32 research outputs found

    Laser-chemical vapor deposition of W Schottky contacts on GaAs\ud using WF6 and SiH4

    Get PDF
    Reports on the deposition of tungsten on gallium arsenide (GaAs) using a low-temperature laser-chemical vapor deposition process. Induction of metallic W formation from a gas mixture; Columnar structure shown by scanning electron microscopy of the W films; Schottky diodes obtained during a laser based resistless projection patterning process on GaAs

    Fabrication and subband gap optical properties of silicon supersaturated with chalcogens by ion implantation and pulsed laser melting

    Full text link
    Topographically flat, single crystal silicon supersaturated with the chalcogens S, Se, and Te was prepared by ion implantation followed by pulsed laser melting and rapid solidification. The influences of the number of laser shots on the atomic and carrier concentration-depth profiles were measured with secondary ion mass spectrometry and spreading resistance profiling, respectively. We found good agreement between the atomic concentration-depth profiles obtained from experiments and a one-dimensional model for plane-front melting, solidification, liquid-phase diffusion, with kinetic solute trapping, and surface evaporation. Broadband subband gap absorption is exhibited by all dopants over a wavelength range from 1 to 2.5 microns. The absorption did not change appreciably with increasing number of laser shots, despite a measurable loss of chalcogen and of electronic carriers after each shot.One of the authors M.T. acknowledges the financial support of the Fulbright Program. This research was supported in part by the U.S. Army ARDEC under Contract No. W15QKN-07- P-0092

    Growth of Co

    Full text link
    The effects of the deposition temperature and laser energy on the characteristics of Co2MnAl films deposited on GaAs substrates were investigated. The grown films were characterized by AFM for film roughness and surface topography. Film thickness and elemental composition were measured using Rutherford Back Scattering (RBS) technique, while crystalline structure and phase composition were investigated by XRD. The RBS measurements showed that the stochiometry of the films was satisfactory and very close to that of the target Co: 0.5, Mn: 0.25, Al: 0.25. The thickness of the films was found to increase as the laser energy was increased from 200 to 400 mJ, in particular for the films deposited at 400 °C. We also found an increase in the films thicknesses as the deposition temperature was increased for the samples grown at 200 and 300 mJ. The best film quality as deduced from XRD, RBS and AFM results for producing these single layers were those deposited at 600 °C with the laser energy at 300 mJ

    Excimer laser processing of novel materials for optoelectronic and spintronic applications

    Full text link
    The interaction of the highly energetic pulsed excimer laser beam with a target material induces non-equilibrium physico-chemical processes which could be harnessed to synthesize a variety of novel and technologically attractive materials that are difficult to grow using more conventional thin film deposition techniques. In this paper, recent advances on two excimer laser based techniques that we have used in the processing of thin films and surfaces will be presented. First, we demonstrate the synthesis, by Pulsed Laser Melting (PLM), of silicon supersaturated with sulfur at concentrations several orders of magnitude greater than the solubility limit of silicon alloys, with strong sub-bandgap optical absorption. This material has potential applications in the fabrication of Si-based opto-electronic devices. Second, the capability of Remote Plasma Pulsed Laser Deposition (RP-PLD) in synthesizing the meta-stable half-metallic CrO2 compound that is of great interest in the field of spintronics was assessed. Infra-Red spectroscopy and Magnetic Force Microscopy indicate that the use of the remote plasma is beneficial to the formation of the CrO2 phase, at a deposition pressure of 30 mTorr and for deposition temperature below 350°C. Atomic Force Microscopy and Magnetic Force Microscopy studies respectively show that films containing the Cr02 phase have significantly different surface topography and magnetic characteristics from those in which the Cr2O3 phase is dominant

    Interaction between confined phonons and photons in periodic silicon resonators

    Full text link
    International audienceIn this paper, we demonstrate that phonons and photons of different momenta can be confined and interact with each other within the same nanostructure. The interaction between confined phonons and confined photons in silicon resonator arrays is observed by means of Raman scattering. The Raman spectra from large arrays of dielectric silicon resonators exhibited Raman enhancement accompanied with a downshift and broadening. The analysis of the Raman intensity and line shape using finite-difference time-domain simulations and a spatial correlation model demonstrated an interaction between photons confined in the resonators and phonons confined in highly defective regions prompted by the structuring process. It was shown that the Raman enhancement is due to collective lattice resonance inducing field confinement in the resonators, while the spectra downshift and broadening are signatures of the relaxation of the phonon wave vector due to phonon confinement in defective regions located in the surface layer of the Si resonators. We found that as the resonators increase in height and their shape becomes cylindrical, the amplitude of their coherent oscillation increases and hence their ability to confine the incoming electric field increases

    Synthesis of Ag and Cd nanoparticles by nanosecond-pulsed discharge in liquid nitrogen

    Full text link
    International audienceThe synthesis of CdO, Ag2O (5 nm) and Ag (~20-30 nm) nano-objects is achieved simultaneously by nanosecond-pulsed discharges in liquid nitrogen between one cadmium electrode and one silver electrode. Oxidation occurs when liquid nitrogen is fully evaporated and nanoparticles are in contact with the air. No alloy is formed, whatever the conditions, even though both elements are present simultaneously, as showed by time-resolved optical emission spectroscopy. This lack of reactivity between elements is attributed to the high pressure within the discharge that keeps each metallic vapor around the electrode it comes from. Each element exhibits a specific behavior. Cubic Cd particles, formed at 4 kV, get elongated with filamentary tips when the applied voltage reaches 7 and 10 kV. Cd wires are formed by assembly in liquid nitrogen of Cd nanoparticles driven by dipole assembly, and not by dielectrophoresis. On the contrary, silver spherical particles get assembled into 2D dendritic structures. The anisotropic growth of these structures is assumed to be due to the existence of pressure gradients
    corecore