core level energies, connecting and explaining XANES spectra with h-DFT electronic structures. While P can diffuse into SiNCs and predominantly resides on interstitial sites, its ionization probability is extremely low, rendering P unsuitable for introducing electrons into SiNCs embedded in SiO2_{2}. Increased sample conductivity and photoluminescence (PL) quenching previously assigned to ionized P donors originate from deep defect levels due to P
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