2 research outputs found
Direct Measurement of Coherency Limits for Strain Relaxation in Heteroepitaxial Core/Shell Nanowires
The growth of heteroepitaxially strained semiconductors
at the
nanoscale enables tailoring of material properties for enhanced device
performance. For core/shell nanowires (NWs), theoretical predictions
of the coherency limits and the implications they carry remain uncertain
without proper identification of the mechanisms by which strains relax.
We present here for the Ge/Si core/shell NW system the first experimental
measurement of critical shell thickness for strain relaxation in a
semiconductor NW heterostructure and the identification of the relaxation
mechanisms. Axial and tangential strain relief is initiated by the
formation of periodic <i>a</i>/2 ⟨110⟩ perfect
dislocations via nucleation and glide on {111} slip-planes. Glide
of dislocation segments is directly confirmed by real-time in situ
transmission electron microscope observations and by dislocation dynamics
simulations. Further shell growth leads to roughening and grain formation
which provides additional strain relief. As a consequence of core/shell
strain sharing in NWs, a 16 nm radius Ge NW with a 3 nm Si shell is
shown to accommodate 3% coherent strain at equilibrium, a factor of
3 increase over the 1 nm equilibrium critical thickness for planar
Si/Ge heteroepitaxial growth
Direct Measurement of Coherency Limits for Strain Relaxation in Heteroepitaxial Core/Shell Nanowires
The growth of heteroepitaxially strained semiconductors
at the
nanoscale enables tailoring of material properties for enhanced device
performance. For core/shell nanowires (NWs), theoretical predictions
of the coherency limits and the implications they carry remain uncertain
without proper identification of the mechanisms by which strains relax.
We present here for the Ge/Si core/shell NW system the first experimental
measurement of critical shell thickness for strain relaxation in a
semiconductor NW heterostructure and the identification of the relaxation
mechanisms. Axial and tangential strain relief is initiated by the
formation of periodic <i>a</i>/2 ⟨110⟩ perfect
dislocations via nucleation and glide on {111} slip-planes. Glide
of dislocation segments is directly confirmed by real-time in situ
transmission electron microscope observations and by dislocation dynamics
simulations. Further shell growth leads to roughening and grain formation
which provides additional strain relief. As a consequence of core/shell
strain sharing in NWs, a 16 nm radius Ge NW with a 3 nm Si shell is
shown to accommodate 3% coherent strain at equilibrium, a factor of
3 increase over the 1 nm equilibrium critical thickness for planar
Si/Ge heteroepitaxial growth