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1.1140879.pdf | Undulator engineering for synchrotron radiation applications
J. M. Slater, S. C. Gottschalk, F. E. James, D. C. Quimby, K. E. Robinson, and A. S. Valla
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 60, 1881 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.1140879
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140879
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/60/7?ver=pdfcov
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:35:19Undulator engineering for synchrotron radiation applications
J. M. Slater, S. C. Gottschalk, F. E. James, D. C. Quimby, K. E Robinson, and
A.S. Valla
Spectra Technology, Inc .• 2755 Northup Way. Bellevue. Washington 98004-1495
(Presented on 29 August 1988)
Six undulators have been designed and built by STI since 1980 for synchrotron and FEL
applications. Several design concepts, producing successively higher fields, have been developed
during this period. A wedged-pole hybrid design has been demonstrated to yield the highest field
to date for a given gap-to-wavelength ratio. A simple method of reducing fieid errors has been
demonstrated on the wedged-pole hybrid, and it may lead to significant cost reduction through
relaxation of mechanical and magnet tolerances.
INTRODUCTION
Spectra Technology, Inc. (STI) has been actively involved
with FEL technology since 1979, when a major U.S. pro
gram series began in Seattle, Washington. These programs
have been directed toward the development of efficient visi
ble and IR PELs in a series of technology demonstration
experiments. During the course of this work, extensive capa
bility has been developed in FEL physics, systems engineer
ing, undulators and optical cavities. There has been special
emphasis on undulator (or wiggler) engineering. Six undu
Iators have been delivered to various customers with one
more currently in construction. These devices range from 50
em to 10 m in length, have periods from 2 to 8 em, and fields
to 10 kG. They are used in both FEL and synchrotron emis
sion applications.
During the continual improvement of the undulator
over these nine years, STI has concentrated on obtaining the
highest possible magnetic field strength with simultaneous
high field quality. This has lead from development of pure
permanent magnet systems, \ to hybrids of permanent mag
net with vanadium permendur poles,2 to a new wedged-pole
hybrid.3 The wedged-pole hybrid produces the highest fields
to date for a given gap-to-wavelength ratio. Both radiation
resistant samarium cobalt and the new higher-strength neo
dymium-iron-boron magnets have been used.
The measurement capability necessary to certify undu
lator coherence over the full device length has been devel
oped. Coherence is a strict requirement for FELs and is de
sirable for synchrotron emission when low-emittance beams
are used, but it is not easily achieved due to material and
mechanical imperfections. Typically, field adjustment after
assembly is necessary to achieve full coherence, and an inex
pensive, but accurate, tuning technique for adjusting the
magnetic field to the ideal values under each pole has been
developed.
This article highlights the high field strength wedged
pole design and a tuning method, called shim tuning, to sub
stantially reduce field errors.
I. HIGH FIELD STRENGTH WEDGED~POLE CONCEPT
The rare-earth permanent magnet (REPM) hybrid un
dulator (or wiggler) was originally proposed by Halbach4 as
a means for achieving high-quality high-strength periodic magnetic fields. This concept is gaining widespread ac
ceptance both as an insertion device for synchrotron radi
ation generation and for use in free-electron lasers. The prin
cipal advantages of the REPM-steel hybrid relative to the
pure-REPM undulator include higher magnetic field
strength at small gap-to-period ratio and higher field quality
by making the field distribution less sensitive to magnet in
homogeneities.
The use of wedged poles has now been demonstrated as a
means for increasing the field strength of the hybrid. The
wedged-pole3 configuration can cause the magnet surface
which faces the gap to be driven to the full magnet coercivity
He' thus resulting in higher on-axis field strength. Pole satu
ration is avoided by increasing the cross-sectional areas of
the pole tip without sacrificing magnet volume. Thus, the
design concept has the potential for both higher on-axis field
strength and improved field uniformity by operating the
poles farther from saturation. In addition, widening the pole
tips reduces the harmonic content of the field distribution. It
should be noted that wedged poles have previously been put
to use,5 but the geometric configuration of the permanent
magnets was not modified to exploit the advantages of the
wedged-pole shape.
The geometry of the wedged-pole concept and its field is
compared with the more conventional pure-REPM and hy
brid undu!ator concepts in Fig. 1. The pure-REPM undula
tor, used as the reference, consists of an array of permanent
magnet blocks, whereas the magnets are sandwiched
between highly permeable steel poles of rectangular cross
section in the conventional hybrid geometry. In the pure
REPM device, the field distribution is determined by the
strength and magnetic orientation of the magnet blocks.
The wedged-pole concept shown is an improvement
which is intended to alleviate some of the limitations that
occur in the basic hybrid geometry. In the conventional hy
brid, the on-axis field strength is maximized when the poles
are considerably narrower than the magnets. This not only
leads to considerable higher-order harmonic content in the
field distribution, but also implies that the achievable field
strength is limited by pole tip saturation.
In Fig. 1, the pure-REPM reference system is assumed
to have square blocks with unity fill factors. For both hy
brids the average magnet operating point is taken to be ap
proximately O.2B, (see Ref. 3 for additional detail). For
each full gap (g) to wavelength ().) ratio, the relative advan-
1581 Rev. Sci. Instrum. 60 (7), July 1989 0034-6748/89/071 8tU -04$01.30 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 1881
." .-.. ,." ""·.·.".7.-•.•.• , ••.•.• :.~.:,:.:.~ •••• ' •• .:.:-:,:.;.:.;.: •.• ,";'.:.:.:.:,:.;: .•• ' •••.• ~.:;:.;.:-;.; •..••••• > ....... :.;.:.: •••••••••• ;.:.;.:.:.;.; ••••• ,..'.:.:.:.:.:.: •••••••• ~.~.:.;.:.:-:., •••••••• :.:.:.;.:.;-:.:, ••••• '.~.:.:.:.:.;.;.;0.', •.•.. ,.;0 ..• ;.: . .'..... ..;-; .... _._ ',' .,"'" •. , .....•.. "._ •...... ' .•....... _ ..... ; ..... -; .....•...• "._._ .• ! .•...•.....
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:35:19---
o ELECTROMAGNETIC
{19BSt PAlADiN
I Pure-REPM
Conventional Hybrid
Wedged-Pole Hybrid
I) ___ L __ i ___ -" ___ L __ -'---.--'
0.2 0.4 0,6
9/AW
tage of the hybrid and wedged hybrid is shown, The STI
Nos. I and 2 undulators indicated are the pure-REPM ge
ometry with the latter using oversize blocKs. THUNDER
and NISUS are STI undulators with conventional and
wedged-hybrid geometries, respectively. Also shown is an
electromagnetic undulator of the Paladin experiment. 6 At a
typicalg/ A ratio of 0.35, the conventional hybrid has a 28%
advantage over the reference, and the wedged hybrid has a
45% advantage over the reference.
The reason for the advantage of the wedged pole is
shown in the calculated plots of Fig. 2, exploiting the
quarter-period boundary conditions. The field in the con
ventional hybrid is limited by pole tip saturation. This prob
lem is reduced with the wide pole tip ofthe wedged geometry
while the magnet thickness is increased at the opposite end.
An additional benefit of the wider pole tip is a reduction of
third harmonic content of the field.
FIG. 2. Field plots show pole
tip saturation is reduced with
wedged pole.
1882 Rev. ScLlnstrum., Vol. 60, No.7, July 1989 EUI1ElwEl
8w8m8
FIG. L Comparison ofundulator geome
tries and relative field strengths. The
pure-REPM with square blocks and unit
fill factor is taken as a reference for each
full gap (g) to wavelength (It) ratio.
II. SHIM TUNING FOR FIELD ERROR REDUCTION
In practice, the undulator field quality is limited by the
presence of several undesirable factors, most notably trajec~
tory (steering) errors, phase-shift errors and higher-order
moment errors, such as improper quadruple moments or
excessive sextupole. These imperfections are caused in part
by inhomogeneities in the permanent magnets, imperfect
poles and mechanical misplacements. The errors become
more critical for longer systems, leading disproportionately
higher costs.
Discussions of the allowable magnetic field error toler
ances can be found in Refs. 7 and 8. In those papers, dipole
errors that lead to trajectory errors are considered; in Ref. 7,
these errors are shown to have different tolerances depend
ing on whether the undulator radiation is required to be co
herent or incoherent. For the FEL application, coherence is
required, whereas in synchrotron applications, the electron
emittance in some cases precludes coherence, independent of
the undulator errors. For the coherent case, there is the gen
eral requirement that the wiggler errors be sufficiently small
so that the phase space occupied by the electron beam is less
than the phase space occupied by a diffraction-limited pho
ton beam. Also in Ref. 7, it is shown that the dipole error
tolerance, if expressed in terms of the error of the integrated
dipole field, is dependent on the number of wiggler periods
and in many cases independent of the photon wavelength
and e-beam energy.
These considerations are for dipole errors which lead to
trajectory errors oflow spatial frequencies, that is, for orbit
errors that occur over a substantial fraction of the wiggler
length. A separate consideration is required for high spatial
frequency errors. An example of such an error would be the
errors remaining after the overall electron trajectory is cor
rected at several points along the wiggler length. In the limit
that the trajectory is corrected at very frequent intervals,
every few periods, for example, these remaining errors are
essentially phase errors (or time-of~flight errors for the elec
tron) rather than trajectory errors. Separate ca1culations9
have shown the RMS errors at each pole as small as several
tenths of a percent can be important even when the trajector
ies are otherwise perfect.
High Power beamlines 1882
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:35:19There is particular emphasis on reducing the errors of
the wedged-pole hybrid wiggler, since it produces roughly at
15% higher field than the more conventional straight-pole
hybrid and 40% higher than the samarium cobalt systems
without poles. The higher-field strength is important since
the FEL gain-extraction productlO scales as B2.
Up to now, there has been no simple scheme for elimi
nating, or tuning out, the hybrid's field errors, partly because
individual errors are not easily traced to specific magnets or
poles. If specific errors can be identified, then magnets and
poles can be relocated compensating locations. Such musi
cal-chair tuning schemes are poody suited to high precision
assemblies with special fix turing for the large forces involved
and are labor intensive.
Methods are dearly needed for achieving substantially
lower error levels than what has been demonstrated to date.
The techniques used to get from the first lO-ttm devices to
the long-undulator 0.5-and I-flm FELs (Ref. 2) are not
suitable for further extrapolation. These methods consisted
of ( 1) use of more stringent mechanical tolerances through
precision grinding and thermal control, and (2) a narrowing
of the acceptance criteria for the permanent magnets. Me
chanical tolerances are already in the O.OOl-in. range for
these large structures, and further magnet selection will be
come prohibitively expensive due to decreased yield. What is
needed is a simple, inexpensive method of tuning a wiggler to
the desired fields after it has been assembled.
A promising candidate for tuning is the newly demon
strated field shimming technique. Thus far, it has been ap
plied only on a short wiggler prototype to tune out dipole
errors in the plane of the primary field, although with devel
opment, any moment in either plane might be corrected. The
basic concept is that thin iron shims are used to selectively
shunt a small fraction of the field lines from regions where
the field is higher than desired. Proper placement of the
shims results in a unifonn field of slightly lower strength,
about 1 %, than the average initial field.
The geometry is shown in Fig. 3 using one wavelength of
the wedged-pole configuration, although the concept has
general applicability to aU wiggler types. For this geometry,
the shims are placed in the shallow recess on the flat tips of
the magnets, shunting field lines from one pole to another as
indicated in the figure. Clearly the effect of shunting field
lines between poles is to reduce the field on axis. Depending
on the local field, the shi.ms vary in thickness from 0 to ap
proximately 0.5 mm. With the large scalar potential differ
ence between the poles, the shims are completdy saturated
and the number of field Hnes shunted is determined simply
by their thickness. The field signature from a single pair of
shims (Le., top and bottom), away from the ends ofa iong
FtG. 3. Shim placement in
wedged-pole hybrid wiggler. The
primary field component (hol
low arrows) can be controlled
with the shunted field (solid ar
rows).
1883 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No.7, July 1989 300. · lPolQ fIo~a · t t " • 200. ~
" .,...+~ ..,
0 100. ;;;
!i
;Ji .300
-too. i
-4.00 -2.00 .000 2.00 4.0n
Z (em)
FlG. 4. Shim signature for single pair of shims (as in Fig. 3) in a long wiggler
assembly.
wiggler, is shown in Fig. 4. The effect is confined largely
between two poles, and it has been shown experimentally
that this signature is approximately linear in the shim thick
ness and additive with that of shims on neighboring poles.
Given that the effect is predictable, one can clearly gen
erate alogrithms that modify the field in some predeter
mined way. Thus far, the shims have been used successfully
to modify the RMS level of field errors in a short wedged
pole undulator with a 3.9-cm period, 1.4-cm fun gap, and
5.6-kG on-axis peak field. That data is used here as an exam
ple. It was desired to reduce the level of kick errors, defined
as the error in half period field integrals under each pole, so
that their RMS deviation could be reduced from the initial
1.3% to a much lower value.
A computer alogrithm was devised to use the measured,
uncorrected field and then identify the proper location and
thickness of shims to counteract the measured errors. The
shims are easily hand placed and self-attaching in the loca
tions indicated in Fig. 3. Afier one shim set plus one iter
ation, the result is shown in Fig. 5 for the central 18 poles of
the 26-pole undulator. The initial kick errors are shown as
the points connected by the dashed lines. The large sinusoi
dal field and any offset has been taken out and only the resid
ual errors are shown. The corrected field is shown by the
solid line connected by the solid line. In this case, the kick
error went from an initialleve1 of 1.3% to a value of 0.11 %.
It is interesting to note, from the shim symmetry of Fig.
3, that there will be no net dipole movement created by the
200 RESIDUAL E~ROAS
After SI'i!r.lmlng
/
" ,..../
I
200 /
/ ,\ A
f \ I '
'.00 W.O fI. ! \
I /
Inlilal Error .. t.3% RMS
ShlIfifOOIJ Error,. O.IV. RMS
t4.0
HAU' • P~J;IOO NUMS£R 18.0
FIG. 5. Measured comparison of field errors before and after shimmmg of
IS·pole section ncar the center of a NISUS prototype module. Crosses are
half period field integrals before shimming, solid line are after shimming.
Solid and dashed lines are for visual reference only.
High Power beamlines 1883
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:35:19CROSS SECTION
shims, and as a consequence one wonders if the shims can be
used to correct dipole errors. The answer is yes, and the
explanation makes a constructive point concerning various
length scales, or spatial frequencies, of errors and various
error correction schemes. The shimming algorithm can be
used to redistribute any arbitrary distribution of kick errors
to a new distribution, In the simplest case, this may be move
ment of a dipole error, associated with a single pole, to a
location of a dipole correction coil, so that the correction and
error then occur at the same location. In some systems, it is
convenient for the correction coils to have large axial extent,
and in that case the shims are used to redistribute the errors
to a new distribution, which is simply a constant (position
independent) error, This constant error is then removed
with an externally applied field oflarge axial extent, Le., low
spatial frequency.
Thus, the shims are a means of converting the high spa
tial frequency errors to lower spatial frequencies, where they
can be dealt with by other methods, In the case of steering
errors, the other method would be a long steering coil and, in
the case of phase errors, the other method might be an ad
justment of taper or gap in each module of the undulator;
these modules being perhaps I-m long.
With this in mind, we recall that for both curves of Fig.
5, the constant offset, i.e., the average dipole error, has been
removed before the RMS errors were calculated. The shim
algorithm adjusted whatever dipole errors are present to be a
constant, axially uniform. This can easily be cancelled by
constant bias field, and the RMS errors were calculated in
this spirit. One demonstrated method of applying this bias
field is the use of correction coils lying between the vacuum
system and poles as shown in Fig. 6, To allow for e-beam
diagnostics in the particular vacuum system considered, it is
convenient that these steering coils be restricted to approxi
mately 0.5 m in length and be repeated at meter intervals.
1884 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No.7, July 1989 FIG. 6. Vacuum system with imbedded
steering correction.
Under these circumstances, the shim algorithm would be
adjusted to move all of the dipole errors to the locations
under the correction wires, and leave no errors in the areas
that have no correctors. The short undulator section for the
measurements reported here was treated as ifit were entirely
within a portion of constant correction field.
III. SUMMARY
The wedged-pole hybrid geometry has been demon
strated to produce higher fields than the conventional
straight-pole hybrid, having an advantage of approximately
15% at ag/ A of 0.35, as well as lower harmonic content. An
inexpensive tuning method for the hybrid systems has also
been demonstrated.
'J. M. Slater, J. Adamski, D. C. Quimby, T, L. Churchill. L. Y. Nelson, and
R. E. Center, IEEEJ. Quantum Electron. QE-19, 374 (1983).
2K. E. Robinson, D, C. Quimby, J. M. Slater, T. L. Churchill, and A. Valla,
ill Proceedings of the Eighth International Free Electron Laser Conference,
Glasgow, UK, September 1986 [Nue!. lnstrum. Methods A 259, 62
(1987)].
'D. C. Quimby and A, L. Pindroh, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 58, 339 (1987),
4K, Halbach. J. Phys. (Paris) 44, Cl (1183).
5G. A. Kornyukkin. G. N. Kulipanov, V. N. Utvinenko, N. A. Mesentsev,
A. N. Skrinsky, N. A, Vinokurov, and P. D, Voblyi, Nuc!. lnstrum. Meth
ods A 237, 281 (1985).
"G. A. Dies, in Proceedings of the Ninth International Free Electron Laser
Conference, Williamsburg, VA, September 1987 (to be published).
7J. M. Slater, in Proceedings afthe 1987 IEEE Particle Accelerator Confer
ence, Washington, D.C., March 1987 [IEEE Catalog No, 87CH2387-9, p.
479 (1987)].
"B. M. Kincaid. J. Opt. Soc, Am. B 2,1294 (l9SS).
9S. C. Gottschalk, Spectra Technology, Inc. and others (unpublished cal
culations) .
lOJ. M. Slater, AlP Conf. Proc. 130,505 (I985).
High Power beamlines 1884
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1.101524.pdf | Microstructure of epitaxial ErBa2Cu3O7−x thin films grown on MgO(100) substrates by
rf magnetron sputtering
J. Chang, M. Nakajima, K. Yamamoto, and A. Sayama
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 54, 2349 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.101524
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.101524
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Published by the AIP Publishing
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Superconducting YBa2Cu3O7− x thin films on metallic substrates prepared by RF magnetron sputtering using
BaTiO3 as a buffer layer
AIP Conf. Proc. 251, 96 (1992); 10.1063/1.42061
The effects of secondary particle bombardment on ion beam sputtered thin films of Y1Ba2Cu3O x deposited on
MgO (100)
AIP Conf. Proc. 200, 102 (1990); 10.1063/1.39062
Microstructure of epitaxially oriented superconducting YBa2Cu3O7−x films grown on (100)MgO by metalorganic
decomposition
Appl. Phys. Lett. 55, 286 (1989); 10.1063/1.102406
Superlattice modulation and epitaxy of Tl2Ba2Ca2Cu3O1 0 thin films grown on MgO and SrTiO3 substrates
Appl. Phys. Lett. 54, 1579 (1989); 10.1063/1.101387
Microstructures of YBa2Cu3O7−x superconducting thin films grown on a SrTiO3(100) substrate
Appl. Phys. Lett. 52, 841 (1988); 10.1063/1.99302
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131.193.242.161 On: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 21:02:42Microstructure of epitaxial ErBa2CUa07_X thin films grown on MgO (100)
substrates by rf magnetron sputtering
J. Chang, M. Nakajima, K. Yamamoto, and A. Sayama
Yokohama R&D Laboratories, The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd .. 2-4-3, Okano, Nishi-ku. Yokohama 220,
Japan
(Received 21 February 1989; accepted for publication 4 April 1989)
The microstructural properties of superconducting ErBa2Cuj07 _ x films on single-crystal
MgO substrates are studied by transmission electron microscopy. The as-grown films are
single-crystal-like and are composed of subgrains of 0.1-0.2 pm in size. Due to annealing, the
dislocations at the sub grain boundaries disappeared. The annealed films are epitaxial with
either the a or the b axis of the ErRa2Cu,07 _ x unit ceil along < 100) directions of the MgO
substrate. The stress caused by lattice mismatch is relaxed by the formation of misfit
dislocations at the film/substrate interface.
Various techniques have been applied to the preparation
of epitaxial high-temperature superconducting oxide films.
The best results for superconducting YRa2Cu307 x films
have been obtained using single-crystal SrTi03 substrates
due to the good lattice match between the substrate and
film, H and consequently, most of the microstructure studies
ofYBa1Cu307 x mms were made on SrTi03 substrates. S-7
However, despite the fact that MgO (100) substrates have a
rather large misfit (-8 %) with RE Ba2Cul07 _, [rare
earth metal (RE) 1 films, they are used because the films
produced are suitable for real applications. 4 In this letter, we
report the successful epitaxial growth of ErBa1Cu}07 _ x
(hereafter referred to as ErBCO) films on MgO (100) sub
strates by using rf magnetron sputtering. The annealed films
have a zero resistivity temperature 1:. of 82 K and a critical
current density Je > 105 A/cm] at 77 K. Furthermore, we
studied the microstructure of these as-grown and annealed
films by transmission electron microscopy. The as-grown
films are single-crystal-like and are composed of subgrains of
about 0.1-0.2 pm in size. After the 900 °C heat treatment,
most of the dislocations at the subgrain boundaries disap
peared. The films are epitaxially grown with either the a or b
axis of the ErRCO cell parallel to the (100) of MgO sub
strates, without an in-plane rotation ';,9 ofthe (001) planes of
the ErRCO unit cell. The stress caused by lattice mismatch is
relaxed by the formation of misfit dislocations at the film/
substrate interface.
We have grown almost completely c-axis oriented
ErRCO films on MgO (100) substrates by using rf magne
tron sputtering, In order to reduce the res puttering effect,
the sputtering was carried out under high pressure
(Ar/02 = 111,80-100 mTorr). The substrate was heated to
around 650 "C during the deposition and the deposition rate
was about 2 nm/min. From x-ray 2e diffraction analysis, as
grown films are oriented with the c axis perpendicular to the
suhstrate surface. The c-axis lattice parameter was measured
to be 11.75 A( ± 0.02 A). After annealing at 900°C for 2 h
in oxygen flow, the c-axis lattice parameter of a 0.3-0.4 /-lm
thick film became smaller and reached 11.68 A. By using a
standard dc four-probe transport method, films with T:
= 82 K and.le > 105 A/cm2 (with a best value 4X 105A/
em2) at 77 K were obtained. In order to further investigate the microstructure of
these c-axis oriented films, transmission electron micro
scopy (TEM) observations for both the as-grown films and
the annealed films were carried out. Figure 1 shows the plan
view image of an as-grown film. Figures 1 (a) and 1 ( c) arc
the bright field image and the selected area diffraction pat
tern from the area shown in Fig. 1 (b), respectively. In Fig.
1 (a) a granular structure is observed. However, the diffrac
tion pattern shows dear diffraction spots, corresponding to
(100) and (010) planes of the ErBCO unit cell. No ring
patterns characteristic of polycrystalline films are observed.
Furthermore, bright field/dark field TEM images showed
that dislocations occurred at the boundaries between the
granular structure of Fig. 1. However, twins did not occur in
the as-grown film. Figure 2 shows the cross-sectional image
of the as-grown film. Boundaries between c-axis oriented
FIG, 1. TEM plan-view images of an as-grown film: (a) bright field image
(RF.I): (b) B.EI with selector aperture: (c) ,elected area ditrraction pat
tern from (b).
2349 Appl. Phys. Lett. 54 (23), 5 June 1989 0003-6951/89/232349-03$01.00 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 2349
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131.193.242.161 On: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 21:02:42FIG. 2. TEM cross-sectional image of an as-grown film. The inset shows the
selected area diffraction pattern from an area which includes the MgO sub
strate.
domains can be observed. The diffraction pattern of the inset
of Fig. 2 shows that neighboring grains are oriented parallel
to the c axis. From these TEM observations, we can con
clude that the as-grown films are single-crystal-like and are
composed of small subgrains with an average size of 0.1--0.2
pm. The c-axis orientation spreads within a small deviation
angle. The standard deviation angle of the c axis measured
by the x-ray rocking curve is sharp and reaches a constant
value of 0.45° (resolution angle ~0.3°) for films thicker than
50um.
However, Tc of the as-grown films is below 77 K. In
order to provide a proper amount of oxygen into the films,
post-annealing was employed. Figure 3 shows the cross-sec
tional image of the annealed film. Comparing Figs. 2 and 3,
the boundaries of c-axis domains are seen to have disap
peared due to annealing. The lattice fringes parallel to the
interface correspond to the (002) planes ofthc ErRCO film.
Furthermore, bright field/dark field TEM images showed
that the twins of 20 to 30 nm in width occurred due to the
tetragonal-orthorhombic phase transformation as the film
was cooling down from 900 °C to room temperature. The
inset of this figure shows the selected area diffraction pattern
from the area which includes the MgO substrate; the inci-
FIG. 3. TEM cross-sectional image of an annealed film. The inset shows the
selected area diffraction pattern from an area which includes the MgO sub
strate.
2350 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No. 23, 5 June 1989 FIG. 4. High-resolution image of the film/substrate interface.
dent electron beam is parallel to (010) direction ofthe MgO
substrate. The diffraction spots of Er BCO (100) can be ob
served clearly. This result means that instead of an in-plane
rotation of the (00l) planes of ErBCO to fit the lattice pa
rameter ofMgO (100), the film grew epitaxially with either
the a or b axis along the MgO < 100) direction. Figure 4
shows a TEM high-resolution image of the interface. It indi
cates that the ErBCO film was epitaxially grown aligned
with the MgO {IOO} lattice. Arrows point to the misfit dislo
cations which occurred regularly along the interface. The
stress caused by lattice mismatch has been relaxed, presum
ably by the formation of these misfit dislocations. However,
an amorphous layer was not formed at the film-substrate
interface. Before annealing, we found that most of the sub
strate surface was rather rough with hills and valleys of
depth about 0,1 pm. However, apart from the roughn~ss at
the interface with depth ~ 12 A as shown in Fig. 4, most of
the interface of the annealed film became smooth. We believe
that the formation of a smooth interface is attributed to a
reaction that may have been taken place at the interface
between the MgO substrate and ErBCO film during anneal
ing.
In summary, epitaxial ErBCO films have been success
fully grown on MgO (100) substrates by rfmagnetron sput
tering. As-grown films are single-crystal-like and are com
posed of small subgrains. With proper annealing, films with
1~ = 82 K and Je > 105 A/cm2 at 77 K were obtained. These
films were epitaxially grown with their a or b axis along the
MgO < 100) direction. The stress caused by lattice mismatch
is relaxed by the formation of misfit dislocations at the inter
face.
The authors wish to express great appreciation for fruit
ful technical discussions and funding bestowed by a group of
Japanese electric power companies-Tokyo Electric Power
Co., Tohoku Electric Power Co., and Hokkaido Electric
Power Co.
Iy' Enomoto, T. Murakami, M. Suzuki, ane! K. Moriwaki, Jpn. 1. AppL
Phys. 26, L1248 (1987).
2T, Tcrashima and Y. Bando, Appl. Phys. Lett. 53, 2232 (1988).
.Ip. Chaudhari, R. H. Koch, R. B. Laibowitz, T. R. McGuirt:. and R. J.
Gambino. Phys. Rev. Lett. 58. 2684 (19X7).
Chang eta/. 2350
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
131.193.242.161 On: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 21:02:424J. K wo, M. Hong, D. J. Trevor, R. M. Fleming, A. E. White, R. C. Farrow,
A. R. K01'tan, and K. T. Short, App!. Phys. Lett. 53, 26R3 (1988).
'C. II. Chen. H. S. Chen, and S. H. Liou, App!. I'hys. Lett. 53, 2339 ( 198R).
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52, 1834 (1988).
2351 Appi. Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No. 23, 5 June 1989
.•.••••••• X"; •••••••••••••••••• :.':':.:.:.~.:.:.:.:.:.:;;;-.: O;.:.:.:.: ••• ;.:.;';".O;-".· ••• ·.·;·;>.·.·.O;~.v.·.·.·.·.·.· ................................. ,. •. ;-0:.:.-;0:.:.:-;.;.;.; •••• ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ••••••• ' •.••••• -; •••••• 'lB. M. Clemens, C. W. Nieh, J. A. Kittl, W. L. Johnson, J. Y. Josefowicz,
and A. T. Hunter, App!. Phys. Lett. 53, 187l (1988).
"I. Bloch, M. Hciblum, and Y. Komem, Appl. Phys. Lett. 46,1092 (1985).
"M. Eizenberg, D. A. Smith, M. Heiblum, and A. Segmuller, App!. Phys.
Lett. 49, 422 (1986).
Chang etal. 235i
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
131.193.242.161 On: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 21:02:42 |
1.343793.pdf | Rate equation analysis of microcavity lasers
H. Yokoyama and S. D. Brorson
Citation: J. Appl. Phys. 66, 4801 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343793
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343793
View Table of Contents: http://jap.aip.org/resource/1/JAPIAU/v66/i10
Published by the American Institute of Physics.
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Downloaded 07 Oct 2012 to 152.3.102.242. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsRate equation analysis of microcavity lasers
H, Yokoyama8) and S. Do 8rorson
Department 0/ Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Research Laboratory afElectronics,
Massachusetts Institute a/Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
(Received 21 October 1988; accepted for publication 24 July 1989)
We describe the light output properties of single mode lasers having cavity dimensions on the
order of the emitted wavelength. A simple rate equation formula is derived for a four-level
laser assuming enhanced spontaneous emission into the cavity. These rate equation analyses
show that increasing the coupling of spontaneous emission into the cavity mode causes the
lasing properties to become quite different from those of usual lasers having cavity dimensions
much larger than a wavelength. We find that the lasing threshold disappears, the light emission
efficiency increases, relaxation oscillations do not occur, and the dynamic response speed is
improved. It is shown that the spontaneous emission rate alteration caused by the cavity plays
an essentially important role for these characteristics.
L INTRODUCTION
The alteration of a material's spontaneous emission rate
in a cavity 1,2 has recently attracted much attention as a fun
damental means of studying the interaction of matters with
vacuum field fluctuations. To date, many experiments have
demonstrated such effects, using Rydberg atoms,3-9 a solid
state laser material,1O organic dyes,11.12 and semiconduc
tors. 13, 14 Altering the spontaneous emission, however, is also
interesting from the device point of view. For example, Yab
lonovitch has proposed the utilization ofinhibited spontane
ous emission in semiconductor lasers for extremely low cur
rent operation.15 On the other hand, Kobayashi et al.
proposed the concept of thresholdless lasers with the full
confinement of spontaneously emitted photons in closed mi~
ero-optical cavities (microcavities) .16 Although the concept
of spontaneous emission rate alternation has not been taken
into account in his idea, enhanced, rather than inhibited,
spontaneous emission should occur in that situation. For
recent surface emitting semiconductor lasers, very short cav
ity structures have been fabricated. 17,18 Changes in sponta
neous emission properties could play an important role in
these devices.
In this paper we describe an analysis for light output
properties of microcavity lasers, based on rate equations
which are simply derived taking into account the enhanced
spontaneous emission caused by a microcavity. It is shown
that, if the coupling ratio of spontaneous emission into the
one cavity mode is sufficiently high, the laser oscillation
characteristics are greatly changed, including the threshold
behavior, the influence of nonradiative processes on input
output conversion efficiency, and the dynamic modulation
response.
iI. EMISSION RATE ENHANCEMENT
First, we discuss the enhancement of spontaneous and
stimulated emission rate in a closed microcavity. Here, we
assume that only one resonant cavity mode overlaps the gain
bandwidth (free space transition width) ofthe laser medium
3) Presently on leave from Opto-Electronics Basic Research Laboratory,
NEC Corporation, Miyukigaoka, Tsukuba 305, Japan. because of the very small cavity volume (of wavelength di
mension) ; thi.s is the origin of the spontaneous emission rate
alteration. Two cases of microcavity operation exist. In the
first case, the gain bandwidth is much less than the cavity
mode band width. According to Fermi's golden fule, the
spontaneous emission rate Ac in a cavity is represented in
this case by2
(1)
with
(2)
(3)
where A is the spontaneous emission rate in free space (here
after, we use the word "free space" as the meaning of "with
out cavity"), Pc (vo) [PI (Va) ] is the mode density for a final
photon state in a cavity (in free space) at transition frequen
cy Va. Qis the cavity quality factor, cis the velocity oflight, V
is the mode volume (in this case, cavity volume), H is an
interaction hamiltonian, Ii) is the initial state without pho
tons, and I f) is the final state with one photon. In (1), 1/ is
the enhancement of the spontaneous emission caused by the
cavity, Although recent interest has been focused on sponta
neous emission, (1) is also valid for stimulated emission.
This becomes obvious with the quantization of electromag
netic field. In this procedure, the overall photon emission
rate Rc for an atom (or a molecule) in a cavity is expressed
as
(4)
where s represents the number of photons in the cavity mode
in the initial state.
The second case of micro cavity operation occurs when
the cavity resonance peak is sharper than the gain band
width. This often occurs in atomic systems and causes the
"golden rule" to break down. In this situation, coherent ef
fects, such as Rabi oscillations,S or "one atom maser" oper
ation6 occur.
Expressions (1) and (4) may also be adapted to such
broad transition linewidth systems as organic dyes, certain
4801 J. Appl. Phys. 66 (10), 15 November 1989 0021-8979/39/224601-05$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of PhySiCS 4801
Downloaded 07 Oct 2012 to 152.3.102.242. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionssolid-state laser materials, and semiconductors, as long as
the cavity mode separation width is much broader than the
transition linewidth in free space, and the cavity resonance
width is broader than the inverse of the radiative lifetime.
For example, in the case of a semiconductor material, based
on the discussion in Ref. 19, the spontaneous emission rate
enhancement ratio 11 can be expressed as
1/ = f" fc(v)dv 1100
ff(v)dv
== l"'Pccv)P(v)dv /1'0'0 Pf(v)P(v)dv, (5)
where fc (v) [rf (v)] is the spontaneous emission rate for
emitting photons of energy hv with (without) a cavity,
Pc (v) [PI (v) 1 is the mode density for photons, and P( v)
represents the transition rate per mode. In (5), as a practical
approximation, the free-space emission rate is given by
PfCvo)P(vo)t:.P, where Vo is the photon frequency at the
emission peak, and AP is the FWHM of P( l'). In a micro
cavity, Peev) is more sharply peaked than P(v), and the
spectrally integrated emission rate can be expressed as
Pc (v~) )P( vb )¥c> where vb is the photon energy at a reso
nancepeak, APe is the FWHM ofPe (v). However, it should
be noted that when absorption loss is negligible Pc (v)!::.pc is
nearly equal to PI (v)1.\1', where t:.v is the cavity mode sepa
ration width. Thus, the ratio ?J is roughly expressed by
(6)
If v,; = vo, the ratio is ~ av/ AP. This shows that the spec
trally integrated emission enhancement depends on the cav
ity mode separation. Note that if PC vo)/ P( vb) > /::"v/ /::,.p
(i,e., off resonance cavity), 1/ becomes less than 1; thus the
spontaneous emission is inhibited instead of enhanced. The
discussion based on (5) is also applicable to a homogeneous
ly broadened two-level system, if the phase coherence time is
much shorter than the population lifetime.
Furthermore, if we assume that there are several cavity
modes within bandwidth, it can be easily found by carrying
out the integration of (5) that the spontaneous emission rate
does not change. Therefore, from the mode density point of
view, it is understood that we do not have to take into ac
count the spontaneous emission rate alternation for a con
ventionallargc-size (compared to the wavelength) cavity
laser. However, even in that case, it can be seen that spectral
ly partial emission enhancement occurs within each cavity
mode resonance width, and emission inhibition takes place
between cavity resonance peaks.
Classically, the spontaneous emission rate alteration
can be understood as caused by the change in radiation resis
tance experienced by a classical dipole when inserted in a
cavity. A complementary view is that it is the result of reso
nant enhancement of the electromagnetic field by multiple
reflections in the cavity, when the roundtrip time oflight is
much shorter than the phase coherence time of a dipole. This
effectively increases the coupling of the dipole to the field.
Drexhage adopted this method to calculate the spontaneous
emission rate modification of thin dye films. I I Furthermore,
semiclassical laser equations may be able to describe the be
havior of microcavity lasers if spontaneous emission pro-
4802 J, Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 10, 15 November 1989 cesses are properly involved.20 However, as outlined by ex
pressions (1)-(6), a description based on mode density
alteration simplifies the discussion, and consistently treats
both spontaneous and stimulated emission in laser rate equa
tions, as long as we are not concerned with the laser's fre
quency and phase.
m. RATE EQUATIONS
To use rate equations based on Fermi's golden rule, we
must insure that an adiabatic approximation is valid. That is,
no transient coherent effects occur. The phase coherence
time of organic dyes and semiconductors are in the femto
second range, while the inverse of the Rabi frequency in a
cavity will be on the order of 1-10 ps for usual optical pump
ing rates ( < 1 MW cm-2). Thus, such transient coherent
phenomena as superradiance, optical nutation, etc., will not
occur for these materials, and a simple rate equation ap
proach is valid.
To begin, we may study the rate equations of a single
mode microcavity laser, which is completely enclosed by the
reflector. For such a device, the spontaneous emission rate is
given by (4). Assuming an ideal four-level laser material
(the decay rates of the highest state to the upper laser state,
and of the lower laser state to the lowest state are extremely
fast), with no nonradiative processes and no inversion satu
ration, the rate equations can be written as
dn -=p~Ac(s+ On, dt
ds ~ = Ac (s + l)n ~ ys,
elt (7)
(8)
where n is the number of excited atoms (molecules) in the
cavity of volume V, p represents the pumping rate, and y is
the damping rate for photons from the passive cavity. The
static solution of these equations is simple but noteworthy:
s=p/yand n=yp/[Ac(p+r)].
We see that the light output increases linearly with increas
ing pumping for all pumping rates. In other words, this de
vice works as a "thresholdless laser." As we will show, this
occurs because all photons are emitted into the one single
cavity mode. Note that n does not proportionally increase
with pumping increase, and this behavior is different from
that of ordinary spontaneous emission, in which the excited
state population n linearly increases with pumping increase.
This thresholdless nature is not necessarily the same as the
concept of one atom maser,5 in which at most only one atom
exists in the cavity at a time and whose behavior is not simply
described by an argument based on the golden rule.
Although enhanced spontaneous emission CAe >A), is
not the necessary condition for the lack of a threshold, the
consequent increase in the spontaneous emission rate has
some great advantages from the device point of view. For one
thing, the response speed of the device to dynamic modula
tion will be improved, as a result of the increased spontane
ous emission rate. Furthermore, the influence of nonradia
tive depopulation processes will be decreased since the
spontaneous emission lifetime will be much shorter than the
nonradiative lifetime. Another interesting feature of the
H. Yokoyama and S. D. Brorson 4802
Downloaded 07 Oct 2012 to 152.3.102.242. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsthresholdless laser is that relaxation oscillations will not oc-4.-----.-----.------.------:::.
cur. This happens because there is no threshold, so the
pumping energy is always immediately converted to laser
output. Thus, there is no mechanism for storing energy in
the laser medium, which is necessary for relaxation oscilla
tions. This is confirmed by a standard small-signal analysis,
which reveals that there is no resonance frequency for relax
ation oscillations.
So far, we have considered the case of a completely
closed cavity resonator. Now we would like to generalize to
the case of an open resonator. We assume there is still one
cavity mode, but now other modes exist which correspond to
photons leaving the open cavity. We assume that the sponta
neous emission into the cavity mode is stilI enhanced, but the
free-space modes have the free-space spontaneous emission
rate. This corresponds to the case discussed in Ref. 8. We
take the ratio of the solid angle subtended by the cavity mode
to the free space modes to be po Thus, /3 is proportional to the
inverse of the mode volume V; from another view point, it is
the light-material interaction strength, If a concentric cav
ity9 is assumed, the value of /3 simply corresponds to the
solid angle which an atom sees the cavity mirrors at the cav
ity center. Also taking into account nonradiative depopula-
tion processes, the rate equations can be represented as
dn -=p -(I-f3)An +/3A;O +s)n -rn, (9)
dt
ds - = tU ; (1 + s) n -ys. (10) dt
Here, s is the number of photons coupled to the cavity mede,
and r is the nonradiative depopulation rate. In this case, A ;
represents the enhanced spontaneous emission rate for the
cavity mode, and is related to the free space rate by A ; = FA,
where the enhancement factor is F. In the limit /3 -> I, we
have a closed cavity, and A ; reduces to Ac in Eq. (1).8 Note
that in a broad bandwidth material, F depends on the cavity
mode separation width as discussed in Sec. II. Thus, F de
pends on the cavity size, as does/3. Therefore, to get an large
/3A ~ value, the cavity should be quite small, and to avoid the
photon lifetime (lIy) decrease, the reflectivity of cavity
mirrors should be quite high. For an open microcavity with
wavelength dimensions. although a plane mirror Fabry
Perot configuration could provide a rather large value for f3
( ~ 0.1), the achievement of a microscopic confocal or con
centric Fabry-Perot configuration would improve the value
of /3. Full confinement of spontaneous emission into the cav
ity mode might be realized with microsphere or microcube
cavity structures.
IV. NUMERICAL RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
We have carried out numerical analysis using (9) and
(10). Steady-state solutions of (9) and (10), for an ideal
four level laser (r = 0), are shown in Fig. 1. In the figure, to
compare the output properties for cavities with different /3
(I.e., different mode volume), light (photon) output SOUl
excited state population N, and pumping P are, respectively,
normalized as
4803 J. AppL Physo, Vol. 66, No.1 0, 15 November 1989 3
0 4
z 2
z 0
!-(3-000001
<:I: 0,01 -l
::J 001 13
CL -~ 0 2 :3 4
PUMPING P
FIG. L Light output SO,,! and population inversion Nvs pumping Pofmi
cTOcavity four-lcvellaserso A co, 109 S -', F = 10, r = 10'2 s -', and r = o.
r /3A;
Sout = ---s = (JF5, A Y /3A' NT C =--11,
Y
and
1 (J A; /3F P=---p=-p.
A Y r
It is seen that as (J increases, the threshold disappearso In the
mode point of view, for the (J.( 1 open cavity case, even
though there is only one cavity mode, excited atoms are
mostly coupled with free-space modes, and the cavity mode
photons can only increase rapidly above "threshold" be
cause of intensive stimulated emission. Thus, the phase tran
sition (threshold) appears in the cavity mode output. (Note
that in actual semiconductor laser devices, the spontaneous
emission coupling ratio (J is 10-5_10-6 per cavity mode.)
On the other hand, in the case of /3 = 1 (closed micro
cavity), all the photons emitted couple into the single micro
cavity resonance mode. Therefore, the emission process
gradually changes from the spontaneous emission dominant
one to the stimulated emission dominant one without a
phase transition (threshold) 0 Although it may not be mean
ingful to distinguish spontaneous emission and stimulated
emission if there is no threshold, for convenience, we distin
guish the emission rate proportional to s in the equation as
stimulated emission. Therefore, for the pumping level shown
in Fig. 1, the light emission process is dominated by the "en
hanced spontaneous emission," because the unnormalized
number of photon s = 0.4 at P = 4 is less than 1. The behav
ior of the excited state population fl is also notable. For the
case of an ordinary laser, with increasing pumping, n in
creases until the lasing threshold level and then is clamped
there. On the other hand, 11 of a thresholdless laser very slow
ly increases with a pumping increase, and it reaches a con
stant value at infinitely large pumping (the condition for
s> 1 ) . As is shown in Fig .. 2, another noteworthy feature of a
Ho Yokoyama and S. D. 8rorson 4803
Downloaded 07 Oct 2012 to 152.3.102.242. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions4~----~--------'-------r-----~
... " <> (f) :3
~ 2
a...
~
::> o
o
PUMPING P
FIG. 2. Light output Sout vs pumping P of microcavity four-level lasers
involving nonradiativc processes. A = 109 s-', F= 10, Y = 10" s-', and
r = 1098-'.
thresholdless laser is to maintain high output conversion ef
ficiency, even if the nonradiative population lifetime is com
parable or less than the free-space spontaneous emission life
time. This occurs even while the lasing threshold of small /3
case markedly increases. This is easily understood, since in a
thresholdless laser, the ratio of radiative depopulation rate
to nonradiative one is greatly increased because of the en
hanced spontaneous emission.
It has also been found that for fixed p, increasing F also
gradually removes the threshold. This is because of the sub
stantial increase in the amount of spontaneous emission cou
pled into the cavity mode.
Concerning the dynamic properties of microcavity la
sers, as discussed in Sec. III, higher frequency response is
expected in thresholdless laser, because of the enhancement
of spontaneous emission rates. Figure 3 shows a calculated
result for microcavity four leve11asers with sinusoidal pump-
3r-----------------------------~
2
~ /3 " I
(J)
I-0
;:) :3
a... I-
;:)
0
:2
,ez 0.0001
o 4
TIME (ns)
FIG. 3. Dynamic light output properties of microcavity fom-levellasers.
A = 1095-', F= 10, r = 5 X 10" s-', f' = 0, Po O~ 2. The modulation fre
quency of pumping is taken as! = 2 X 10'" s '.
4804 J. Appl. Pl1ys., Vol. 66, No. 10, 15 November 1989 ing modulation of P = Po( 1 -cos 211'ft). To clearly extract
the effect of spontaneous emission coupling, the nonradia
tive depopulation rate r is taken to be zero in this calcula
tion. The enhancement factor is taken to be F = 50, since
this value can be realized by a halfwavdength size cavity for
semiconductors. In the small /3 case, a time delay for lasing
and relaxation oscillations are observed. On the other hand,
when f3 = 1, there i.s no relaxation oscillation (this is pre
dicted from standard small-signal analysis), and the modu
lation depth in steady state is much larger than that when/3
is small. It is noted here that the unnormalized average pho
ton number in the cavity s = Soutl/3F is much larger for
{3= 0.0001 case (s = 200) thanfor,8 = 1 case (s = 0.04). It
is emphasized, therefore, that the response speed improve
ment in the case of p = 1 is dominantly due to the decrease
in spontaneous emission lifetime by a factor of F for the
pumping level shown in Fig. 3.
Although (9) and (10) are valid forfour-levella.';er sys
tem, they are also approximately applicable to intrinsic
semiconductors (with bimolecular radiative recombina
tion). There, the spontaneous emission rate is represented by
A = B r n (under the Boltzmann carrier distribution approxi
mation), where Br is the bimolecular carrier recombination
coefficient. When the calculation is performed using this
expression for A, the features are qualitatively the same as
for the case offour-levellasers.
V. CONCLUSION
In summary, rate equation analyses have been imple
mented on static and dynamic output properties of micro
cavity lasers, based on the concept of spontaneous emission
rate enhancement in a cavity. Although our simple rate
equation analyses can bring information only about output
power, some attractive features of microcavity lasers have
been predicted. Among these are the lack of threshold, the
efficiency increase, and the high-speed response improve
ment, when the coupling ratio of spontaneous emission into
the cavity is sufficiently large. In these characteristics, the
increase in spontaneous emission rate plays an essentially
important role, Thus, it should be noted that the operational
properties of single-mode microcavity laser are not correctly
explained by simply counting the number of cavity modes,
without taking into account the spontaneous emission rate
alteration. Other aspects of microcavity lasers (oscillation
frequency, linewidth, etc.) are also interesting subjects to
study, but they should be discussed in the context of a semi
dassical or a fully quantum mechanical analysis.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors are grateful to Professor T. Kobayashi of
Osaka University, Professor E. P. Ippen, Professor H. A.
Haus, Professor D. Kleppner, and Dr. J. Wang of Massa
chusetts Institute of Technology for their stimulating discus
sions. The valuable comments of Dr. R. Lang, Y. Nambu,
M. Suzuki, K. Nishi, T. Hiroshima, and T. Anan of NEC
Corporation are also gratefully acknowledged. This work
was supported in part at M.I.T. by the Joint Services Elec
tronics Program Contract No. DAAL03-86-K-0002.
H. Yokoyama and S. D. Brorson 4804
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"K. H. Drexhage, in Progress in Optics, edited by E. Wolf (North Holland,
Amsterdam, 1974), VoL XII, p. 165.
'2F. DeMartini, G. Innocenti, G. R. Jacobovitz, and P. Mataloni, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 59, 2995 (1987).
"E. Yablonovitch, Phys. Rev. Lett. 51!. 2059 (I9!l7).
I4H. Yokoyama, K. Nishi, T. Anan, and H. Yamada, Tech. Dig. of Topical
4805 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, NO.10,15 November 1989 Meeting on Quantum Wells for Optics and Optoelectronics, Salt Lake
City, March 1989, paper MD4 (unpublished).
"E. Yablol1ovitch, T. J. Gmitter, and R. Bila!, Phys. Rev. Lett. 61, 2546
(1988).
J('T. Kobayashi. T. Segawa, A Morimoto, and T. Sueta, Tech. Dig. of 43rd
Fal! Meeting of Japanese Applied Physics Society, paper 29a-B-S, Sep
tember 1982 (unpuhlished); T. Kobayashi, A Morimoto, and T. Sueta,
Tech. Dig. of 46th Fall Meeting of Japanese Applied Physics Society, pa
per 4a-N-l, October 1985 (unpublished) (both ill Japanese).
17J. L. Jewell, K. F. Huang, K. Tai, Y. H. Lee, R. Fischer, S. L. McCall, and
A. Y. Cho, App!. Phys. Lett. 55, 424 (1989).
"s. W. Corzine, R. S. Geels, R. H. Yan, J. W. Scott, L. A. Coldren, and P.
L. Gourly, IEEE Photonics Tech. I,etL 1,52 (1989).
'''n. c. Casey, Ir. and M. B. Panish, Heterostructure Lasers (Academic,
New York, 1978), Chap. 3.
20 A semiclassical description of spontaneous emission in a cavity has been
done in the following paper: J. J. Childs, D. J. Heinzen. J. T. Hutton, and
M. S. Feld (unpublished).
21M. Sargent III, M. O. Scully, and W. E Lamb, Jr., Laser Physics (Ad
dison-Wesley, Boston, MA, 1974), Chap. 8.
H. Yokoyama and S. D. Brorson 4805
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1.343077.pdf | Experimental vortex transitional nondestructive readout Josephson memory cell
Shuichi Tahara, Ichiro Ishida, Yumi Ajisawa, and Yoshifusa Wada
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 851 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343077
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343077
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/2?ver=pdfcov
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15Experimental vortex transitional nondestructive read .. out Josephson
memory ceU
Shuich! Tahara, ichiro Ishida, Yumi Ajisawa, and Yoshifusa Wada
l.ficroelectronics Research Laboratories, NEC Corporation, 4-1-1, Miyazaki, Miyamae-ku, Kawasaki,
Kallagawa 213, Japan
(Received 7 April 1988; accepted for publication 20 September 1988)
A proposal vortex transitional nondestructive read-out Josephson memory cell is successfully
fabricated and tested. The memory cell consists of two superconducting loops in which a single
flux quantum is stored and a two-junction interferometer gate as a sense gate. The memory cell
employs vortex transitions in the superconducting loops for writing and reading data. The
vortex transitional memory operation of the cell contributes to improving its sense
discrimination and operating margin. The memory cell is activated by two control signals
without timing control signals, Memory cell chips have been fabricated using a niobium
planarization process. A ± 2i % address signal current margin and a ± 33% sense gate
current margin have been obtah1cd experimentally. Successful memory operations of a cell
driven by two-junction interferometer gates has been demonstrated. The single flux quantum
operations of this memory cell makes it an attractive basic element for a high-speed cache
memory.
I. INTRODUCTION
Josephson devices, with their high intrinsic switching
speed and low-power dissipation, are promising circuit ele
ments for future ultrahigh performance computer applica
tions. In the Josephson computer, a high-speed cache mem
ory is indispensable to complement the Josephson logic
circuits which have picosecond-switching characteristics. In
general, signal delay time through a memory array line is
first-order proportional to the amount of stored flux quanta
in the memory cell. I A single flux quantum memory cell,
therefore, is an attractive basic element for a high-speed
cache memory. Various kinds of single flux quantum mem
ory cells have been proposed and examined experimental
ly.2-4
A quantum loop cell proposed by Henkels et al.2•5 has
been the object of particular study for a high-speed memory.
This memory cell, however, has several problems. Interfer
ometer gates with two control signals are used as write and
sense gates in the memory cell. Since tolerances on all of a
gate current and two control currents are equal for a maxi
mum margin in these gates, it is difficult to approach a theo
reticallimit of the operating margin. In the memory array,
memory cell selection results from a coincidence of X and Y
address signal currents. U nselected cells in the X and Y lines
suffer from half-selected disturbance. Therefore, a large op
erating tolerance in the memory cell is very important for
increasing the discrimination between selected and unselect
ed cells. In addition, a second problem for this cell is the fact
that the necessity of timing sequence for address signals
makes high-speed memory operations difficult. Supply of a
timing signal requires a large timing margin, which prevents
the circuits from reducing its cycle time. AdditionaHy, cell
driving current levels are not equal in the memory cell, re
quiring a different current level for signals such as address,
data, and read/write conditions, This often reduces an inter
connection margin between the cells and peripheral circuits. It is an important problem when memory circuits with large
operating margins are constructed.
In this paper, we discuss a single flux quantum memory
cell, called a vortex transitional memory ceU.6 Its main fea
tures are a large operating margin, a memory operation with
no timing control signals and an almost equal current level
for control signals. This memory cell is activated by X, Y
address signals and a sense signal, and employs vortex transi
tions in the superconducting loops for writing and reading
data. The vortex transition in the superconducting loops
coupled with the sense gate permits that operating margins
for address signals are almost independent of a sense current
margin. Therefore, the operating margin for the memory cell
can be optimally designed to be its theoretical Hmit. High
speed memory operations are possible because timing con
trol signals are not necessary. The memory cell contributes
to improve a margin for a total memory circuit since the
applied control current levels are almost equal.
The memory cell consists of two superconducting loops
each of which stores a persistent circulating current corre
sponding to a single flux quantum. The sense gate couples
with one of the superconducting toops. The cell is fabricated
by using Nb/ AIOJNb junctions and the niobium planari
zation technique.7 The surface flatness for each layer results
in high reliability. The basic circuit configuration is de
scribed in Sec. II. The fabrication process and experimental
results are presented in Sec. III. Conclusions are finally giv
en in Sec. IV.
II. CIRCUIT CONFIGURATIONS
An equivalent circuit for the vortex transitional nondes
tructive read-out (NDRO) Josephson memory ce!l is shown
in Fig. 1. The cell consists of two superconducting loops
(loop 1 and loop 2), each of which stores a single flux quan
tum. The superconducting loop contains a Josephson june-
851 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (2), 15 January 1989 0021-8979/89/020851-06$02.40 @ 1 9S8 American Institute of Physics 851
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15ly
Is
IDC -----'l'""-4-...ro1fP----
I )( Mi ._~( '-' ""","'--.J-""""""""",,,
LI
JI RI
FIG. 1. Equivalent circuit of a vortex transitional NDRD memory cell.
L, = 5 pH, L2 = 4 pH, L, = 7 pH, L4 = 1 pH, I, = 0.2 rnA, 12 = 0.1 rnA,
and I, ,= 14 = 0.1 rnA. (/,-1.,: critical currents of J,-J •. )
tion and inductance elements. Damping resistors R I and R2
are connected in parallel to junctions JI and J2, respectively,
and provide suitable damping conditions.6 The sense gate is
a two-junction interferometer gate, magnetically coupled
with loop 2. Loop 1 stores information in the foml of a single
flux quantum. The Josephsonjunction, J" included in loop 1
has a function in which a single flux quantum is caused to
enter loop 1 when X and Y address signals are coincident.
Reading of stored data can be accomplished by the loop 2
vortex transition, which depends on the stored data in loop
1, and the switching of the selected sense gate caused by the
transition. Optimum design parameters are listed in Fig. 1.
Here let us investigate the variation of the quantum
phase differences B\ and 82 of the Josephson junctions J1 and
J2 in the memory loops against the address signal currents Ix
coupled with inductances L I and L2, and Iy injected into the
loop 1 in Fig. 1. The flux quantization condition and the
current continuation condition yield equations for I" [I and
the quantum phase difference BI, 82 as
(tPo/21T)( 8J + 2m1T -82 + 2n1T)
= L2Iy + (Lj + L2) (lx -I, sin 8,) + L3I2 sin 82 ,
(1)
(<1>01211')(82 -2mr)
= L4ly -L4Ij sin 81 -(L3 + L4)I2 sin 82 , (2)
where II and 12 are the Josephson critical currents of junc
tion J1 and J2, respectively, <Po is the magnetic flux quantum,
L1, L2• L3, and L4 are inductances in Fig. 1, and m and n are
integers for the quantities of magnetic flux in loop 1 and loop
2, respectively. In these equations, we assume mutual induc
tances MJ and M2 equal L I and L2, respectively. The stability
condition produced by potential energy minimum is
A JlIz cos ()\ cos 82 + A2I( cos Bj
+ A312 cos B2 + A4>0, (3)
where
Al = (L(L3 + LjL4 + L2L3 + L2L4 + L3L4)/L2L4,
A2 = (<J>o/21T) (LI + L2 + L4)/(L2L4) ,
A3 = (tPo/21T)(L3 + L4)/(L2L4) ,
A4 = (<P0I21T)2/(LzL4) .
From Egs. (1 )-( 3), we can obtain the threshold charaeter-
852 J. Appl. Phys .• Vol. 65, No.2. 15 January 1989 noise
band
-0.4 0.8
FIG. 2. Threshold curves of the memory loops on the (0,0), (1,0),
and (0, 1) modes, along with hypothetical ± 10% variation of critical cur
rents and inductance values. The dotted areas indicate the operating margin
of Ix and I,.
istics (Fig. 2). Figure 2 shows several parts of the threshold
curves for the memory loops in the memory ceil. The hori
zontal and vertical axes represent the address signal cur
rents, Ix and Iy' respectively. The numbers in parentheses
correspond to flux quanta in the memory loops. That is,
(m,n) means m flux quanta in loop 1 and n flux quanta in
loop 2. Point "0" is the memory operating origin and is
defined by de powered current Ide' The (0,0) mode and
(1,0) mode in the memory loops are respectively correspon
dent to data" 1" and "0".
Cell operations and the stability of the dynamics were
established in Ref. 6. As shown in Fig. 2, the operating point
moves from "0 "to "A" or"B" according to data on writing.
On reading the stored information, the operating point
moves from "0" to "e." The vortex state for the memory
loop changes into the (0,1) mode only when the data" 1" is
stored, and then the sense gate switches into a voltage state.
After that, the vortex mode can return to the (0,0) mode at
point "0" under the suitable damping conditions. In Fig. 2,
the dotted areas indicate the operating regions for I~ and Iy
for" 1", "0," writing and reading. The shaded areas illustrate
thermal noise bands in a fashion similar to that described in
Ref. 6. Minimum operating margins Ix = 0.16 rnA ± 14%
and Iv = 0.18 rnA ± 14% are achieved, along with a hypo
thetical ± 10% variation in the Josephson critical current
and in the inductance value, while the optimally designed
cells have address signal current margins Ix = 0.17 rnA
± 33% and Iv = 0.2 mA ± 33%.
On reading the stored data, a vortex transition in the
loop 2 causes the sense gate to switch. Figure 3(a) shows
calculated characteristics in terms of the external current Ie
ofloop 2 and the quantum phase difference 82 of junction J2•
Figure 3(b) shows the threshold characteristics of the sense
gate, along with hypothetical ± 10% variations in Joseph
son critical current and inductance values, The shaded areas
in Figs. 3(a) and 3(b) illustrate the thermal noise bands. In
these calculations, we assumed a coupling factor between
loop 2 and the sense gate is approximately 0.5. When the
memory cell conserves data "1" ("0"), the operating point
Tahara eta!. 852
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15Ie (mAl (a)
I
noise K /
0.5 band ,..-.. , L~
I "~-
f: f..~l /1 ' H ll' J '--'
82
-411"
Is (mAl (b)
o
FlG. 3. (a) Characteristics of the external current and the phase difference
in loop 2. (b) Threshold curves of the sense gate. :±: 10% fabrication toler
ances of circuit parameters were assumed.
stays at "D" ("E") in Fig. 3 (a). The operating point moves
from "D" to "H" through "G" with the supply of positive
current Ix and negative current [y. On the other hand, when
data "0" is conserved, the operating point moves from "E"
to "F", and vortex transition does not occur.
The operating point for the sense gate coupled with loop
2 moves to "M" or "N" depending upon the applied magnet
ic field, as illustrated in Fig. 3 (b). The sense gate margin is
determined by the characteristics of the sense gate and the
input magnetic field at points "G" and "R" of Fig. 3(a).
The designed sense gate has the product LI of ~o/6, where L
is the total inductance value for the sense gate and I is the
critical current for one junction (J3 = J4 in Fig. 1). A sense
gate current margin has been designed Is = 0.12 rnA
+ 42% nominally, and Is = 0.13 rnA ± 13% assuming ± 10% parameter variations and thermal noise distur
bance. Since the fiux mode in loop 2 changes only for read-
ing, the sense gate current Is can be applied as a dock-pulse
like gate current.
As mentioned above, the operating margins for Ix and
I is almost independent of the sense gate margin, because
the sense gate detects the vortex transition in loop 2. There
fore, the operating margins of ±: 33% for Ix and Iy are nom
inally designed. And then the memory cell has capability for
high-speed memory operation, since the cell is activated by
the address signals and the sense signal without a timing
sequence. Moreover, the designed memory cell contributes
to improving the operating margin for a total memory cir
cuit because the applied control current level for Ix and ly
are designed to be nearly equal.
853 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.2, 15 January 1989 TABLE 1. Layem for ,he vortex transitional memory cell.
Layer Material
GP Nb
GIl Nb2O,
GI2 Sial
IL, 1\0
II SiO,
RS Mo
ILl Nb
JJ Nb/AIO./Nb
1L3 Nb
III. EXPERiMENT
A. Fabrication Thickness
(nm) Function
200 Ground plane
30 Ground insulation
300 Ground insuiation
200 Interconnection layer I
200 Interconnection insulation 1
70 Resistor layer
200 Interconnection layer 2
200/6/200 Junction trilayer
200 Interconnection layer 3
A test chip with four-level interconnections having less
than about 50 nm planarity wa~ fabricated by a lift-off plan
arization technique,7 using sputtered Nb films for all metalli
zations except for Mo resIstors, and sputtered SiOz films for
insulation layers. Table I describes the layers for the de
signed cell circuits. A cross section of the cell is illustrated in
Fig. 4. It is composed of a ground plane, three interconnec
tion layers, Nbl AlO x Ir-..o Josephson tunnel junctions, resis
tors, insulation between interconnections, and contact holes
between interconnections. To heighten the reliability, the
lift-off planarization technique was applied to each level in
the cell structure because of its high layer-thickness control
lability, low-temperature process ability, and pattern-size
adaptability.
The fundamentallift-offplanarization process flow con
sisted of the foHowing five basic steps: (a) A sputtered lower
film was patterned by a reactive ion etching technique using
a CF4 gas plasma. (b) A second film was deposited over the
entire surface, including resist masks. (c) The second film
on the side waH of the etching mask is etched away selective
ly with a slight wet etching. (d) The resist and the second
film on the resist are removed with a solvent in an ultrasonic
treatment. (e) An upper layer is sputtered over the planar
ized surface.
An of the interconnection layers and contact holes are
planarized with the above technique. A microphotograph of
the memory cel! is presented in Fig. 5. The cell size was
49X49 pm2, and the minimum line width, minimum layer
to-layer registration, and minimum junction dimensions
RESISTOR
I~TERCCNNECT :ON :3)
''1"----~COUNTE.Ri
,,-JUNCTION
fT?+-,¥v?jt>--"-..L...-'-1:;;..;r'--'''17~_ s _1~~~~~?N"ECTiON (2)
~~~~~~=r~~$Lij~~· CONTACT KOLE
--INTERCONNECT:ON (\)
H"';"444J.".-r~++r-~ CONTAC; HOLE
'$"-GROUND-PLANE
\¥,-rr-r>-rrrrrn-rrr.rrn.,.,-r,,,..,,rrr.r-rn77T,'777, Tl-.s--gUeST RATE
FIG. 4. Vertical structure of the vortex transitional memory cell.
Tahara et al. 853
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15FiG. 5. Microphotograph of the 2 X 2 bits vortex transitional memory edt
were 1.5, 1.0, and 3.0 pm, respectively. In this designed cell,
the coupling of two control lines to loop 1 consumes a large
area. However, these two control lines can be changed into
one control line by improving driver circuits because one of
the two control lines is dc current line. Therefore, the mem
ory cell has the ability to be designed with a smaller size. A
Mo sheet resistance of 1.5 010 was achieved, almost the
same as the designed value. The critical current of the 3,um
Josephson junction was 0.08 mA, which was 20% smaller
than the optimally designed value.
B. Results and discussions
Low-frequency measurements were carried out to
evaluate the operation of the memory cello Figure 6 shows a
properly executed quasistatic test pattern, including
NDRO, for fuIl-and half-selected conditions. Current nota
tions are the same as those in Fig. 1. Sense signal Vou, is the
voltage across the sense gate. The sense gate current is ap
plied on both writing and reading. The first half of the pat
tern indicates the corresponding operation for writing and
nondestructive reading of data "I," indicated by voltage
v.,U( across the sense gate. The second half shows the same
for data "0," indicated by zero voltage across the sense gate.
Iy
Is
Vout U >( H H H H "0" H H H H WRRSRSRSRSRWRRSRSRSRSR
-0
-0
-0
-0
FIG. 6. Quasistatic fUllction test patterns demonstrating successful NDRO
memory operations. (W: write operation, R: read operation, and lIS: half ..
selected disturhance;1,: 0.2 mA/div,I,,:0.2mA/div,I,:O.15 mA/div. ~'"':
4mV/div.)
854 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.2, 15 January 1989 Iy(mA)
"O·W(:!:24%)
I){(mAl
-0.3
i W ~p....=oc~~
(:!:33%) R(!21%)
-0.5
FIG. 7. Measured operating region (shaded areas) for "0" writing, ''1''
writing, and reading. Circle points are presented the threshold curve oftlle
vortex transitional memory cell.
As shown in Fig. 6, the memory cell operates successfuHy
even after encountering half-selected disturbance. In the
memory cell, the necessary information such as address,
data, and read/write conditions is transmitted only by I,
and Iy-The sense current is simply applied as a clock-pulse
like gate current. It improves the construction for the peri
pheral circuits.
The memory cell switching threshold. deduced from the
function test, is plotted in Fig. 7. A 0,2 mA dc powered
current was applied to the cell to set up an operating origin.
The circles in Fig. 7 illustrate the threshold values for "1"
writing, "0" writing, and reading. The operating regions,
shaded in Fig. 7, show the address current margins Ix = 0.14
rnA ± 24%, 0.21 mA ± 33%, and 0.14 rnA ± 21 %, and
1v=0.15 mA ±24%, 0.17 rnA ±33%, and 0.18 rnA ± 21 %, corresponding to "0," "1" writing, and reading,
respectively. The sense gate margin was measured Is = 0.14
rnA ± 33%. When the data was read, a single flux quantum
entered loop 2 of the cell. This vortex transition was detected
by the sense gate. Therefore, the sense gate margin is almost
independent of the address currents I, and Iv' Each of the
operating current margins is smalier than its designed value
because the Josephson critical current and inductance values
in fabricated chips were, respectively, 20% smaller and 10%
larger than their designed values.
The characteristics of the sense gate for loop 2 are ex
perimentally measured to examine the vortex transitions of
FrG. 8. Threshold characteristics oCthe sense gate measured on an isolated
monitor gate. Vertical axes: the sense gate current (0.1 mA/div). Horizon
tal axes: the external current (0.2 mA/div).
Tahara et al. 854
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15FIG. 9. Estimated circuit parameter by measuring stray and mutual induc
tallce value on isolated gates.
loop 2. In order to measure these characteristics, a monitor
gate consisting of the sense gate and loop 2 is fabricated. This
gate has two gate lines: one is loop 2 external gate line and the
other is the sense gate line. Figure 8 shows the characteristics
in terms of the sense gate current I, and loop 2 external
current Ie' The external gate current values at points "A ',"
"B '," "e '," and "D '" in this figure correspond to those at
Points "G" "I" "J" a d "K'" F' 3 ( ) Th b , , ,n In ·lg. _ a. e a rupt
changes in the sense gate current values at these points indi
cate that the magnetic field entering the sense gate increases
abruptly; that is to say, there is a vortex transition occurring
in loop 2. From estimates of the characteristics of the moni
tor gate, the circuit parameters were determined as fonows:
L] = 7.5 pH, L4 = 1.5 pH, and 12 = 0<08 rnA. One of the
reasons for the differences between these parameters and
their designed values is the existence of stray inductance at
contact holes, Josephsonjunctions, and so o~. Stray and mu
tual inductance measurements at isolated monitor gates pro
duced the circuit parameter estimates shown in Fig. 9< The
calculated threshold characteristic curves of the memory
loop for the experimental parameters are in good agreement
with the experimental data, as may be seen in Fig. 10.
Figure 11 illustrates the quasistatic results of the test for
the memory operation with timing sequence" The patterns
(a)-(d) in Fig. 11 show the writing and nondestructive
reading operations for the four combinations of the se
quences of setting and resetting for Ix and Iv' In pattern (a),
for example, proper operations are demonstrated in the case
Iy (rnA)
0.5
FIG< 10< Threshold curves (circle points) deduced from the quasistatic
function tests. Solid lines show calculated threshold characteristic curves of
the memory loops for the experimental parameters.
655 J. Appl. Phys .• VoL 65. No.2, 15 January 1989 Iv I,
I,
Vout (.) (b)
"1" "cr W 11 R A R
- -~- -, ---
--- --- ~ -- -- ---- ----","",- ~-----
{d)
FIG. I!. Execution of quasistatic pulse test pattern demonstrating propel'
operation with timing sequellce of a designed cell. (I,: 0.2 rnA/div, I,.: 0.4
mA/div, I,: 0.2 mA/div, V;",,: 4 m V /div.) .
of setting Ix earlier than ly and resetting Ix earlier than Iy.
The memory cell is successfully worked regardless of se
quence for Ix and Iy" These results show its capability of
reducing a cycle time of the memory operation.
In the actual memory circuit, the address signal cur
rents to the memory cell are applied from driver gates. In
order to test the operation of the cell with driver gates, the
test circuit illustrated in Fig. 12 was examined. The driver
gate switching time is estimated to be approximately 20 ps
from digital simulations. In this test, the dynamic stability of
the cell is also measured. Test elements consisted of two in
terferometer gates, the cell, and reset gates" In this circuit,
the gate currents and the input current for the interferometer
gates, the sense gate current and the reset gate currents were
supplied from room-temperature pulse generators. The two
interferometer gates drove the cell for X and Yaddress cur
rents. The reset gates returned the applied currents from the
cell to the interferometer gates" The quick pulses from the
driver gates apply to the celL Figure 13 shows the results of a
successful test of the test circuit, including nondestructive
read-out operations and half-selected conditions. The mem
ory ceH dynamicaHy operated propedy<
IV. CONCLUSION
A single flux quantum memory cell, caned a vortex tran
sitional nondestructive read-out Josephson memory cell,
was experimentally tested, using an isolated cell. The cell
employs vortex transitions in the superconducting loops, for
writing and reading information to improve operating toler
ance. Test chips were fabricated using a lift-onplanarization
techniqu.e with Nbl AIOxlNb junctions. Sputtered Nb,
linx Memory
Cell Ir
Is
2 JJ Interferometer Vout
FIG. 12. Test circuit diagram for the vortex transitiollal memory cell with
driver gates.
Tahara et al. 855
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129.120.242.61 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 15:00:15FIG. 13. Resu1tsofth~success
ful measurements of the cdl
with driver gates, including
NDRO operation and half-se
lected condition (W: write op
eration, R: read operation, and
HS: half-selected disturbance).
Si02, and Mo films were used for interconnections, insula
tions, and resistors, respectively. Successful quasistatic test
patterns were obtained. Cell switching threshold character
istics were deduced from a function test. There was good
agreement with calculated threshold characteristics using
experimental circuit parameters. The experimentally ob
tained current margins were Ix = 0.14 rnA ± 21 %,
ly = 0.16 mA ± 21%, and Is = 0.14 mA ± 33%, in spite
of Josephson critical currents 20% smaner and indictance
values 10% larger than their designed values. It was experi
mentally shown that timing sequence is not necessary in the
memory cell operation. The cell driven by interferometer
856 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.2, 15 January 1989 gates was successfully operated, and the dynamic stability of
the cell was evaluated also.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank H. Abe for his contin
uous encouragement during this work, and J. S. Tsai, H.
Tsuge, M. Hidaka, and S. Nagasawa for their helpful techni
cal comments. The present research effort is part of the Na
tional Research and Development Program on "Scientific
Computing System," conducted under a program set by the
Agency of Industrial Science and Technology, Ministry of
International Trade and Industry.
'w. H. Henkels, J. AppJ. Phys. 50, 8143 (1979).
"W. H. Henkels and J. H. Greiner, IEEEJ. Solid-State Circuits SC-14, 794
(1979).
3K, Kojima, T. Noguchi. and K. Hamanaka, IEEE Electron Devices Lett
EDL-4. 264 ( 1983).
4H. Bena, IEEE Trans. Magn. MAG·IS, 424 (1979).
-'w. H. Henkels, L. M. Gappcrt, J. Kadlec, P. W. Epperlein, W. H. Chang,
and H. Jaeckel, J. App!. Phys. 58, 2379 (1985).
"5. Tahara and Y. Wada, lpn. J. App!. Phys. 26,1463 (1987).
71. Ishida, S. Tahara, Y. Ajisawa, and Y. Wada, Extended Abstract.s of the
19th Conferellce 011 Solid State Device alld Materials. Tokyo 1987 (The
Japan Society of Applied Physics, Tokyo, 1987), p. 443.
Tahara et al. 856
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1.1140379.pdf | Lowtemperature bolometer array
M. Boninsegni, C. Boragno, P. Ottonello, and U. Valbusa
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 60, 661 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.1140379
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140379
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/60/4?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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138.51.164.120 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 22:26:33Low .. temperature bolometer array
M. Boninsegni,a) C. Boragno, P. Ottonello, and U. Valbusa
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Genova, Via Dodecaneso 33. 16146 Genova. ltafy
(Received 14 June 1988; accepted for publication 27 December 1988)
The implementation of a 16-channel, low-temperature bolometer linear detector array is
described. The detectors are silicon samples, whose surfaces are doped with phosphorus by the
technique oHonic implantation. A single digital processor implemented on a common PC both
provides the scanning of the array and performs synchronous signal detection from the different
bolometers. The actual system has been tested with a broad infrared source, and some possible
improvements are indicated.
INTRODUCTION
Thermal detectors are widely used in detecting infrared
OR) radiation. In this class of sensors, the energy of the
absorbed radiation raises the temperature of the detecting
element and, as a result of it, changes the properties of the
detector. Bolometers belong to this class of detectors. They
are resistive elements fabricated with a material with a large
temperature coefficient so that the absorbed radiation
changes the value of its electrical resistance.
In order to obtain the ultimate performance from this
class of detectors, Low! was the first to develop a bolometer
operating in liquid helium. Cryogenic bolometers are made
of superconducting materials2 which have a large tempera
ture coefficient. However, semiconducting bolometers are
more widely used than the superconducting ones because
they do not require critical temperature control. Recently,
cryogenic bolometers have been used for detecting IR radi
ation,2 molecular beams,3 ballistic phonons,4 and single par
ticles5; they have been largely used in astrophysics, laser
spectroscopy, surface science, atomic and molecular phys
ics, and solid state physics. In all these applications, either
the position of the detector is fixed with respect to the source
or the detector itself is mechanically displaced through
successive angular positions. Most current far-infrared and
millimeter imaging systems, for instance, depend on a single
detector with mechanically scanned optics, whereas in mo
lecular-beam scattering experiments, the bolometer can ro
tate around the target in order to record the angular distribu
tion of the scattered molecules? For many applications,
however, this approach is inadequate. The required integra
tion time may be in some cases too long, the events can occur
too quickly, or the construction is too complicated. There
fore, the development of a bolometer array becomes particu
larly important, for instance, in constructing ground-based,
airborne, and balloon-borne telescopes6 for infrared astron
omy or in the field of surface science for imaging the diffrac
tion pattern of a molecular beam from a crystal surface as
done in a similar way by a low-energy electron diffraction
(LEED) screen.
Multichannel bolometers 7,8 have been recently used in
plasma diagnostic, In this case the bolometers work at room
temperature and this simplifies the design of the array.
In the present paper we describe a cryogenic array made
of 16 phosphorus-implanted silicon bolometers driven by a microcomputer-controlled system which allows the collec
tion of data. Section I describes the experimental setup with
emphasis on the construction of the array (Sec. I A), on the
calibration procedure (Sec. I B), and on the electronic sys
tem controlling the imaging procedure (Sec. Ie). Section II
reports the results. The array is used to detect the angular
distribution of the radiant intensity of an IR light-emitting
diode (LED) located in front of the array. A discussion on
the performance of the array concludes the paper.
I. EXPERIMENT
A. Bolometer
Each bolometer of the array is realized by ion implanta
tion of phosphorus in a n-Si (100) wafer 300 pm thick and
with a resistivity p = 103 n cm. The implant doses and ener
gies are reported in Table L
This procedure allows one to obtain a surface region
uniformly doped for a depth of = 5600 ;"',9 as resulting from
the Lindhard-Scharff-Schiott (LSS) method; this region has
a net donor concentration of n = lAX 1018 cm-3, close to
the critical value n" = 3.74X 1018 cm-3 for the metal-insu
lator transition. lO Each bolometer of 4 X 2 X 0.3 mm 3, has
been cut out from the wafer and provided with electrical
contacts. The resulting detector is sketched in Fig. 1 (a).
Two gold wires (150 f-lm in diameter) are soldered to
the device by using the following procedure: two gold pads
500 A thick are first realized at both sides of the bolometer
by thermal evaporation; the device is next maintained at a
temperature of about 150"C and then, by flowing current
through the wires, the temperature is locally raised up to the
eutectic temperature of the Au-Si alloy (370 ·C) to produce
the soldering. The procedure is carried out in inert and
slightly reducent atmosphere (90% Nz + 10% Hz) in order
to avoid formation of oxides at the Au-Si interface. The anal-
TABLE L Implant doses and energies of phosphorus in the
.'I-Si( 100) wafer."
Ion energy (keV) 65
Doses (1013cm2) 0.53 lOS
0.83 160
1.26 265
1.99 370
3.32
'The silicon wafers, after the ion-implantation procedure, have been an
nealed for l5 min in N 2 gas at 920 "C and immediately after, for 15 min, in
O2 gas at 920 "Co
661 Rev. Sci. Instrum. 60 (4), April 1989 0034-6748/89/040661-05$01.30 @ 1989 American institute of Physics 661
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138.51.164.120 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 22:26:33COPPEH DISK
FIG. 1. (a) Schematic view ofa single bolometer. The sensitive area is I X2
mm2• (b) Schematic view of the bolometer array. The bolometers are locat
ed close together in order to form a strip of 32 mm in length and ~ m~ m
height. The G-IOeR substrate is 40X IOX2 mm3. The cop~er dls.k IS m
good thermal contact with the bath. The electrical ~onnectlOns Wlt~ the
external electronic system arc thermally connected with the copper disk.
ysis of the interface, carried out with Auger spectroscopy,
did not reveal oxides within the sensitivity of the method.
After calibration (see next section), each bolometer is
attached by General Electric 7031 (G E) varnish onto a
glass-cloth/epoxy-Iaminate (G-lOCR) substrate 2 m~
thick to form a linear array of 16 bolometers; the substrate IS
fixed with a silicon grease onto a copper disk in thermal
contact with the liquid-helium bath. The complete arrange
ment is shown in Fig. 1 (b).
The gold wires on each bolometer are soldered by indi
um alloy onto the copper pads evaporated on the substrate.
These 32 pads are electrically connected to as many copper
wires of 0.5 mm in diameter which link the array to the
external electronic system. Care has been taken in reducing
the input of heat through the copper wires by thermally con
necting them to the copper disk.
The array is inserted in a cryostat schematically shown
in Fig. 2; the working temperature is fixed at 1.2 K by pump
ing onto the liquid-helium bath. In front of the array, at a
distance of5.5 cm, is located an infrared LED (Texas Instru
ment, TIL 903) which is used to test the capability of the
device in detecting the angular distribution of the emitted
radiation.
B. Calibration
The single component of the array has been tested by
measuring the R-T curve in the 4.2/1.2-K temperature
range. For all bolometers we found that the a( T} coeffi-
662 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No.4, April 1989 LED light
Li<\N"
FIG. 2. Schematic view ofthe experimental setup. The bolometer array and
the radiation source are maintained at a pressure of 10-5 mbar. The LED
array distane is 5.S cm. The tube diameter is 16 mm. The LED is located
along the tube axis.
cient, defined as [ 1/ R (T ) ] [dR ( T ) I dT ], is the same with
in 1 % and its value at T= 1.2 K is a = -2.9 K-1• After
the realization of the array, we measured, for each bolo
meter, the responsivity S, the response time T, and the noise
equivalent power (NEP).
The responsivity has been determined from the load
curve, as suggested in Ref. 1. The measured values of S are
reported in Table II. The current at the working point is
fixed at 18 /lA.
The responsivity can be also calculatedl by the follow
ing equation:
S = aiR I ( G -ai 2 R), (1 )
once the thermal conductance G between bolometer and
thermostat has been evaluated. A simple model of the bolo
meter has been made by assuming that the sensitive element
can exchange heat with the copper pads across the gold wires
and the copper disk of Fig. 1 (b) across the substrate (Gen
eral Electric varnish, G-IOCR-silicon grease). To calculate
G we took into account both these contributions, Gwires and
G to the thermal conductance. G was calculated by substrate' .
using the values of thermal conductivity and dimenslOns re-
ported in Table III, considering that (a) Gwires and GS~bstrate
are two conductance in "parallel," and (b) Gsubstrate IS the
"series" of G2, G3, and G4•
With these considerations and by using the values of
Table III, we obtained for each bolometer a value of
G = 3.1 X 10-5 W IK. This value is predicted on the base of
the values of Table III and is only a first approximation of
the real situation. Each bolometer, in fact, differs from the
others for several reasons (length of the wires, goodness of
the thermal contact, etc.), and therefore the values of Table
III can vary up to 20% from one bolometer to the other.
By using the values of G determined with this model,
Eq. (1), and the values of resistance (see Table II), we ob
tained the values ofresponsivity S * reported in Table II. The
agreement between the experimental values S and the pre
dicted ones S * confirms the goodness of the model.
Figure 3 reports the response of a bolometer (No.8 of
Table II) to an impinging modulated (20 Hz) square-wave
Bolometer array 662
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138.51.164.120 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 22:26:33TABLE H. Responsivity S and resistance R as measured from the load curve. a
Bolometer 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
S (104V/W) 5.3 5.7 5.7 5.7 5.8 5.9 5.3 5.3 5.1 5.7 5.1 5.9 5.5 5.0 5.9 S.7
R (kH) 18 19 19 19 18 18 14 18 15 19 15 18 20 24 18 19
S* b (10' V /W) 6.7 7.5 7.5 7.5 6.7 6.7 4.1 6.7 4.6 7.5 4.6 6.7 8.5 14.9 6.7 7.5
"The working point is fixed at i= 18 11A. The temperature is 1.2 K.
b S * is the responsivity calculated by using Eq. (l) and assuming G = 3.1 X 10-5 W /K.
radiation. The response time r is 5 ms. According to Ref. 1, r
is given by
r= CI(G-ai2R), (2)
where C is the thermal capacity of the bolometeL C can be
calculated as
This formula takes into account the contribution which
arises from the thermal1inks of the sensor element. 13 Assum
ing for the specific heat (at 1.2 K) ofthe materials constitu
ent the different parts of the detector the following values:
CSi = 4.5 X 10-7 11K g,14 CAu = 8.3 X 10-6 11K g,14 and
CG _ IOCR = 2 X 10' 6 J/K g,15 C results equal to 3 X 10'8 JI
K. By using Eq. (2) and the values of G and C previously
calculated, one obtains for the bolometer No.8, r = 2 ms.
which is in close agreement with the observed one. '
The NEP for all the bolometers is of "'" 10-12 W Imi.
No care has been taken in minimizing it since it is lower than
the noise input equivalent power of the electronic-acquisi
tion system developed in the present work.
c. Electronics
When no radiation is impinging on the detector surface,
a constant voltage Vo = Roi appears across the bolometer,
where Ro is its resistance at the working temperature and i is
the current supplied by a suitable constant-current gener
ator. A change t:..R in the bolometer resistance occurs when
ever radiation is absorbed, and the corresponding change in
voltage, 11 V, is a measurement of the intensity of the imping
ing radiation.
The array is controlled by the electronics shown in Fig.
4, which allows the selection of each bolometer as well as
low-noise amplification of the signal from the detectors. The
TABLE III. Values of thermal conductivity gi' length Li' area A" and ther
rna] conductance Gi of the materials forming the bolometer array."
gi (W/cmK) L, (em) Ai (cml) G, (W/K)
Gold + 0.07% Fe 5 X 10-3 b
single wire
GE 7031 varnish 5X 10" c
G-lOCR 10-4 d
Silicon grease 10-5 e
"The temperature is 1.2 K.
h From Ref. 11, extrapolated at 1.2 K.
C From Ref. 11, extrapolated at 1.2 K,
d From Ref. 12, extrapolated at 1.2 K.
e From Ref. 11. 0.5
0.01
0.2
0.01 8XlO--1 4XIO I
8XlO'2 4XlO'
8Xl0 2 8X1O'
663 Rev. SCi.lnstrl.lm., Vol. 60, No.4, April 1989 IBM PC is equipped with an analog (12-bit resolution) and
digital I/O interface board (LabMaster TM-30). The over
all gain is distributed along the amplification chain in order
not to saturate the analog-to-digital converter whose input
range is switched from unipolar (0/5 V) to bipolar ( ± 2.5
V) passing from Il;) to ~ V measurement. Throughout a mea
surement run, the chopper supplies an interrupt each time
the incoming radiation is turned off. At these instants the
constant current is switched from a detector to the next one
along the array and a measurement is performed within a
period of the modulation. Two successive steps can be out
lined corresponding to the different halves of this period: 0)
in absence of radiation, the dc component Vo is analog-to
digital converted and stored in the main memory of the PC,
and (ii) when the radiation is on, the voltage across the de
tector, Il;) -fj. V, appears at one input of the instrumentation
amplifier, while the previously stored Vo value is fed, via the
DI A converter, to the other input. The large dc component
being removed by subtraction, the small Ll V can be amplified
with a gain factor G2 = 500 to a level suitable for AID con
version. Also all voltage contributions from the on resistance
of the different switches making up the analog multiplexers
are strongly reduced. The subtracting procedure is, in fact,
very effective because passing from step (i) to step (ii) noth
ing in the system changes but impinging radiation. As a re
sult of the two steps, a sample (i.e., a term in the sums yield
ing the averaged values) of both Vo and 11 V is obtained for
the selected bolometer.
It is worth noting that the stored value of b.. Vis formed,
as well as the Il;) value dl,ring the first step, by numerical
FIG. 3. Picture of the oscilloscope output for a square-wave radiation irn
pinging on bolometer No.8. Horizontal axis scale i, !O ms/cm; vertical axis
scale is 50 m V / ern.
Bolometer array 663
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138.51.164.120 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 22:26:33r--------------,
out
61 G = 10 I LAB MASTER
I
~ FIG. 4. Block diagram of the control and
data-acquisition electronics. Both tem
perature and long-term drift ofthe current
generator are actually limited to 5 ppml"C
and 50 ppm/lOoo Hr, respectively, by us
ing high-precision voltage sources and
operational amplifiers,
L ______________ J
averaging over 32 readings performed within the corre
sponding halves of the modulation period. This operation
reduces the input noise level, although the gain in the signal
to-noise ratio is lower than that possible with fully indepen
dent events. A test carried out with the actual instrument
when no radiation is impinging on the array gave a noise
growth factor of about 1.8.jn, where n is the number of sam
ples.
A complete run consists of a preselected number N of
measurement cycles whose length is equal to the number of
detectors ( 16) times the period r of the modulated incoming
radiation.
All the bolometers are cyclically selected and the ratio
LlV(j)IVo(j) is measured for each one (j= 1,2, ... ,16)
during the measurement cycle. The intensity pattern is ob
tained after having averaged over N cycles.
The back~up procedure employed to remove the dc
component assures the measurement of the comparatively
large values Vo(j ) as well as the small Ll V(j ) without in
troducing any time constant. In fact, the alternative simpler
way, based on ac coupling between the detector and amplifi
er chain, causes memory effects, preventing the fast scanning
ofthe array.
Also the 16 time sequences Va [j ; (16k + j) r]
(j = 1,2, ... ,16; k = measurement cycle index
= O,1,2, ... ,N -1) can be stored for a later check of the sta-
bility of individual bolometers and of the system in its entire
ty. Currently, no further exploiting ofthese large amount of
data is foreseen.
A few parameters (number N of cycles, option of storing
the Vo time sequences, or their undersampled versions, etc.)
can be passed to the machine-coded, interrupt-driven rou
tine which, as already said, allows the synchronous scanning
664 Rev. Sci. (nstrum., Vol. 60, No.4, April 1989 of the array, the acquisition of data from the different chan
nels, and the updating, cycle after cycle, of the different aver
ages.
II. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Figure 5 reports the radiation-intensity pattern of the
LED source as measured by the linear array. This pattern
has been obtained accumulating 6400 samples (N = 200)
per bolometer. The LED source is supplied with a square
wave at a repetition rate of 10 Hz whose intensity level is set
>f-
(f)
Z
W f
Z
w >
f
<: .J w
cr: ~ '.
lli~ -ID D 10
DISPLACEMENT FROM OTPICAL AXIS (mm)
FIG. 5. Angular distribution of the radiation emitted by the LED source as
detected by the 16-bolometer array compared with the theoretical one
(squares).
Bolometer array 664
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138.51.164.120 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 22:26:33in order to have a signal-to-noise ratio = 1 for the central
bolometer. In the same figure we report a simulation of the
pattern based on the LED characteristics and on the as
sumption that the detected radiation pattern is formed by
two contributions: the first stems directly from the LED
source and the second from a single reflection on the wall of
the tube.
Because of the low resolution of the employed AID and
D/ A converters, the quantization noise is the main limiting
factor for the sensitivity of the apparatus. In fact, the rms
equivalent noise voltage across the bolometer (referred to
the system bandwidth of 200 Hz) due to the independent
contributions ftom the AID and D/ A conversions is
11 D/A voltage output range _1 __ 1_=50 V.
212 ,-G /1
2~3 1
A first, considerable reduction (to = 3 fl V) is easily
achieved by using a 16-bit analog-to-digital interface board.
A further step towards lower noise level is possible because
any quantization noise is generally considered to be white
whenever the AID converter input (signal + analog noise)
changes by at least a few quantization levels between sam
plcs.16 That being the case in our operating conditions, the
input equivalent noise voltage, i.e., the input 110ise power,
can be reduced by lowering the system bandwidth, which
can be obtained by simple averaging. 17 For instance, with
reference to the above figure, a factor of 100 can be gained by
accumulating 10 000 independent samples for each bolo
meter (which requires a 25-min-long measuring run).
6S5 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No.4, April 1989 ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We are grateful to Dr. F. Mod who realized the ion
implants.
a) Present address: Physics Dept., Florida State University, Tallahasse, FL.
'F. J. Low. J. Opt. Soc. Am. 51,1300 (1961).
'E. H. PUlley, in Optical and In/rared Detectors. edited by R. J. Keyes
(Springer, Berlin, 1977), pp. 71-100.
IG. Scoles, Ed., Atomic and Molecular Beam Methods (Oxford University,
New York. 1988), Vol. 1.
4c. Boragno, U. Valbusa, and G. Pignatel, App!. Phys. Lett. 50, 583
(1987).
5S. M. Moseley, J. C. Mather, and D. Me Cammon, 1. App!. Phys. 56, 1257
(1984).
"F. J. Low, T. Nishimura, A. W. Davidson, and M. Alwardi, inProcredillgs
of Workshop all Ground-based Astronomical Observations with Illfrared
Array Defectors, Hila, Hawaii, 1987.
7B. Joyc, P. Marmillod, and S. Nowak, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 57, 2449 (1986).
gpo E. Young, D. P. Neikirk. P. P. Tong, D. B. Rutledge, and N. C. Luh
mann, Jr., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 56, 81 (1985).
"c. Boragno, U. Valbusa, G. Gallinaro, D. Bassi, S. Iannotta. and F. Mori,
Cryogenics 24, 6R I (1984).
"'T. F. Rosenbaum. R. F. Milligan. M. A. Paalanen, G. A. Thomas, R. N.
Bhatt, and W. Lin, Phys. Rev. B 27, 7509 (1983).
"G. E. Childs, L. J. Ericks, and R. L. Powell, Thermal cOllductiuityofsolids
at room temperature and below, NBS Monograph No. 131, 1973.
12M. B. Kasen, G. R. MacDonald, D. H. Beekman. and R. E. Schramm, in
Advances in Cryogenics Enginel'ring, edited by A. 1'. Clark and R. P. Reed
(Plenum, New York. 1980), Vo!. 26, p. 235.
I3G. Gallinaro, C. Salvo, and S. Terreni, Cryogenics 26, 9 (1986).
I4JJandhook of Physics and Chemistry, 64th ed. (CRC, Boca Raton, 1983).
151'. Fabbricatore (pl'ivate communication).
;6B. Allen Montijo, Hewlett Packard J. 1988, 70 (June 1988).
i7J. Max, it/ethodes et Techniques de Traitement du Signal et Applications
(lUX Mesures Physiques (Masson, Paris, 1981).
Bolometer array 665
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1.1140027.pdf | Paralleled transconductance ultralownoise preamplifier
Robert B. Hallgren
Citation: Rev. Sci. Instrum. 59, 2070 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.1140027
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140027
View Table of Contents: http://rsi.aip.org/resource/1/RSINAK/v59/i9
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Downloaded 05 Oct 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://rsi.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsParalleled transconductance ultraiow .. noise preamplifier
Robert B. Hallgren
School o/Electrical Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14850
(Received 21 September 1987; accepted for publication 27 May 1988)
A simple NJFET preamplifier was constructed from commercial parts using parallel input
devices in a cascode configuration. The equivalent input noise resistance was 8.5 n (0.38
nV /~Hi) at 1 kHz, and 12 n (0.45 nV /,fHZ) at 100 Hz, measured at room temperature,
independent of the source resistance. For SO-H sources, a gain of29 dB was achieved from 3 Hz to
13 MHz. The input noise equivalent resistance is verified by measuring the thermal noise oflow
valued wire-wound resistors. Circuit utility is demonstrated by noise measurements performed on
GaAs Ohmic contacts at room temperature, under various bias conditions. Design considerations
for using parallel input devices, the bias criteria for them, and possible design extensions arc
discussed.
INTRODUCTION
Much research has recently been devoted to the noise behav
ior and noise mechanisms of various physical systems.] For
accurate measurements, the noise of the system of interest
should be greater than the residual noise of the amplifier
used for the measurement. Whatever the source ofthe noise,
it is limited by the thermal noise of the dc resistance present
in the system. Flicker noise, or any nonthermal sources pres
ent in the system, appear as excess noise above this thermal
background. For detailed measurements of any nonthermal,
or excess, noise in the system, it is necessary, first of all, to be
able to measure the thermal noise present. In this way, the
thermal component can be removed, leaving only the noise
of interest.
This measurement of the thermal noise is limited by the
residual noise of the instrumentation used. In those systems,
where the de resistance is quite low, the instrumentation
must have an input noise resistance (Reg) which is corre
spondingly lower. Such systems are gallium arsenide
MESFETs used in microwave circuits, where the mean
channel resistance is often less than 10 n. The excess noise in
these devices is flicker noise, and the point at which the
flicker component dominates the thermal noise ( 1/1 corner)
is usually at a frequency above 1 MHz.2 To study accurately
the excess noise in these systems, and the bias dependence of
it, the midband noise of the amplifier must be less than the
thermal noise of the channel, and the bandwidth must ex
ceed the 1/1 corner. The preamplifier presented here ad
dresses these needs by paralleling commercial JFET devices,
in a cascode configuration, operating at room temperature.
I. BACKGROUND
The input noise of an amplifier is usually dominated by
the device noise of the input stage. By careful selection of the
devices, the bias points, and the temperature of operation,
the input noise can be reduced. Silicon NJFETs are usually
used as the input devices,3 where the noise power generated
is inversely proportional to the transconductance of the
FET, gm' as given by4
0) where a is a constant,
gm = (2/1 Vp I) (lnss1ns ) 1/2,
and Vp is the pinch-off voltage of the channel.
Increasing gm reduces the noise, but necessitates in
creasing lDss (the saturated drain current at zero gate bias).
For maximum circuit gain, the FET must remain in satura
tion during the entire voltage swing, and this poses a lower
limit to the noise reduction possible. The minimum drain
source voltage for saturation, VnsAT, and the drain current
used, must generate less than the allowed power dissipation
of the device, thus limiting the amount by which loss can be
increased. The quantities loss, VOSAT' andgm are related to
the gate dimensions. By making the PET physically larger,
the noise can be reduced. This increase in the FET size is at
the expense of a larger gate capacitance, limiting the useful
frequency range of the device. What is needed is a way to
reduce the noise of an FET, while remaining within the max
imum power dissipation and allowing a sufficiently wide
bandwidth. Motchenbacher and Fitchen have done this5 by
paralleling separate devices at the input to an amplifier,
thereby creating a much larger FET with a greatly increased
power-handling capacity. This parallel connection has been
used in FET amplifiers6 and op-amps circuits,? all having
similar results, though for different applications.
II. CIRCUIT THEORY
A. Theory of operation
Consider an FET as shown in Fig. 1 (a), biased at some
current IDS' at a voltage greater than VosAr' The noise is
dependent upongm' as given by (2), and for this single PET,
the transconductance is
gm, = (2/j v," I) (loss los ) 1/2 (A/V). (2)
If N such identical devices were connected in parallel
lFig. 1 (b)], biased to a total current of los, each individual
FET would carry a current of Ins = los/No The transcon
j
ductance of an individual FET is thus
(3)
2070 Rev. SCLlnstrum. 59 (9), September 1988 0034-6748/88/092070-05$01.30 @ 1988 American instItute of Physics 2070
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~~ IDS
Making the transconductance of the parallel combina
tion to be the sum of the individual contributions gives
(A/V). (4)
In this connection, each FET is biased well below 1 DSS'
and contributes a transconductance that is less than the
maximum available for that device. The sum of the separate
contributions, however, is greater than the maximum trans
conductance of the single FET considered above, using the
same power dissipation in both cases. The ratio of the gain
increase is N 1/2, so connecting more devices can give less
noise. The input capacitance of the paranel combination in
creases with N, making the largest number of devices that
can be paralleled limited by the source resistance and the
desired bandwidth.
For wide-bandwidth circuits, a cascade connection is
generally employed to reduce the effects of the increased
feedback capacitance. The cascode FET then becomes the
limiting device, as it is biased to the total drain current bias
ing all of the input devices, and must itself remain in satura
tion. As the number of paralleled FETs increases, the total
bias current increases, so that the power dissipated by this
cascode FET eventually exceeds the rated power dissipation.
B. Circuit description
The circuit tested is shown in Fig. 2, Six input FETs
were used (Q l-Q6), with a single cascode FET (Q7) and a
resistor load (RL ). The input stage (Q 1-Q7) is connected to
a simple source follower (Q8) circuit, biased to give an ap
proximate SOon. output impedance. The circuit operates
ALL TRANSISTORS RRE 2N5434 as
790 UF I-
1329 UF -j 4.84K
10011
Rl-RS
FIG. 2, Preamplilier schematic,
2071 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 59, No.9, September 1988 FIG, L (a) Single FETbiased ailps' (b)
N paralleled FETs with total current of
los,
from a single 24-V supply obtained from commercial12-V
wet cells.
The input stage uses capacitive coupling from six paral
lel tantalum capacitors to reduce the series resistance of the
capacitors, and to allow adequate coupling to an 8-H source
for frequencies below 10 Hz. Each input FET uses a separate
resistor (RI-R6) for source degeneration, which allows for
variations in the input device characteristics. These resistors
use large bypass capacitors (CI-C6) for extending the low
er-frequency limit.
The bias point selected for the input devices was the
largest current that the cascode FET could handle, while
remaining at a drain-source voltage of 3 V, with a power
dissipation less than one-half the maximum rating (to mini
mize heating). This amounted to 10 rnA per input FET. At
this drain current, the input FETs needed a gate-source vol
tage of approximately -2 V, which was supplied by the
appropriate source resistors, allowing the gate to be biased
through a lOO-MH resistor to ground. The transconduc
tance of the input transistors at this operating point was over
30 mS each, making the total close to 200 mS.
C. Device description
An FETs used in this circuit are commercial parts, ob
tained as samples from Siliconix, and each device was tested
on an HP 4145B semiconductor parameter analyzer. The
2N5434 are low ON resistance, N-channeI JFETs used com
monly for switching applications, Other devices have been
tested, though not in the current design; among these devices
are 2N6550, U3 11, 2N4416, and 2SK1161. These transistors
have all been reported as having low noise,8 but the commer
cial availability and frequency response are unknown. The
saturated drain current was over 100 rnA for all devices,
giving a transconductance greater than 100 mS at a drain
current of 100 rnA. Breakdown voltages are specified at 25 V
and the maximum power dissipation is 300 m W ambient.
Device geometry is quite large, to give the low channel resis
tance for switching, and this results in a gate capacitance of
around 50 pF per device. The saturation voltage is over 3 V
at IDss' and the output conductance is rather large, even
when operating in saturation.
The 2N5434 devices are extremely rugged, due to a
maximum forward gate current of 100 rnA, and at no time
during construction or testing did a device faiL The reverse
gate current was measured to be below 100 pA at room tem
perature and 2-V reverse bias.
Low-noise preamplifier 2071
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A. Amplifier measurements
The gain of the amplifier was tested by providing a
-70-dBm input signal from an HP 3336C signal generator,
and r-eading the output signal from an HP 3586C selective
level meter. Additional amplification was provided by a low
noise bipolar postamplifier, which had approximately 1.6
n V / JHi input noise and 33 dB of gain. The gain of the
preamplifier was measured to be 29 dB from 3 Hz to over 10
MHz. The upper frequency limit of the preamplifier depends
upon the source resistance and the total input capacitance.
The 300-pF total input capacitance is high for an rf circuit,
but using a 50-0 source, the circuit operated to 13 MHz, and
only for a source resistance of over 300 n was the bandwidth
reduced to a few MHz. The lower-frequency corner depends
upon the input source impedance/coupling capacitor and
the FET degeneration pole. The values used gave a cutoff of
3 Hz, which can be reduced by using larger bypass compo
nents.
B. Noise measurements
To quantify the noise performance of the preamplifier,
measurements were made of the thermal noise from 5%,
wire-wound resistors at room temperature. The noise tests
were made using an HP 3586C selective level meter, with the
bipolar postamplifier providing additional gain. Multiple
readings of the noise power at various frequencies were taken
and the average computed. The power spectral density was
calculated by dividing the average noise power by the band
width of the filter, which was set to 20 Hz. The noise spec
trum was referred to the input of the amplifier by subtracting
the total gain, and the resultant value expr~ssed as a voltage
spectrum in dBV (V2/Hz). The noise voltage spectra, as
obtained from the resistors and from a shorted input to the
preamplifier, are shown in Fig. 3. The noise from a lOon
resistor is seen to be more than 3 dB greater than the shorted
input noise, indicating that the amplifier equivalent input
noise resistance is less than 10 ·n.
N :r:
"> co
"
<Il The noise measured from the various resistors can be
-170.-------------------------------, ]30 OH~1
lSl OHM
56 OHM
~ -180
o >
<Il
" o
Z 10
.__---------+ 8. 5 OHMS
-190L-~~~L-~~~L-~~~L-~~~
! 02 103 I (] 4 105 ICE
Frequency (Hz)
FIG. 3. Measured noise of wire-wound resistors. The shorted input noise
floor of the preamplifier is shown along with the thermal noise expected
from 8.5 n at room temperature.
2072 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 59, No.9, September 1988 normalized by subtracting the shorted input noise at each
frequency of measurement. This normalized noise is plotted
in Fig. 4. The right ordinate shows the expected value of the
noise as calculated from the measured dc resistance of each
sample resistor. The agreement is excellent in all cases, and
only for resistances below 70 n can the instrumentation 1/1
noise be seen. Bandwidth reduction is evident only for the
measurement of the 330-H resistor.
C. Equivalent input noise resistance
The input noise resistance can be defined as the resis
tance value that contributes an amount of noise equal to the
amplifier residual. This value is determined by using the data
from the various resistor noise measurements. At each fre
quency, the noise from a resistor is plotted versus the value of
the resistance. These data are plotted in Fig. 5 in terms of
log[e~(/)/e6(/) -1] vs logR, (5)
where e~ ( I) is the noise of resistance R at frequency J, and
e6 (f) is the shorted input noise at!
The regression line from a least.squares fit for the data is
plotted through the data points at two sample frequencies:
150 Hz and 400 kHz. The log R-axis intercepts give the val
ue of the input noise resistance for these two frequencies. In a
similar manner, ReG for each frequency can be found, and
the values obtained are plotted versus frequency in Fig. 6,
where the mean value is around 8.5 fl. This value is very
close to the resistance equivalent of the shorted input noise,
which shows that the preamplifier noise characteristics are
not affected by the source resistance, as expected for FETs.
This fact is also seen from the linearity of the noise plots
yersus resistance value (Fig. 5). If the noise were dependent
upon the source resistance, some nonlinearity would be seen,
and the shorted input noise would be less than that generated
by the equivalent noise resistance. This manner of testing for
noise behavior is particularly useful, as it gives the noise
equivalence very accurately in terms of a resistance for dif
ferent frequencies. Included in the equivalent resistance is
the noise due to any parasitics, such as the series resistance of
the input coupling capacitance, or any frequency depen
dence due to this capacitor.
N :r:
" > rn
'0
" OJ
'" +'
o >
.-o
Z
-1~0L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~
i02 11,3 104 10" 1116
Frequency (Hz)
FIG. 4. Noise of resistors minus amplifier residual. The right ordinate labels
the resistor values and the dashed lines indicate the expected thermall).oise
of this resistance value at room temperature.
Low-noise preamplifier 2072
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7 2 * JS800flHZ
150HZ
L1 • ~j -o
..J
?,5
LOG (R,nputl
FIG. 5. Normalized resistor noise as a function of resistance value at two
sample frequencies. The R-axis intercept gives the equivalent input noise
resistance at the frequency plotted.
IV. CIRCUIT UTILITY
As an example of one possible application for this
preamplifier, the noise from a series of Ohmic contacts was
measured as a function of the voltage across them. The mea
surements were made on a test pattern from a production
gallium arsenide wafer. The pattern consisted of a series of
minimum-sized Ohmic contacts with metal interconnects.
The dc characteristics were measured on an HP 4145B semi
conductor parameter analyzer. The current-voltage plot
was linear, the intercept was through the origin, and the
slope was calculated to be 12.5 n. The noise voltage from
this sample was measured at bias voltages of 0, 10, and 50
m V across the sample. The results are plotted, in normalized
form (with the amplifier residual subtracted), in Fig. 7. In
dicated in the figure is the expected thermal noise floor from
the 12.5-0, resistance at room temperature, and the agree
ment is good. The low 1/ f noise corner of the preamplifier
allows the excess noise of the contacts to be seen increasing
as the bias voltage increases. At a bias of 10 mY, the 11/
comer of the amplifier is already below the 1// noise of the
sample.
V. CIRCUIT EXTENSIONS
Extensions of the present design are possible, allowing
some ability to tailor it to any specific application. The low
\2
:1
E ..c
0 10
ij) 9 -
u c 8 -(C
+'
(/) 7
(~
(j) b 0:::
5
102 103 \04
Frequency
FIG. 6. Equivalent input noise resistance of the preamplifier circuit as a
function of frequency as found from the intercept values. The mean value is
seen to he around 8.5 n.
2073 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 59, No.9, September 1988 N
I
"> rn
"1J --160 r--------------~
.;; -180
-o
Z ~""""'~F .... -...... __ .._!-12.5 OHliS
-I '30 ~J...-I..J...U.'_'_":_-J...-'-'-'-U-l.<L... ........ -J,.Wu.uL .......... --'-'..u.u.J ill 103 11')4 10"
Frequency (Hz)
F.IG. 7. No~se of Ohmic contact test pattern (minus instrument residual) at
different bIas voltages. The sample measured 12.5-H dc resistance, and this
value of thermal noise is indicated by a dashed line,
value of the total input gate current to the preamplifier al
lows direct coupling to the noise source, provided the sample
can supply the one-half of a nanoampere required by the
gates. If the bias voltage needed for the sample is small
enough, direct coupling would be a distinct advantage. The 2
V dropped across the source resistors (RI-R7) biases the
input PETs and allows for some deviation in the de input
voltage from the sample, without appreciable gain devia
tions in the preamplifier. Direct coupling places the low
frequency limit at the FETs' source resistorlbypass pole fre
quency, which is as low as the capacitor can be made large.
An additional FET gain stage can be added directly to
the follower output, and if the total gain were sufficient, no
additional amplifiers would be needed. The present design is
useful as a buffer between existing amplifiers and any smail
signal, low-impedance noise source. The gain of almost 30
dB, and noise floor ofO.44nV I~Hz, anow postamplifiers to
be used that have an input noise floor under 6 n V I[Hz, with
no degradation in the noise performance, Commercial, low
noise op-amps that typically have noise floors of around 4
n V I/Hz-would provide ample additional gain for lower
frequency designs.
Cooling the input devices would further reduce the
noise,9 with some additional concern for high~frequency sta
bility. The number of devices used at the input can be adjust
ed to effect a compromise among the bandwidth, sample
impedance, and the noise floor desired. To accommodate
additional input FETs, the cascode FET could itself consist
of two parallel devices, thereby doubling the power dissipa
tion allowed.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
. . The author would like to express gratitude to and appre
CIatIOn for the staff and all concerned at the Microwave
Technology Center of Hewlett-Packard, and to Siliconix
Inc. Special thanks are due to Nicole Bute! for patience and
assistance in preparing much of this effort.
'See, for example, Proceedings of the International Conferences on Noise
and Physical Systems (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1983, 1984).
low-noIse preamplifier 2073
Downloaded 05 Oct 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://rsi.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions2B. Hughes, N. G. Fernandez, and J. M. Gladstone, IEEE Trans. Electron
Devices ED-34, 733 (1987).
3c. D. Motchenbacher and F. C. Fitchen, Low Noise Electronic Design
(Wiley, New York, 1973), Chap. 6.
4A. Van der Ziel, Noise in Measurements (Wiley, New York, 1973).
Sc. D. Motchenbacher and F. C. Fitchen, Low Noise Electronic Design
2074 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 59, No.9, September 1988 (Wiley, New York, 1973), Chap. 12.
fiP. Bardoni and G. V. Pallotino, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 48, 757 (1977).
7B. Sundvquist and G. Back.strom, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 46, 928 (1975).
8D. Bloyet and r. Lapaisant, Rev. Sci. lustrum. 56,1763 (1985).
9S. Klein, W. Innes, and r. Price, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 56,1941 (1985).
Low-noise preamplifier 2074
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1.342547.pdf | Electrical effects of atomic hydrogen incorporation in GaAsonSi
J. M. Zavada, S. J. Pearton, R. G. Wilson, C. S. Wu, Michael Stavola, F. Ren, J. Lopata, W. C. DautremontSmith
, and S. W. Novak
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 347 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342547
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342547
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/1?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19Electrical effects of atomic hydrogen incorporation in GaAs",on .. Si
Jo Mo Zavada
u.s. Army European Research Office, London NWl 5TH, United Kingdom
S. J. Pearton
AT& T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
R. G. Wilson
Hughes Research Laboratories, Malibu, California 90265
C. S. WU,a) Michael Stavola, F. Ren, J. Lopata, and W. C. Dautremont-Smlth
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
S. W. Novak
Charles Evans and Associates, Redwood City, California 94063
(Received 11 July 1988; accepted for publication 13 September 1988)
~ e have introduced atomic hydrogen by two methods into GaAs layers epitaxially grown on
SI substrates, namely, by exposure to a hydrogen plasma or by proton implantation. In both
cases, when proper account is taken of shallow dopant passivation or compensation effects,
there is a significant improvement in the reverse breakdown voltage of simple TiPtAu Schottky
diodes. Proton implantation into un doped (n = 3 X 1016 em -3) GaAs-on-Si leads to an
increase in this breakdown voltage from 20 to 30 V, whereas plasma hydrogenation improves
the value from 2.5 to 6.5 V in n-type (2 X 1017 cm-3) GaAs-on-Si. Annealing above 550'C
removes the beneficial effects of the hydrogenation, coincident with extensive redistribution of
the hydrogen. This leaves an annealing temperature window of about 50·C in the H-implanted
material, in comparison to 150·C for the plasma-hydrogenated material. The hydrogen
migrates out of the GaAs to both the surface and heterointerface, where it shows no further
motion even at 700 ·C. Trapping in the GaAs close to the heterointerface is shown to occur at
stacking fautts and microtwins, in addition to extended dislocati.ons.
INTRODUCTION
There has been an extensive effort in recent years to
grow and characterize GaAs layers on Si substrates. 1-3 The
reasons for this interest are wen documented, but briefly
they relate to the advantages of replacing brittle, small-di
ameter GaAs substrates with larger-diameter Si substrates
of superior thermal and mechanical properties. At some
point i.n the future, it may also be possible to combine the
functions of GaAs-based photonic devices with those of
very-large-scale integration (VLSI) Si electrical circuits, all
on the same chip. At present this optoelectronic integration
is hampered by the fact that aU GaAs layers grown on 8i
substrates exhibit high densities of extended defects, in par
ticular threading dislocations.4 These defects result from the
4% lattice constant difference between GaAs and 8i and
appear in the initially coherently strained GaAs after a few
hundred angstroms of growth. Regardless of the lattice mis
match between the III-V layer (GaAs, GaP, InP) and the
group-IV element substrate (Si or Ge), there appears to be
an almost invariant defect density of 107_108 cm·2 at dis
tances of -1 /Lm from the heterointerface.4 This may well be
an interaction-distance argument in the sense that near the
interface an initially high density of defects can tangle and
terminate. This leads to a reduction in defect density with
distance from the heterointerface until the remaining defects
become far enough apart that their probability for interact
ing with each other becomes small. This appears to occur at a
a) Permanent address: Hughes Aircraft Co., Torrance, CA 90S09. distance of 1-10 p,m, corresponding to a defect density of
107_108 cm·--2•
The performance of electrical devices fabricated on
GaAs-on-Si is characterized by the presence of high reverse
bias voltage leakage currents, whose origin is clearly related
to the high defect density in the materiaLS The mechanism
for production of these excess leakage currents is not, how
ever, quite so clear. Intuitively, one might expect that recom
bination at the extended defects would be a major contribu
tor, although there is some evidence that defect-assisted
tunneling may in fact be the dominant mechanism for the
leakage current. (, The presence of the defects in the GaAs
layer is perhaps even more deleterious to the performance of
photonic devices, especially lasers. The defects tend to be
mobile under minority-carrier injection and agglomerate in
the active region of the laser, forming nonradiative areas.
This obviously degrades the light output from the device and
eventually leads to the termination of lasing action.7
It is clearly of interest to examine the effects of atomic
hydrogen incorporation into this highly defected material
system. Hydrogenation has previously been shown to passi
vate or neutralize the electrical activity of a wide range of
impurities and defects in semiconductors and might be ex
pected to reduce the defect-related leakage currents in
GaAs-on-Si diode structures. x We have previously reported
this effect for the case in which the hydrogen was i.ntroduced
by exposure of the GaAs-on-Si to a hydrogen plasma.9 In
some respects a more controlled method of incorporating
the hydrogen is by ion implantati.on, in which a known dose
can be placed at known depths in the GaAs. The disadvan-
347 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (1), 1 January 1989 0021-8979/89/010347 -07$02.40 © 1988 American Institute of Physics 347
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19tage of this technique, of course, is the introduction oflattice
damage by the implanted ions, which requires annealing at
elevated temperatures. The major question is whether this
damage can be annealed out without removing the beneficial
effects of the hydrogen. A related point of interest is the
extent of any redistribution of the hydrogen during the post
implant anneal. The GaAs grown on Si is highly strained and
defective, and the motion of hydrogen within it might be
expected to be somewhat different from conventional GaAs.
In this paper we compare hydrogenation of GaAs-on-Si
by both plasma exposure and ion implantation, compare the
annealing required to restore the original conductivity, and
examine the redistribution of the hydrogen during post-hy
drogenation annealing. We observe a correlation of the
amount of hydrogen incorporated during plasma exposures
with the amount of initial disorder in the GaAs layer and
note a somewhat surprising thermal stability of hydrogen
located around the heterointerface region. We have predom
inantly used leakage current-voltage (1-V) measurements as
a qualitative indication of the concentration of electrically
active defects. Deep-level transient spectroscopy is not sensi
tive to the types of defect in GaAs-on-Si, and so this is the
reason we use the somewhat indirect 1-V measurements.
EXPERIMENTAL DETAilS
The GaAs layers were deposited onto the Si substrates
using a three-step technique which is basicaUy standard
these days. We used 2-in.-diam, I-n em, p-type (B-doped)
Si cut 4· off (l00) toward the [011], which was solvent
cleaned and lightly etched before being loaded into a vertical
geometry metalorganic chemical vapor deposition
(MOCVD) reactor. 10 The Si substrates were then heated at
900 ·C for 10 min under AsH3 to thermally desorb native
oxide from their surfaces. The substrate temperature was
then lowered to 450°C to nucleate the growth ofGaAs, with
deposition of ~ 100 A of material. Following this, the wafer
temperature was raised to the growth temperature of
-650 ·Cfor deposition of the GaAs at a rate of -4,um h.-I
The final layer thicknesses varied frem 1.5 to 10 pm. Capaci
tance-voltage (C~ V) profiling showed that all of the un
doped GaAs layers were n type with net carrier densities in
the range 1-3 X 1016 cm--3. Companion samples were exam
ined by both plan-view and cross-sectional transmission
electron microscopy (TEM). The defect structures and den
sities observed in the material were similar to those reported
previously by many authors,4 and discussed earlier in this
paper.
TABLE I. Types of GaAs-on-Si investigated.
Structure
No. GaAs layer
sequence Doping We investigated hydrogenation in three basic layer
structures summarized in Table 1. The first was simply to
implant protons into the undoped GaAs. This was done both
at high doses (1016 cm -2 at 100 keY), for the purpose of
monitoring the redistribution of the implanted species upon
annealing, and at low doses (5X 1013 cm-2 at 100 keY) to
try to passivate the electrical activity of some of the defects in
the material. The second type of structure consisted of a 0.15
,um-thick n-type region (n~3 X 1017 cm-3) formed by im
plantation of 29Si ions at a dose of5 X 1012 cm -2 (100 keY of
energy), into the undoped GaAs. As we discussed in a pre
vious paper," this simulates the depletion region of field-ef
fect transistor structures, the most common electrical device
used in GaAs technology. The implanted Si was activated by
proximity rapid annealing at 900 ·C for 10 s. This annealing
treatment reduced the microtwin and stacking fault density
in the GaAs layer, but the threading dislocation density re
mained essentially unchanged.!! These n-implanted GaAs
structures on Si were hydrogenated by exposure to a 30-kHz,
O.08-W cm--2 plasma contained within a parallel plate, ca
pacitively coupled reactor. The samples were held at 250°C,
and the exposure time varied from 0.5 to 3 h. After each
plasma treatment, these samples were annealed at 400 ·C for
5 min in N2 to restore the electrical activity of the shallow
donor impurities in the material. This anneal is necessary to
ensure that we can make valid comparisons of hydrogenated
GaAs-on-Si with unhydrogenated material of the same dop
ing density. We have previously demonstrated that such an
anneal is sufficient to remove shallow-donor passivation in
GaAs grown on GaAs or Si. !2 The third type of structure
consisted of -2.um ofSi-doped n+ (2X 1018 cm-3) GaAs
grown on the Si, followed by 8 f.lm of undoped GaAs. Some
samples were given an in situ anneal under AsH3 at 750·C
for 10 min after deposition of the n -{-layer, in order to reduce
the interfacial disorder. Companion samples were grown
with a similar structure, but without the annealing step. The
doping concentration in the undoped GaAs was similar in all
samples (n-3X 1016 cm-3). The purpose of both types of
samples was to examine the effect of the presence of varying
degrees of lattice disorder on the total amount of hydrogen
incorporated into the GaAs-on-Si.
The electrical effects of hydrogen incorporation were
examined by current-voltage (I-V) measurements in
TiPtAu Schottky diode structures. The TiPtAu contacts
were deposited by electron-beam evaporation through a
shadow mask, to a total thickness of2S00 A. Ohmic contact
was made by a low-temperature (_325°C) anoy of In on
Hydrogenation method
1
2 3-,um undoped
0.15-,um n-type
2.85-,um undoped n~3x 1016 em-J
n-3 X 1017 ern -3
n-3X1016cm 3 H+ implant; sx 10"_10IE em 2,IOOkeV
H plasma 250 'c, 0.5-3 h
3
348 8-,um undoped
2-Pfi n+ GaAs
J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. i, 1 January 1989 n-3XlO '6cm'
n-2X 10'8 em-, H plasma 250 ·c, 0.5-3 h
Zavada et at. 348
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19lOp.m Gata-ON-Si
AS -GROWN lOf'!'I'l GaAs -ON-Si
IN -SITU ANNEALED
'? 1020 D PLASMA O.5h, 250"C 106
~ r-------~----, o PLASMA 0.5h, 250°C 106
FIG. 1. SIMS profiles of deuterium in
GaAs-on-Si samples grown either with or
without an in situ anneal and subsequently
exposed to it D plasma for 0.5 h at 250°C,
o 2 4 6 8 10 12
DEPTH (f\-m) o 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
DEPTH {fLml
the front face of the samples. The atomic profiles of hydro
gen or deuterium in the implanted or plasma-treated materi
al were obtained using negative secondary ion mass spec
trometry (SIMS) measurements with Cs-+ -ion
bombardment in a Cameca IMS 3fsystem.13 The concentra
tions obtained in this way were calibrated by comparison
with implanted standards and the depth scales established
by stylus measurements of the sputtered crater depths. The
former are usually quoted to be accurate to within a factor of
2, while the latter are generally accepted to be accurate to
±7%.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The amount of hydrogen or deuterium incorporated
into semiconductors depends on a number off actors related
to the density of sites to which it can bond. These sites in
clude dopants, defective bonds, and regions of strain in the
material associated with line and point defects and certain
types of impurities.8 The high level of lattice disorder near
the heterointerface of GaAs-ou-Si might be expected to at
tract a significant density of hydrogen. To examine this we
exposed the to-,um-thick GaAs layers on Si (layer structure
3 in Table 1) to a deuterium plasma for 0.5 h at 250"C.
Figure 1 shows the SIMS profiles obtained from samples
that either had or had not received the 750 "C, lO-min an
neal. There are two components to the D profile in each
sample. The ben-shaped distribution within the first 5,um is
typical of that observed in plasma-exposed GaAs. It does not
correspond to a classical error-function profile for unimped
ed, one-species diffusion. Based on our current understand
ing of the permeation of hydrogen into semiconductors, it is
possible that the SIMS profile in this region represents deu
terium present in at least two forms. The first is deuterium
complexed with the shallow-donor impurities in the GaAs.
These are present at a concentration of only _1016 cm-3,
and therefore there must be at least one other form of deuter
ium present at a concentration ofS X 1017 cm-3• This almost
349 J. Appl. Phys .• Vol. 65, No.1. 1 January 1989 certainly includes some form of dusters of deuterium, possi
bly as simple as deuterium molecules, or may be larger asso
ciates such as the extended platelets observed in proton-im
planted GaAs which has been annealed above 200 QC. 14 The
spike in the distributions near 3.5 pm corresponds to a
growth-interruption step during the GaAs deposition and
probably represents deuterium accumulation at interfacial
defects or impurities.
The second component in each D profile occurs at
depths between 8 and 10 pm. In both samples this region is Si
doped to a level higher than that of the overlying 8 lim of
GaAs, and so one might expect more deuterium to accumu
late there. However, there is clearly less deuterium between
8 and 10 pm in the sample that received an in situ anneal.
This sample contained less disorder near the heterointerface
than the un annealed sample, as measured by He-ion chan
neling and cross-sectional TEM. There was a complete ab
sence of stacking faults and microtwins in the in situ an
nealed material, and the backscattering yield at a depth of 8
/-lm was 36%, compared with 49% in the unannealed GaAs
on-Si. This is consistent with the previously observed char
acteristics of in situ annealed material. ]5 The increased con
centration of deuterium near the heterointerface in the latter
sample therefore represents the combined influence of stack
ing faults, microtwins, and other defects which can bond
deuterium.
Capacitance-voltage profiling of the GaAs-on-Si after
hydrogenation showed reductions in the carner density in
the first -1 lim from the surface in all samples. Typically,
there was a reduction of approximately an order of magni
tude within this region, corresponding to passivation of the
shanow donors in the material. The initial doping levels were
restored by annealing at 400 ·C for 5 min but even after this
treatment we observed significant reductions in diode re
verse leakage current in hydrogenated material. Figure 2
shows reverse J-V characteristics from the Si-implanted
GaAs-on-Si material, hydrogenated for 3 h at 250 ·C, an
nealed at 400"C to restore the shallow-donor doping, and
Zavadaefal. 349
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19'10-10 OL.L.L-~2--!3~-..J,4----'5~--:!6'---±-7---!S
VR (VOLTS)
FIG. 2. Reverse-bias 1-V characteristics from TiPtAu diodes fabricated on
S1-implanted (n~ 3 X IO{7 em -3) GaAs-on-Si either untreated or plasma
hydrogenated (3 h, 250 'C), followed by annealing at 400 'C for 5 min to
restore the shallow-donor activtiy.
then processed into diode structures. These diodes show
breakdown voltages, defined as the reverse bias at which the
leakage current is 1 rnA, of -6.5 V, compared with 2.5 V for
unhydrogenated diodes. We emphasize that c-V measure
ments showed that doping concentrations were identical in
the two types of samples, with the only difference being that
hydrogen is still presumably bound at defect sites in the plas
ma-treated material, even after the anneal to restore the shal
low doping level. Diodes formed in exactly the same fashion
on homoepitaxial GaAs of the same doping density showed
reverse breakdown voltages of ~ 8 V and displayed no im
provement upon hydrogenation and annealing at 400 °e. We
varied the plasma exposure conditions for the GaAs-on-Si
over the temperature range 125-250°C, and from 30--180
min, but were unable to achieve diode breakdown voltages as
high as in the homoepitaxial diodes. This could be due to
several factors, including the possibility that some passivat
ed defects were reactivated by the 400°C anneal to restore
the shallow doping concentration, or that not all of the elec
trically active defects were passivated by hydrogen. We have
no way to distinguish these possibilities, although it is typical
of many hydrogenation experiments to observe only partial
passivation of defects or impurities. Passivation of the intrin
sic defect levels in molecular-beam cpitaxially grown
GaAs16 and of DX centers in AIGaAs, 17 all of which showed
complete passivation to the deep level transient spectroscopy
(DLTS) detection limit, are notable exceptions.
It is worth mentioning at this point that not only was the
reverse breakdown voltage in the GaAs-on-Si altered by hy
drogen-plasma exposure, but the Schottky barrier height de
termined from the J-V characteristics was also changed, as
shown in Table II. In untreated samples the barrier height
was measured to be 0.67 V, while after a 3 h, 250°C plasma
exposure, followed by 400 °C annealing and deposition of the
TiPtAu, the barrier height was reduced to 0.52 V.9 In sam
ples hydrogenated by proton implantation, we observed im-
350 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.1, 1 January 1989 TABLE II. Average ideality factors (n), barrier heights (,pe). and break
down voltages (VB) in GaAs-on-Si diodes, obtained from 1-V measure-
ments.
Layer structure 2
Untreated
n ifJB (eV) VB (V)
1.35 ± 0.08 0.67 ± 0.02 2.44 ± 0.07
Hydrogenated
n ifJB (eV) VB (V)
1.32 ± 0.Q1 0.52 ± O.Ql 6.48 ± 0.27
Layer structure 3
Untreated
n ,pB (eV) VB (V)
1.28 ± 0.06 0.71 ± 0.02 19.54 ± 0.58
Hydrogenated
n o/B (eV) VB (V)
1.29 ± 0.04 o.n ± 0.Q3 30.30 ± 0.95
provements in reverse breakdown voltage, but no change in
barrier height, as also shown in Table II. This is consistent
with our previous assumption that the change in barrier
height in plasma-treated material is due to removal of free
As and its oxides from the surface as AsH) and water
vapor.9,tH
The improvement in reverse breakdown voltage was not
stable for annealing above 550°C, decreasing to 3.5 V after a
600°C, 5-min treatment. Figure 3 shows the atomic profiles
of deuterium in a plasma-treated sample after annealing at
400°C for 5 min. There was no motion of the deuterium up
to 400 °C, at which temperature some redistribution is evi
dent, with the onset of pileup at the heterointerface. After
600 ·C annealing there is diffusion of deuterium both toward
the surface and to the heterointerface where there is a sub-
1020 4p.m GaAs -ON -Si lOS D PLASMA O.5h, 250°C
..., 5 MIN ANNEALS
I
E
'"
1019 to5 m z I-
0 Z
I-::l
0 <1 AS -TREATED ~ u 0::: I-104 Z
Z Q lJ.!
(,) . >-Z 0:::
0 400QC ! <1 u 1017 103 0 'f 1 :'--Ga-+ z :ii: 0 ::l '...., e e U
a::: \I,...L! w
, I' m w : \ I-
::l 10i6 .. 102
W
0
600·e
1015 101
0 2 4 6 8
DEPTH (ftm)
FIG. 3. SIMS profiles of deuterium in undoped GaAs-on-Si treated in a
plasma for O.S h at 250'C and subsequently annealed for 5 min at 4OO·C or
600 'C.
Zavadaetal. 350
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19II')
\ e
Q 1021
Wi 9
>-
f-
Cf)
Z
W o
Z
W
(!) o
0:: o
)0-
J: 300"C
DEPTH (,urn)
FIG. 4. SIMS profiles of hydrogen in proton-implanted (10'6 em -2, 100-
ke V) GaAs-on-Si as a function of post-implant annealing temperature (20-
min anneals).
stantial accumulation. This is the region of maximum disor
der in the material and emphasizes once again that hydrogen
and deuterium are attracted to any site of strain in semicon
ductors. It is interesting that the hydrogen (or deuterium)
must be in an atomic state, since molecules show no evidence
of significant motion or trapping in any semiconductor.19
After trapping, however, the hydrogen is strongly bound
and upon annealing shows no ability to passivate dopants. It
is therefore in an apparently inactive state.
The accumulation of hydrogen at the heterointerface
upon annealing was even more evident in proton-implanted
material (structure 1 in Table I). Figure 4 shows SIMS pro
files of hydrogen in a sample implanted with IOO-keV H+
ions to a dose of 1 X 1011> cm-2, followed by annealing up to
700 ·C for 20-min periods. In this case there was little motion
at 200 ·C, but some slight redistribution at 300 ·C, especially
on the tail of the implanted profile. With increasing anneal
ing temperature, hydrogen is lost to the surface, but there is a
tremendous accumulation at the heterointerface. The sur
prising result is that this accumulation is stable to 700·C
annealing, and even in the original implanted region as hy
drogen is lost by diffusion, the remaining hydrogen retains
the profile shape of the implanted distribution. This indi
cates that there is still some remnant damage in the GaAs
even after 700°C annealing, and that the hydrogen is decor
ating this damage. The enhanced accumulation near the he
terointerface in the implanted material compared with the
plasma-treated GaAs-on-Si may be slightly misleading, be
cause it must be remembered that the implanted layer was
only 2.5 f..tm thick and therefore had poorer crystalline quali
ty than the 4-,um-thick sample that underwent plasma expo-
351 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 65, No. i, 1 January 1989 2,um GaAs-ON-GaAs
.. Ht 5)\ 1013 cm-2
.. 3He+3xIO '3cm-2 ....
I \
\
'" \
\
$
\
\\
~
\
lOT \
1O't \
: INITIAL SHEET RESISTANCE
1021 I I I ! I I
o 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800
ANNEALING TEMPERATURE (OC)
FIG. 5. Sheet resistance of n-type (\0.7 em -3) GaAs layers implanted with
multiple-energy (30-, 100-, and 20G-keV) H+ or 'He ~ at doses of 5 X 10'3
or 3 X JO l:l em -2, respectively, as a function of post-implant annealing tem
perature.
sure. The anneals in the former case were also for 5 min only,
while in the latter case they were for 20 min, and deuterium
was used in the plasma exposure compared with implanted
hydrogen. Taking an these factors into account, there ap
pears to be a roughly similar rate of accumulation at the
interface for the two methods of hydrogen introduction.
The obvious problem with the use of conventional high
energy implantation as a technique for hydrogenating
GaAs-on-Si is the introduction of the lattice damage so evi
dent from the results in Fig. 4. The question is whether, for
the dose levels that might actually be used in device struc
tures, this damage can be annealed while still retaining the
beneficial effects of hydrogen. The first thing to determine is
the annealing temperature required to remove the hydrogen
implant damage. Figure 5 shows the sheet resistance of 2-
pm-thick n-type (_1017 cm-3) GaAs layers grown on
semi-insulating GaAs substrates, after proton implants at
multiple energies (30, 100, and 200 ke V) at a dose of 5 X 10 \3
em -2, and then annealed for 5 min at the indicated tempera
tures. The evolution of the sheet resistance with annealing
temperature can be explained by the introduction of dam
age-related deep levels which trap electrons in the GaAs,
increasing the resistivity of the material after implantation.
However, the damage sites are close enough that electrons
can hop from one to another, leading to a low-mobility con
duction. The hopping conductivity is reduced as some ofthe
damage is annealed out with increasing annealing tempera
ture, leading to an increase in the resistivity. At some tem
perature (around 300 ·C for proton implants) the deep-level
density falls below that of the donor concentration and eIec-
Zavada et at. 351
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:191018
H 5 x 1013 cm~2 100 keY
...... GaAs -ON-Si
---'--GaAS! Si
1017
", ,
E
t)
<{
Z
i
0
Z
1016
DEPTH (fLm)
FIG. 6. Carrier profiles in GaAs-on-Si implanted with tOO-keY H+ ions at a
dose of 5 X 10 13 em -2, and subsequently annealed for 5 min at either 400 aT
500 "C.
trons are returned to the conduction band, lowering the re
sistivity until eventually it reaches its unimplanted vaIue.20
This occurs at 500 ·C for this particular dose of protons into
GaAs. It is worth noting that even the use oeRe +-ions, also
shown in Fig. 5, shifts the annealing curve somewhat to
higher temperatures, and therefore the use of another defect
passivating species, such as Li, is probably precluded by the
extra annealing required for heavier ions.
As a further check that 500·C annealing restores the
initial condition of the GaAs lattice for proton implants at
doses around 5 X 1013 cm -2, we made electrochemical C-V
measurements on implanted GaAs-on-Si samples after sev
eral annealing treatments. Figure 6 shows the initial carrier
profile and after a 5X lOLl cm-2, tOO-keY H+ implant. In
the latter case the reduction in doping will be due predomi
nantly to the damage introduced with possibly a small com
ponent due to donor passivation by hydrogen. After anneal
ing a 400 ·C this latter effect will be removed, as will some of
the damage (refer to Fig. 5). Finally, we see that 500·C
annealing restores the carrier density to its initial value.
Based on this information, we can look for the beneficial
effects of hydrogen incorporation by implanting protons
into the GaAs-on-Si, annealing at 500 ·C to restore the initial
carrier density, and comparing the 1-V characteristics of a
diode structure with that of an unimplanted companion. The
reverse-bias J-V data from TiPtAu diodes fabricated on un
doped (n = 3X 1016cm-3) 2-3-.um~thickGaAslayersonSi
are shown in Fig. 7. The untreated sample had a reverse
breakdown voltage of ~ 19.5 V, whereas the hydrogenated
diode shows a value of -30 V. An unimplanted sample that
352 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.1, i January 1989 10-3
10-4
10-5
10~r
'< It: 10-7
....
10~8
10-9
10-10
10-11
0 ;0 TIPIAu
A"2.08x10-:~cm-2
i5 20 25 30 35
VR (VOLTS) 40
FIG. 7. Reverse-biasl- Vcharacteristics from undoped (n-3 X 10'6 em-3)
GaAs-on-Si samples processed into TiPtAu Schottky diodes. One of the
samples was implanted with lOO-keY H+ ions (5 X 1013 cm-2) and an
nealed at 500·C for 5 min prior to metallization.
also underwent a 500 ·C anneal showed a similar breakdown
voltage as the control diode (i.e., 19.5 V). Therefore, the
proton implant appears to be effective in improving the di~
ode characteristics of GaAs-on~Si structures by passivating
the electrical activity of some of the defects in the material.
Once again, however, the breakdown voltage of even a hy~
drogenated diode was inferior to one fabricated on homoepi
taxiaI GaAs of the same doping density. In the latter case we
observed a diode breakdown voltage of -43 V. We note also
that the thermal stability of improvement in performance of
the implanted diodes was similar to that of plasma~exposed
samples. The only difference between the two methods of
hydrogen introduction was the fact that there was no lower
ing of the Schottky barrier height for proton-implanted sam
ples.
CONCLUSIONS AND SUMMARY
We have compared hydrogenation of GaAs-on-Si by
two different methods: Hz-plasma exposure and proton im
plantation. In both cases there is a significant improvement
in reverse breakdown voltage of TiPtAu Schottky diodes,
compared with unhydrogenated diodes. This improvement
is presumably due to a reduction in the number of electrical
ly active defects in the GaAs-on-Si upon hydrogenation.
There is extensive redistribution of hydrogen to the heteroin
terface at annealing temperatures above 500 °C, and the hy
drogen appears to be in a strongly bonded form when it is in
the interface region because of its subsequent thermal stabil
ity. It could indeed be in several forms, such as bound to
defects or dangling bonds, or in a clustered state. Since after
high-temperature annealing there is no apparent dopant pas
sivation during stimuli such as minority~carrier injection,
the hydrogen is apparently in an inactive state.
I t is worth emphasizing that the defect passivation in the
Zavada at al. 352
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19material is incomplete, a frequent feature of hydrogenation
experiments. Therefore, the incorporation of hydrogen is
not a panacea for the high defect density in GaAs-on-Si, but
rather it indicates the important role these defects play in
degrading the electrical quality of material. As is widely re
cognized, the future utility of GaAs-on-Si depends on mak
ing real progress in reducing the defect density from the cur
rent value of ~ 108 to 104 cm--2 or less.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors acknowledge the supply of some of the
GaAs-on-Si material from So Mo Vernon and V. E. Haven
(Spire Corporation), and the interest of A S. Jordan. The
ion-channeling results were provided by K. T. Short (AT&T
Bell Laboratories).
'R. M. F1etcher, D. K. Wagner, and J. M. Ballantyne, App!. Phys. Lett. 44,
967 (1984).
2R, J. Fischer, W. F. Kopp, J. S. Gedymin, and H. Morko,<, IEEE Trans.
Electmn Devices ED-33, 1407 (1986).
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Lett. 45,309 (1984).
353 J. Appl. Phys., VoL 65, No.1, 1 January 1989 'See, for example, papers in Proc. Mater. Res. Soc. Syrup. 91 (1987).
5N. Chand, F. Ren. S. J. Pearton, N. J. Shah, and A. Y. Cho, IEEE Trans.
Electron. Device Lett. EDL .. S, 185 (1987).
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Cho, App!. Phys. Lett. 51, 1013 (1987).
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Pinzone, and A. Savage, Appl. Phys. Lett. SO, 456 (1987).
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lIS. M. Vernon, S. J. Pearton, J. M. Gibson, K. T. Short, and V. E. Haven,
AppL Phys. Lett. 50, 1161 (1987).
12J. Chevallier, W. C. Dautremont-Smith, C. W. Tu, and S. J. Pearton,
App!. Phys. Lett. 47,108 (1985).
13Charles Evans & Associates, Redwood City, CA.
14H. C. Synman and J. H. NecthHng, Radiat. Eff. 69, 199 (1983).
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Chevallier, C. W. Tu, and S. J. Pearton, Appl. Phys. Lett 49, 1098
(1986).
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and S. J. Pearton, Appl. Phys, Lett. 50, 921 (1987).
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Zavada et al. 353
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131.94.16.10 On: Sat, 20 Dec 2014 23:59:19 |
1.1140557.pdf | High performance xray area detector suitable for smallangle scattering,
crystallographic, and kinetic studies
J. Widom and H.P. Feng
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 60, 3231 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.1140557
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140557
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/60/10?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16High performance x .. ray area detector suitable for smaU .. angle scattering,
crystallographic, and kinetic studies
j. Widom
Departments ajChemistry and Biochemistry, University oj Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Urbana, Illinois 61801
H.-P. Fang
Department 0/ Chemistry, University a/Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801
(Received 31 March 1989; accepted for publication 9 June 1989)
An x-ray area detector has been constructed that has the following capabilities: lower noise and/
or higher spatial resolution than previous opto-electronic designs; higher spatial resolution and no
significant countrate limitations as compared to multi wire designs; and capability of acquiring
millisecond- or microsecond-wide snapshots of a kinetically evolving x-ray pattern. An important
feature of the present detector is that an key components are commercially produced; this
detector can readily be duplicated in other laboratories.
INTRODUCTION
X-ray scattering studies oflarge, weakly diffracting systems
require a detector that has good spatial resolution and very
low noise levels. Moreover, whether samples are anisotropic
or not, it is most efficient to collect a full two-dimensional
diffraction pattern at once (with an "area detector"). rather
than simply measuring the intensities at one point or along
one line at a time. X-ray film is commonly used as an area
detector for CuKa (8 keY) x rays, but it has several signifi
cant limitations: it has a high background noise level (the
"chemical fog" of development) which leads to a very poor
detective quantum efficiency for weak signals; it must be
developed and then digitized before the data may be ana
lyzed quantitatively; and it has a very limited dynamic
range, so that a typical pattern must be recorded on several
films that are exposed for different times and then scaled
together.
These and other deficiencies of x-ray film have prompt
ed the development of alternative technologies for x-ray area
detection. One class of such devices are multi wire propor
tional counters 1-4; two of these are commercially available. 1.2
These devices can have vanishingly low noise levels, but they
are capable only of modest spatial resolution; strict count
rate limitations generally prohibit their use in kinetic studies
(see below). A second class of detectors use a phosphor to
convert the x-ray pattern to a dim visible light pattern, and
then use one of several technologies to acquire the visible
image.5-12 One such detector is commercially available.5,11
This general approach seems quite promising; but, each of
the devices described until recently (see below) suffered ei
ther from relatively pocr noise levels or relatively poor spa
tial resolution or both. Additionally, many of them required
extensive and sophisticated custom electronics that could
not readily be duplicated in another laboratory. A third class
of detectors have recently been commercialized; these are
called "imaging plates," 13 and are used in a manner analo
gous to film. Incident x rays are absorbed in a "storage phos
phor" which is subsequently read out by scanning with a focused laser. The noise, resolution, and dynamic range of
imaging plates are all very good. They have only two modest
disadvantages: because the plates must be read out in a sec
ond instrument, they do not anow one to see the diffraction
pattern in "real time, " which is often desirable; and, it would
be difficult to use such a detector for rapid kinetic studies.
We set out to develop an x-ray detector that would have
noise levels, spatial resolution, and dynamic range similar to
those of the imaging plate detectors, but that would also
allow essentially real-time observation of the diffraction pat
terns. Importantly, our detector would utilize commercial
products for all key components, so that it could readily be
duplicated by other laboratOlies. While our work was in
progress, another detector was described which met similar
design criteria. 10.12 Our detector is related to this and other
opto-electronic detectors,5-12.14 but differs significantly in
detail. Compared to this other recent design, we find that the
present design yields competitive performance with regard
to noise levels and spatial resolution, and that it provides a
unique kinetic capability.
I. SYSTEM OVERViEW
A. Hardware
A block diagram of the detector is illustrated in Fig. 1;
key components are listed in Table I. The detector head con
sists of two separately refrigerated modules, which are opti.
cally coupled by a lens. The x-ray diffraction pattern passes
through a layer of black paper and impinges on a phosphor
which converts the x rays to visible tight. The phosphor is
GdOzS (Tb) CP43) deposited at a density of 10 mg em -2 on
a fiberoptic faceplate. \5.16 The faceplate is optically coupled,
via direct mechanical contact, to the fiberoptic input win
dow of a proximity focused microchanneI plate image inten
sifier tube having a 40-mm-diam aperture. The intensifier
tube operates at unity optical magnification and in the un
saturated (linear gain) mode, at 15 ooaX luminescent gain.
The phosphor and intensifier are mounted in a thermoelec-
3231 Rev. Sci. Instrum. 60 (10), October 1989 0034·6148/89/103231-08$01.;30 ® 1989 American Institute of Physics 3231
•••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• n •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ••••••••••••••• ,. ~ ••••• ~ ••
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16PHOR MACRO LENS
OPTIC FACEPLATE I WINDOW. SHUTTER
IMITY- FOCUSED MICROCHANNEL I
IMAGE INTENSIFIER I ceo
COOLED HOUSINGS---l------.
WINDOW
~----Ic---~ CCD READOUT
ELECTRONICS
ON I OFF
SHUTTER CONTROL
ON I OFF CAMERA CONTROLLER
IMAGE PROCESSOR
PARALLEL
iNTERFACE
HIGH
VOLTAGE
SUPPLIES L-. __________ . ______________________________ --l HOST COMPUTER
INTENSIFIER PHOTOCATHODE
FIG. 1. Block diagram of the x-ray detector.
tricaUy cooled housing and cooled to -20 0c. The output of
the image intensifier tube is imaged at 3: 1 demagnification
by a macro camera lens, onto a charge coupled device
( CCD) image sensor that is thermoelectrically cooled to
TABLE I. Key components of x-ray area detector.
Component
L Phosphor
2. Fiberoptic
faceplate
3. Image
intensifer
4. Refrigerated
housing
5. Lens
6. CCD camera
7.CCD Vendor
GTE/Sylvania Specification
P43 type 1820; 6-,um
grainsizc.
Galileo Electro-Optics No. l324-0390; NA 1
Corp. fibers, 6 f.1m diam,
withEMA.
ITT Electro-optical
Products Div. F4113 Proximity fo
cused microchannel
plate intensifier tube
with fiberoptic
input, S20ER
photocathode, P20 output
phosphoron HV-NESA
fiberoptic; 40-mm
aperture.
Products for Research TE316, modified for F4113
tube.
Alpa 50 mm! 11.8 Macro Switar
Photometries Ltd. CH220 camera head,
CE200 camera
electronics unit with 14 bit
1m .. noise ADC, CC200
controller.
Thompson CSF TH7882CDA; 576X384
pixels format;
pixel size 23 /-lm X 23 !Lm.
3232 Rev. ScI. 'nstrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October 1989 -53°C. The CCD has a format of576X 384 pixels, each 23
jIm square. The demagnified image of the intensifier tube
aperture is centered on the rectangular CCD format, with
the diameter of the demagnified image equal to the long di
mension of the CCD, 576 pixels. The active area on the phos
phor is thus a rectangle having dimensions of 40 mm X 26.7
mm. The CCD is read out by a 14 bit low noise analog to
digital converter, at a gain of 1 analog to digital converter
unit (ADU) per 31 photoelectrons. The CCD controller
communicates with a host computer over a standard IEEE
488 parallel interface. The detector is gated on and otfunder
computer control either by a shutter in front of the CCD, or
by electronic switching of the intensifier tube photocathode
voltage.
B. Software noise rejection
During preliminary evaluation ofthe detector, we found
that numerous bright spots accumulated in the CCD images
even when the detector was not exposed to x rays. These
spots apparently occurred at random in space and in time,
and were much more frequent when the intensifier tube pho
tocathode was switched on (photocathode at -180V) than
when the photocathode was switched off ( + 10 V) while
leaving the intensifier tube otherwise activated (microchan
nel plate and output phosphor high voltage supplies operat
ing as IIsual). While the source ( s) of this noise is (are) not
known, it is reasonable to suppose that the extra spots found
when the photocathode is on may be due to cosmic rays and
to radioactive decay near the phosphor; the spots found with
the photocathode off may be due to ionization events in the
very high voltage field between the microchannel plate and
the (proximity focussed) output phosphor. Quantitative
X-ray detector 3232
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16n short exposures
i 576 ~--·---I l C1DD n
I 2 n
~
For each pixel:
Examine ei! n exposures;
Delete anomalous intensity in pixel (i, j) of exposure K;
Replace with average of remaining exposures for that same pixel.
! DOD D
l FIG, 2. Noise-rejection algorithm t<'1r the
detector. The figure illustrates n exposures
of equal duration in which, for some par
ticular pixel (shaded), exposure No.2 has
an anomalously high intensity. The algo
rithm detects the anomalous value and re
places it by an average of the other mea
surements for that pixel. Other
corrections are applied subsequently,
Sum noise-rejected exposures.
Subtract background exposure;
Correct for pixel-sensitivity voriations.
output exposure
measures of detector noise averaged over whole images (see
below) showed that these bright spots dominated the noise,
and that they significantly degraded the detector's perfor
mance. We therefore developed an algorithm for detecting
and removing these spots, and implemented this algorithm
in a program that runs on the host computer.
The algorithm is outlined in Fig. 2; it takes advantage of
the random nature of the noise source (s). Instead of taking a
single exposure of duration T, one takes a set of n shorter
exposures each of duration t = Tin. The algorithm makes
three passes over the n intensity measurements, for each
CCD pixel in turn. In the first pass, a mean and standard
deviation are computed using aU n measurements, In the
second pass, individual exposures are identified in which a
pixel has an intensity that differs from the mean for that pixel
3233 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October HiSS by some small multiple a of the standard deviation for that
pixel; the aberrant intensity is then simply deleted. In the
third pass, the m snrviving measurements are summed to
gether, scaled by thefactor (nlm), and placed in the appro
priate location in the output image. The parameters a and n
could presumably be optimized; we have arbitrarily chosen
the values a = 1.0 and n = 8 for our preliminary studies,
which leads to a typical value for m """ n -1. This algorithm
was used in ali of the work described below, except where
specifically noted. It provides a great improvement in the
detector's signal to noise ratio. at a very low "cost" in lost
information: if one measurement out of 8 is deleted fOf every
single pixel, the cost (discounting the readout noise-see
below) is simply that 8 units oftime have been spent to ac
quire only 7 units of time's information. The algorithm has
X-ray detector 3233
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16been implemented on two different host computers, It takes
30 min on an 8-MHz Dell 286 computer, and 4 min on a
Hewlett Packard 16,7-MHz 68020 based workstation.
II. PERFORMANCE EVALUATiON
A, Sensitivity
The sensitivity of the detector was evaluated by measur
ing the response to a 55Fe (5.9-keV x rays) calibration
source. The detector was found to respond linearly to the
incident x-ray dose. Each incident x ray produced on aver
age a signal of 4.0 ADU's, leading to saturation at 4096 de
tected x rays per CeD pixel for a single exposure, Using the
manufacturer's specified ADC sensitivity of3 Ie--per ADU,
this means that each x-ray incident on the phosphor pro
duced 124e'-in the ceD.
The uniformity of the detector's response was evaluated
with a uniform flood of 5sFe x rays. Pixel to pixel variation
in sensitivity was observed; correcting for variation owing to
counting statistics, the standard deviation in sensitivity was
found to be 6.6%-a small value, easily corrected with a
pixel sensitivity lookup table (see Fig. 2).
B. Noise
The detective quantum efficiency of a counting detector
is limited in part by random noise introduced by the detector
into the measured signal. We have used the methods devel"
oped by Gruner and colleagues8•17 to quantitate this noise for
the present detector system. Pairs of exposures of equal du
ration (T) are taken in the absence of any incident x rays, for
a series of values of T. For each pair, one image (exposure) is
subtracted from the other, and the mean and variance are
then measured over the entire difrerence image. If the detec
tor introduces random noise, then the mean over all pixels in
the difference images will be zero, independent of T, but the
variance per pixel will increase linearly with T.
We have carried out this analysis of the present detector
system, with and without the noise rejection algorithm. In all
cases, the mean intensity in the difference images did not
differ significantly from zero. The measurements of variance
are plotted in Figs. 3 (a) (no noise rejection) and 3 (b) (with
noise rejection). The measured sensitivity and the known
pixel size and optical demagnification are used to convert the
measured variance (ADU pixel-1)2 into an equivalent vari
ance expressed in (x rays mm -2f for x rays incident at the
phosphor. In both graphs, the variance is seen to increase
linearly with time, from an initial value (at T = 0) which is
not zero, These observations are consistent with a time-inde
pendent readout noise superimposed on other noise sources
that accumulate over time.
The noise rejection algorithm is extremely effective. As
discussed above, for a very low cost in lost information, it
reduces the rate of variance accumulation by a factor of
-100. After noise rejection, the data for variance are fit by
the following equations:
(1; (ADU pixel-I)2 = 10.6 + 0.0621' (s),
a} (x rays mm-2at phosphor) 2 = 139+0.81T (s), (1)
where the subscript s in the variance cJl indicates that this is
3234 Rev. SCi.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October 1989 U)
:::",
2
I
>< 10 r--'-'----'-------'_.-'-------'-'------I
t b I 8 t
f
d i
t r.::_-----o~'-'----11
: ( 0.-.--0.'- --0---
~ f---E.1 .. - I
x r o ~ ~~ -.'-~ ~-~ ~~~--~~~ __ ~ ~ _~_._J
100 20D JOO 4DO 500
time (sec)
FIG. 3, Accumulation of variance in the detector output as a fUllction of
exposure time, in the absence ofincidcnt x rays, Each point is obtained from
the sum of eight difference images (see text), each of duration 118 of the
indicated time. In (a) the 8 difference images are simply summed together;
in (b) the images arc summed together after running the noise rejection
algorithm. Note that the two ordinates differ in scale by a factor of 100.
the variance introduced by the system. Compared to the re
lated detector described by Gruner and colleagues,IO,]2 the
present detector has a readout variance that is higher by a
factor of 3.3, and a time-dependent variance that accumu
lates more slowly by a factor of 4.9, when expressed as (x
rays mm2 at phosphor).2 (See Table II.)
TABLE II. Properties of x-ray area detector.
Experimental values
Conversion efficiency (CCD e -lx-ray photon): 124
(ADU/x-ray photon): 4,0
Pixel saturation level, single frame (x rays pixe\-I): 4096
multiple frames: unlimited
RMS noise, (<T;) 112 (x rays mm-2 at phosphor): 1139 + 0,81 T
(8)]'/2
Dynamic range for single pixel, single frame: 5032: 1
mUltiple frames: unlimited
Spatial resolution (FWHM, microns at phosphor): 120
Temporal resolution (single frame, sec): 10-3
Active region of phosphor: 4OmmX26,7 mm
X-ray detector 3234
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16The dynamic range of a detector is often defined as the
maximum signal divided by the minimum rms noise, which
in the present case is simply the apparent readout noise,
u = [~ (T = 0)] 112; thus u = 3.26 ADU pixel -I, or 0.81
x ray at phosphor per pixel. Taking the value of 4096 x-ray
pixel -1 at saturation gives a dynamic range for a single pixel
of5032:1; this value is slowly reduced as the time required to
saturate a pixel is increased. The dynamic range can be made
arbitrarily large by summing multiple exposures in the host
computer, or by integrating the signal over many pixels from
a single frame.
A useful measure of detector performance is the relative
uncertainty in a measured signal, 14 p, given by
(2)
where So is the signal output from the detector and Uo is the
rms noise in that signa!. Generally, one counts the incident x
rays until p reaches the desired precision. Following Eiken
berry, Gruner, and Lowrance,8 we assume that (To is given by
the relation
(3)
where 07 is given by Eq. (1) and (if is the variance in the
signal incident on the detector owing to Poisson counting
statistics. For a mean incident signal Si' u7 = Si'
For an ideal detector, 07 = 0 and So = Si; thus
p = l/uu independent of the incident x-ray flux (i.e., of the
time required to count Si) and independent of the area on
the detector face over which Si has been integrated. For a
nonideal detector, a nonzero time-dependent contribution to
a; causes p to depend on the incident flux, and a nonzero
time-independent contribution to ~ causes p to depend on
the area of integration.
Calculated values of p as a function of Si are plotted in
Figs. 4(a} and 4(b) for the present detector, for two differ
ent areas of integration and several different incident signal
fluxes. For comparison, results are also plotted for an ideal
detector and for x-ray film. Film has a large time-indepen
dent contribution to a; ("fog") but essentially no time-de
pendent contribution. For an incident flux of 100 x rays
mm -2 S -1 or greater, and an integration area of 1 mm2, the
present detector closely approximates the behavior of an
ideal detector. For lower incident fluxes and larger integra
tion areas, the present detector is worse than ideal, but still
vastly better than film, and better than previously described
optn-electronic detectors (see Sec. IIO. For example, for an
incident fiux of 0.1 x ray mm 2 s -1 and an integration area
of 100 mm2, the detector reaches 5-10% precision 20-30
fold faster than film.
Another quantitative measure of detector performance
that is useful for comparing different designs is the detective
quantum efficiency (DQE, or D), 17 defined as
'2 D=(So/u o) (4)
(S;I O'i) 2
This property too will depend on the incident flux and on the
area of integration, for nonzero time-dependent and time
independent contributions to a:, respedively. Results for
one area of integration and various fluxes are illustrated in
3235 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. SO, No. 10, October 1989 jOO.----- __ ------------------~ a
~ 10
2...-
Q...
I
I
102 103 104 Id'
Si
IOO~r-------------~----------~
10
105
Si
FIG. 4. Thc relativ<! uIIcertainty p is plotted as a function of the signal S" the
number of photons incident on an integration area at the phosphor of (a) I
mm/or (h) 100 mm'. (A) Ideal detector; (_) x-ray film. Open symbols are
calculated for the present dete;:;tor: (\) flux incident on phosphor ,= 0.1 x
rays mm 's '; (0) flux = 1 x ray mm- 2 s-'; (V) flux ",100 x-ray
mm -'0 s -'. Data for film calculated as described in Ref. 8.
3235
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16iLl
" Q
FIG. 5. Detective quantum efficiency is plotted as a function of Sj' the num
ber of photons incident on an integration area of I mm" at the phosphor. An
ideal detector has DQE =, 1. Curve (c) illustrates the behavior of x-ray
mm"; curves (a) and (b) illustrate the behavior of the present detector for
incident x-ray fluxes of (a) 100 x rays mm-o s-I and (b) 1 x ray
mm-2s-l.
Fig. 5 as a function of St. An ideal detector has D = 1. Plain
ly, film is a very poor detector except when large numbers of
x rays are incident on an integration area.
C. Resolution
We anticipated that the detector's spatial resolution
would be dominated by the CCO pixel size, 23 flm square,
which maps onto the phosphor with 3:1 magnification. All
other optical elements are expected to have a much higher
spatial resolution. The phosphor consists of 5-6-.um grains
in a ~ 14-,um-thick layer; the fiber optics use 6-flm fibers; the
microchanne1 plate in the image intensifier has a 15-,um cen
ter to center channel separation; and, the lens is designed
specifically for macro imaging applications.
One typically measures the resolution by quantifying
the extent to which the image of a pinhole mask pressed
against the detector face exceeds the known dimensions of
the pinhole. We used a 50-ftm-diam pinhole in a 2-mm-thick
platinum disk. Twelve images were obtained from various
positions on the detector face. Each image appeared radially
symmetric. Therefore, for each image, the centroid was lo
cated and the data were radially averaged about the centroid.
The twelve radial integrals were summed together, and de
convoluted for the diameter of the pinhole to yield the detec
tor point spread function. This is illustrated in Fig. 6 as a
weighted least squares fit to a Gaussian curve.15 The fun
3236 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October 1989 1.0
\
0.0 L-+~----f=~-----1
o 1 2 3
r (pixe:s)
FIG. 6. Point spread function of the detector. The full width at half maxi
mum is l. 7 pixels, corresponding to 120 pm at the phosphor.
width at half-maximum is 1.7 pixels, or 120 pm at the phos
phor.
D. Kinetic capability
We have not yet experimentally characterized the kinet
ic capability of the present detector: however, manufac
turer's specifications and previous work by others allows us
to anticipate the detector's kinetic behavior. Note that it
takes several seconds to read out each image, so the kinetic
behavior we refer to is the ability to capture a single narrow
window in time in a kinetically evolving x-ray pattern.
The detector can be gated on/off electronically by
switching the intensifier tube photocathode voltage between
-180 and + 10 V. The manufacturer specifies a tube re
sponse time of 5 ns or less. IS This property can be used as
follows to capture an x-ray pattern during a narrow time
window. The detector is initialized by switching the intensi
fier photocathode off, and clearing the CCD of stored
charge. The x-ray beam is then turned on, and at t = 0 an
experiment is initiated, e.g., by stopped flow mixing. After
waiting some desired time 7dclay' the intensifier photocath
ode is switched on for a brief period 7' acquisition' and then
switched off again. Only during the period 7 a<:quisition are elec
trons from the intensifier photocathode able to excite the
intensifier tube output phosphor, leading to a signal in the
CCD. Therefore, even though the output phosphor (P20)
has a slow decay time, the output image reflects only x rays
that were detected during the period Tacqui,ition' convoluted
by the decay characteristics of the "front end" phosphor
used to convert the x rays into visible light. The Gd02S(Tb)
phosphor used here is known to decay to 1 % in 1 ms when
excited by 8-ke V x rays. 15 CsI has a decay time to 1 % of 1 flos,
and has an intrinsic sensitivity for 8-keV x rays that is only
2-3X lower than that of Gd02S(Tb).15 We conclude that
the present detector has a kinetic resolution of 1 msec and
that this could easily be extended to 1 flS.
Single x-ray patterns captured in this manner cannot be
processed by the noise rejection algorithm; but this is unlike
ly to pose a problem in practice, for several reasons. First, the
X-ray detector 3236
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130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16frequency of bright spots is sufficiently low that images inte
grated over several seconds or less will usually contain none
of them. Second, if desired, one could carry out three or more
identical experiments, and then apply the algorithm. Final
ly, if an image is to be radially integrated, one could apply an
equivalent algorithm to all of the pixels in each radial zone of
that single image.
III. DISCUSSION
The present detector should be compared to the three
classes of x-ray area detector that are currently in use:
multi wire counters, other opto-electronic detectors, and
imaging plates. The present detector has a better spatial reso
lution than any of the previously described detectors, al
though the imaging plateD and the opto-electronic detector
of Templer et al. 10,12 are only slightly worse (150f-l and 160 fL
FWHM, respectively, versus our measurement of
120 fL).
The present detector's noise level is somewhat worse
than that which obtains with multiwire counters, the imag
ing plate, and with an apia-electronic detector that can be
used in a photon counting mode. (, However, as shown in Fig.
4(a), even for countrates corresponding to extremely weak
scattering (e.g., 1 x-ray mm-2 s-I incident on an integra
tion area of 1 mm2) the present detector is only 2-3 fold
worse than an ideal detector for counting to 5% uncertainty.
It is also useful to compare the noise level of the present
detector with the alternative recent detector of Templer and
co-workers. [0,12 Using their amended values of noise ex
pressed as e-per pixel,12 we caiculate the variance for that
device expressed as (x rays mm -2 at phosphor) 2. We calcu
late for their detector a readout variance of 41.6 (x rays
mm -2)2 and a time dependent variance of4.0T(s) (x rays
mm-Z)2. That detector therefore has a readout variance
that is 3.3 X lower (better) than the present one's, but it has
a time-dependent variance that accumulates more rapidly
(worse) by a factor of 4.9. We calculate that, for an integra
tion time of 30 s and an integration area of 1 mm2, the two
detector's noise levels are identical. For longer integration
times, the noise (variance) i.s dominated by the time-depen
dent component, and the lower rate of variance accumula
tion ofthe present detector could be an advantage. It is possi
ble that the detector of Templer and co-workers could be
improved with a noise rejection algorithm such as that de
scribed here. Possible methods for improving the present
detector are discussed below.
Compared to other existing detectors, the detector de
scribed here, and that of Templer and co-workers, 10.12 will be
of particular use in ordinary scattering experiments when
one requires both high spatial resolution and immediate dis
play of the diffraction pattern. For example, with the present
system it is practical to scan along partially oriented sam
ples, looking at the diffraction pattern in real time, to find the
best oriented region; many studies of fiber or liquid crystal
line samples could benefit from this approach.
The present detector has another capability which
makes it unique among area detectors described to date: the
ability to capture narrow windows in time in a kinetically
3231 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October 1989 evolving diffraction pattern. With the Gd02S(Tb) phos
phor, the kinetic resolution is expected to be one millisecond
or better; with CsI this is extended down to one microsec
ond. The only existing detector which approaches this capa
bility is a special multi wire area detector that has a deadtime
of 470 us (Ref. 4); such a device would require 5-10 ms to
count 104 x rays distributed over an entire diffraction pat
tern. It takes our detector severa! seconds to read out a com
plete image, so we cannot monitor kinetic processes continu
ously in time. Nevertheless, by doing a series of experiments
in which one starts some process, waits a variable delay time,
and then takes a snapshot, one can obtain valuable informa
tion about the kinetics. It has been pointed out that gateable
detectors such as the present one can be synchronized with a
pulsed electric field and used to record diffraction from elec
tric field-oriented samples. [9
It is also useful to consider how the present detector
might be improved. One possibility is to reduce the detector
noise levels by operating either the CCO or the image inten
sifier or both at a lower temperature. The results discussed
above were obtained with the CCD operating at -53 "C
and the image intensifier operating at -20 'C. We have also
carried out experiments with the image intensifier operating
at 5 °C (data not shown). We find that the rate of dark vari
ance accumulation drops by a factor of -3.5 when the tem
perature of the image intensifier is reduced from 5 to
-20°c' Even with the intensifier at -20 °C, the overall
system noise is dominated by the image intensifier; therefore
it would not be of significant help to operate the CCO at
lower temperatures. It is possible that greater ~ooling of the
image intensifier would provide a further decrease in system
noise.
It would also be useful to increase the active area of the
present detector, which currently is a rectangular window
having dimensions 40 mm X 26.7 mm. This area is restricted
by the 40 mm aperture of the image intensifier. ITT markets
a similar image intensifier tube with a 75 mm diam. This
could easily be used in place of our 4O-mm tube. However, if
the 75-mm tube were used with the same 576 X 84 pixel
CCD, one would have to optically demagnify the image in
tensifier output by a factor of 5.6 instead of 3.0. This would
result in some loss of sensitivit yl4; also, it would degrade the
spatial resolution since each CCD pixel would then map to
130 fLm at the phosphor. Both of these problems can be over
come by using a larger CCD such as the 2048 X 2048 pixel
CCD, with 27-fLm pixel width, produced by Tektronix. Both
the larger image intensifier and the larger CCO could easily
be incorporated into the present detector; their only disad
vantage is much higher cost.
Finally, it is of interest to consider hybrid detectors
which combine some of the technology used in the present
detector together with previously used technology. One de
vice which is particularly likely to be useful would have a
phosphor and image intensifier tube combination such as
ours, except with the image intensifier operating in the satu
rated (photon counting) mode, and having a resistive car
bon anode rather than an output phosphor. Commercial po
sition-sensing electronics, similar to those used with some
wire-based detectors,20 could then be used to locate, dis-
X-ray detector 3237
.......•.•. ;:.;.; ......•••••••••• :.:<.;-;.; ................... -•.•••.••...•.. -.'0" ••••••••••••••• ; •••••• :.;.; •••••••••• '.:-:.;.:.;.;.; •••••• ~ ••••••• :.:.:.:-; •••••••••• .,-••••• :.:.:.:.; •••••••••••• -;;:; •• :.:.:-:.~ •••••••• :.~.;;:.:.:.;.: •••••• :.:.:.:.:.:.;.:.: •••••• ' ••••••••••••• _ •••• _ •••••••
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitationnew.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
130.49.59.195 On: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 22:02:16criminate and count each x ray. Such a device would lack the
kinetic capability of ours; but it should otherwise combine
performance equal to that of the imaging plate with realtime
display of the diffraction pattern.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to U. W. Arndt and A. R. Faruqi for
valuable discussions at an early stage of this work, and to J.
Chappell and M. Brines for advice concerning phosphor de
position. J.W. acknowledges research support from the
NIH, the Searle Scholars Program of the Chicago Commu
nity Trust, and from an NSF Presidential Young Investiga
tor Award.
IR. Hamlin, Methods in Enzymology 114, 416 (1985).
2R. M. Durbin, R. Burns, J. Moulai, P. Metcalf, D. FJ'eymann, M. Blum, J.
E. Anderson, S. C. Harrison, and D. C. Wiley, Science 232,1127 (1986).
'A. R. Faruqi, NucL lnstrum. Methods A 273, 754 (1988).
4A. Gabriel, C. BouEn, and M. H. J. Koch, Nucl. lnstrum. Methods (to be
published) .
'u. W. Arndt, Methods in Enzymology 114,472 (1985).
6K. Kalata, Methods in Enzymology 114, 472 (1985).
3238 Rev. ScI. Instrum., Vol. 60, No. 10, October 1989 7R. L Dalglish, V. J. James, and G. Tubbenhauer, Nue!. lnstrum. Methods
227,521 (1984).
8E. F. Eikenberry, S. M. Gruner, and J. L. Lowrance, IEEE Trans. Nue!.
Sci. NS·33, 542 (1986).
OM. G. Strauss,!. Naday, I. S. Sherman, M. R. Kraimer, and E. M. West
brook, IEEE Trans. Nuc!. Sci. NS·34, 389 (1987).
lOR. H. Templer, S. M. Gruner, and E. F. Eikenberry, Adv. Electron, Elec
tron Phys. 74, 275 (1988).
"u. W. Arndt, G. A. and In'l Veld, in Adv. Electron. Electron Phys. 74,
285 (1988).
12S. M. Gruner, in Proceedings of the Third International Conference on
Synchrotron Radiation Instrumentation [Rev. Sci. Instrum, 60, 1545
(1989) ].
"Y. Ameniya, K. Wakabayashi, H. Tanaka, Y. Uena, and J. Miyahara,
Science 237,164 (1987).
14H. W. Deckman and S. M. Gruner, Nucl. lnstrum. Methods A 246,527
( 1986).
ISU. W. Arndt, Nuel. lnstrum, Methods 201,13 (1982).
"'J. H. Chappell and S. S. Murray, Nue!. lnstrum. Methods 221, 159
(1984).
17S. M. Gruner, J. R. Milch, and G. T. Reynolds, IEEE Trans. Nuc!. Sci.
NS.25, 562 (1978).
I"ITT Electro-optical Products Division, F4113 Technical Bulletin, 1986.
,oM. H. J. Koch, E. Dorrington, R. Kliiring, A. M. Michon, Z. Sayers, R.
Marquet, and C. Roussier, Science 240,194 (1988).
20U. W. Arndt, J. App!. Cryst. 19, 145 (1986).
X-ray detector 3238
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1.576238.pdf | Particle bombardment effects on thinfilm deposition: A review
D. M. Mattox
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A 7, 1105 (1989); doi: 10.1116/1.576238
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.576238
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Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 128.238.33.43 On: Mon, 01 Sep 2014 02:49:05Particle bombardment effects on thin .. film deposition: A review
D.M. Mattox
Surface and Interface Technology Division, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque,
New Mexico 87185
(Received 25 July 1988; accepted 5 September 1988)
In many atomistic film deposition processes, concurrent energetic particle bombardment (ions,
atoms, molecules, atom citlsters) may occur inadvertently and uncontrollably or bombardment
may be used to deliberately modify film propert~es. These energetic particles can arise from (i) the
acceleration of charged particles, (ii) high-energy neutrals from reflection from bombarded
surfaces, or (iii) charge exchange processes. Particle bombardment effects that can affect film
formation and growth include (a) modifying the substrate surface (cleaning, defect formation),
(b) momentum transfer processes in the surface region (sputtering, desorption, recoil
implantation, defect formation), (c) addition of heat to the surface region, and (d) formation of
secondary elelctrom; that can affect chemical reactions. These in turn affect film properties such
as adhesion, resi<iual film stress, film morphology, density, grain size and orientation, surface
coverage, pinhole d~~sity, and surface area. The understanding of these effects and how to use
them advantageously is important to those utilizing processes where concurrent energetic particle
bombardment is occurring or can be made to occur.
I. INTRODUCTION ,
In the atomistic deposition of inorganic thin films in a vacu
um or low-pressure environment films are formed by the
controlled addition of condensable atoms (ada toms) to a
surface (substrate). The source of the ada toms may be from
(i) thermal vaporization, (ii) physical sputtering, (iii) from
a gaseous species (reactive gas or chemical vapor precur
sor), or (iv) from other vaporization sources such as vacu
um or plasma arcs.
Major processing variables that may be used to modify
the various stages of atomistic film formation include (a)
substrate temperature, (b) deposition rate, (c) angle ofinci
dence of the depositing particles, and ( d) the use of energetic
particle bombardment. Energetic particle bombardment
may be used to modify the substrate surface or influence the
nucleation and growth of the depositing film material. Gen
erally these energetic particles are ions of either a gaseous or
condensable species formed in a plasma, 1,2 but they may also
be an energetic neutral species or atom clusters such as are
used in ion duster beam (ICB) deposition? Argon g;tS is the
most commonly used inert gas used for plasma formation
since it is the least expensive inert gas. However, heavier gas
species such as krypton and mercury vapor have a number of
advantages such as better momentum transfer to he~vi.er tar
get atoms and decreased gas incorporation in the deposited
film. Ions of reactive gases may be used in reactive film depo
sition processes, reactive etching, or surface modification
processing.
The properties of films formed by atomistic deposition
processes are generally very process and process parameter
dependent and in order to understand the role that process
variables may play in the film properties we must consider
the way that a film is formed.
The stages of film formation are (i) surface preparation,
(ii) condensation and nucleation of the adatoms, (iii) inter
face formation, (iv) film growth and, in some cases, (v)
postdeposition treatments.
1105 J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A. 1 (3), May/Jun 1989 Surface preparation may be defined as the treatment of a
surface in order to obtain satisfactory processing, stability,
and functionality.4 Surface preparation may be in the form
of (a) cleaning, (b) modification of surfa~ chemistry, (c)
modification of the morphology or physical properties of the
surface, (d) formation of nucleation sites, (e) addition of
nucleating agents (sensitization), or (0 "activation" of the
surface to make it more chemically reactive.
Cleaning of the surface allows intimate contact between
the surface and depositing adatoms of film material. Plasma
species, and ions accelerated from the plasma, may be used
to clean the surface by physical sputtering or by chemical
reaction (0, Cl, F) to form a volatile species (reactive plas
ma cleaning). 5 Plasmas and bombardment may also be used
to texture surfaces6 and activate surfaces, particular polymer
surfaces.7 Surface chemistry may be changed by bombard
ment, e.g., bombardment of a carbide surface by hydrogen
ions from a plasma has been shown to cause carbon depletion
in the carbide surface to an appreciable depth.8
When adatoms impinge on a surface they may have a
degree of mobility on the surface before they nucleate and
condense.9•10 The nucleation density of adatoms on a sub
strate surface (and mode of growth) determines the interfa
cial contact area and the development of interfacial voids;
generally a high nucleation density is desirable for good film
adhesion. The nucleation density depends on the kinetic en
ergy and surface mobility of the adatoms, chemical reaction
and diffusion with the surface material, and the nucleation
sites available. Plasmas and energetic particle bombardment
may (i) increase the adatom surface mobility, (ii) promote
chemical reaction and diffusion by heating, by introduction
of surface defects, and by changing the surface chemistry,
and (iii) may introduce nucleation sites by lattice defect for
mation, adsorption of activated species, implantation of im
pinging energetic species, generation of electric charge sites,
and the recoil implantation of surface species. II
Interface formation will begin during nucleation of the
adatoms on the surface and may proceed throughout the
1105
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deposition and even during postdeposition processing, sub
sequent processing, and in-service usage depending on con
ditions.
The interfacial types may be categorized as12 abrupt,
mechanical, diffusion, compound, and "pseudodiffusion."
The abrupt interface is formed when there is no diffusion and
thus the interface is an abrupt transition from one material to
another in the space ofa lattice parameter (Au on NaCl). In
this case the gradient of materials properties is also large and
the nucleation density will generally be low. Due to the lack
of reaction and the method of nuclei growth interfacial voids
may be formed at the abrupt interface. The mechanical inter
face is an abrupt interface with mechanical interlocking.
This type of interface may provide good adhesion if the sur
face roughness is "filled in" and interfacial voids are avoid
ed.
The diffusion-type interface is formed when there is in
terdiffusion of the film and substrate materials. A problem
with this type ofinterface may be the development of voids in
the interfacial ("interphase") material if the diffusion rates
of the film and substrate materials are different (Kirkendall
voids). In the compound interface diffusion is accompanied
by reaction to form a compound material. The interphase
material thus formed may be brittle, have Kirkendall voids,
and develop microcracks due to the stresses developed in
forming the compound material; all of which reduce the
fracture strength of the interface region and hence lower the
film adhesion.13 The pseudodiffusion type of interface may
be formed under low-temperature deposition conditions, or
where the materials are insoluble, by physically mixing the
depositing materials during deposition or by implantation or
recoil implantation of at011ls into the substrate surface.
A major concern in the development of interfacial re
gions is the properties of the interphase materials. If the ma
terial has voids, microcracks, and is brittle, then it will have a
low fracture toughness. This low fracture toughness materi
al will degrade the adhesion. In many cases it is best to limit
the extent offormation of the interphase material in order to
obtain good adhesion. 13
Energetic particle bombardment processes affect the in
terface formation by affecting the nucleation processes
(cleaning, changes in surface chemistry, nucleation sites),
by increasing the contact area, decreasing the interfacial
voids, and by providing a high thermal input into the sur
face. Bombardment can also promote the formation of the
pseudo diffusion type of interface by implantation and recoil
implantation.
Film growth occurs by nucleation on a "like material"
and the same considerations as for nucleation on a foreign
surface apply. In addition, larger-scale effects must be con
sidered. In particular, geometrical effects may lead to the
development of a columnar growth morphology 14 that often
leads to undesirable film properties such as microporosity,
low film density, high chemical etch rates, contamination
retention, and other such effects. This columnar morpholo
gy can be dependent on the angle of incidence of the deposit
ing flux of film material. 15.16 The addition of a gaseous envi
ronment where there is adsorption of gaseous species 01} the
surface and energetic particle bombardment can also change
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 the growth morphology.17-21 Bombardment can also alter
other film properties such as the residual growth stresses,
film density, gas incorporation surface coverage, chemical
reaction rates, etc., which will be discussed in greater detail
later.
For reactive film deposition processes two general cases
exist. In the first case there is a condensable species and a
gaseous reactive species (Ti + N). In the second case both
species are condensable and reactive under the proper condi
tions but may not react or only partially react under other
conditions such as a low deposition temperature (Ti + C).
In reactive film deposition processes, in the absence ofbom
bardment effects, the rate and degree of reaction is depen
dent on the chemical reactivity of the reactive species, the
temperature, the extent of the reaction, and the availability
of the reactive species to the depositing species which in tum
is dependent on system geometry, process parameters, and
relative surface areas. The presence of a plasma and concur
rent energetic particle bombardment may enhance chemical
reactions on the surface by providing activated and energetic
reactive species (radicals, ions) and utilizing bombardment
to enhance chemical reactions on the surface. 22-24
Energetic particles for bombarding surfaces and grow
ing films may arise from 0) biasing (dc or rf) a substrate
immersed in a plasma so that it is bombarded by particles
from the plasma, (ii) extraction of ions from a confined plas
ma and accelerating them to a high energy into a vacuum
environment (ion beam),25 (iii) reflected high-energy neu
trals which arise from ions bombarding a surface in a low
pressure environment26,27 such that the reflected neutrals
are not thermalized by collisions in the gas phase, (iv) accel
eration of negative ions from a negatively biased sputtering
target,28.29 or (v) special ion sources such as field emitters.3o
Biasing of a substrate immersed in a "processing plasma" is
probably the most common application of particle bombard
ment processing but the same effects are to be found with any
source of bombarding particles.
Figure 1 shows some configurations whereby a surface
may be bombarded from a plasma. Figure 2 shows some
configurations which may be used to bombard surfaces using
ion beams. In many cases the configurations for bombard
ment of a surface are very similar to configurations for sput
ter deposition (plasma or ion beam) where the substrate is
now the sputtering target and there is another source of de
positing material. In many instances the complex substrate
configuration or substrate fixturing leads to nonuniform
electric fields and nonuniform plasma densities over the sur
face and hence nonuniform bombardment over the surface.
This leads to film property variations over the surface.
The ion plating process31-34 uses energetic particle bom
bardment just prior to and during film deposition to modify
surface and film properties such as adhesion, surface and
bulk morphology, density, residual stress, crystallographic
orientation, grain size, and chemical composition, etc. Fig
ure 3 shows a simple ion plating configuration using a dc
diode plasma and a thermal evaporation source. In some
configurations the substrate is immersed in the plasma and
the part is completely coated. Figure 4 shows one such con
figuration called the sputter ion plating (SIP) system35
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DC/IIF \-r-SUBSTRATES
PLASMA
I~ !-
TH£RAlAL SPUTTERING
V APORIIA nON
a
DCi/IF 1-
SUBSTRATE ~ _____ ----'GR,O ~
c ~
~
CHEMICAL
VAPOR
PRECURSOR GAS
DC RF 1-
SUBSTRUE
FI CrJ El
DC. !IF
I DCdlf t
d
I SUBSTRATE I B
.~~~ SUBSTRATE
G:)
~-j.-!lEAM
V ... CUUM
e FIG. 1. Some configuratiol1s for bombarding a
surface from a plasma by using accelerated or
reflected high-energy particles: (a) diode, (b)
"downstream configuration" using a remote
plasma source, (c) grid to allow bombardment
of complex surfaces or insulators, (dl thermo
electron sustained plasma with magnetic en
hancement/confinement, (e) electron beam
evaporation with a diiferentiaiiy pumped vacu
um cham her, (f) utilizing reflected high-energy
neutrals and sputtering, (g) magnetron sputter
ing source, and (h) moving magnetron plasma
to allow uniform bombardment of substrate
surface.
SPUTTERED ATOMS
REFLECTED NEUTRALS 6 6 -PLASMA
TARGET J I SUBSTRATES -OC'RF I
PLASM"'-~-
lot 5 S N
SUBSTRATE 1·-
f
which uses a grounded sputtering cathode to provide the
depositing material. The term ion plating may also be modi
fied to indicate specific variations in environment, source of
depositing material, or source of bombarding particles,
namely, "sputter ion plating" which uses a sputtering target
source, "chemical ion plating" which uses a chemical vapor
precursor gas as a source of depositing material, "reactive
ion plating" which uses a reactive gas plasma, or "vacuum
ion plating" which uses a vacuum environment. Most re
cently the term ion plating is being applied to processes
where the substrate is in contact with a plasma and the term
ion assisted deposition (lAD) or ion beam enhanced depo
sition (IRED) is used where the substrate is bombarded by
an ion beam in a vacuum environment during deposition.36
When energetic ions traverse environments where there
is an appreciable density of gaseous species, charge exchange
processes result in a spectrum of energetic neutrals as well as
energetic ions.37,38 These energetic neutrals interact with
surfaces in the same way as energetic ions but are not affect
ed by electric or magnetic fields. Physical collisions will also
thermalize the energetic particles in a gaseous environ
ment,39.40
In some cases, ions of the film material (condensable or
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A, Vol. 1, No.3, May/Jun 1989 h
noncondensable) may be used to bombard the surfaces.
These "film ions" do not represent the introduction of a
"foreign" species into the film and thus have many attractive
aspects compared to the use of inert gaseous ions for bom
bardment. Ions of noncondensable, but reactive, film species
(N,O) may be formed in a plasma by conventional tech
niques. These species may then be used to bombard the
growing film.
High ion densities of condensable species can be expect
ed in regions having a high density oflow-energy (HID eV)
electrons41.47 and in vacuum arcs on solid cathodes4~--50 or
above molten anodes.51•52 Many sources for the generation
of high fluxes of condensable ions have been developed for
the isotope separation programs.53-5
f> Film ions may also be
formed by the fragmentation of chemical precursor species
either in a plasma57•58 or in a plasma source chamber. 5'1.60
Ions of these condensable species can be used to bombard the
substrate and depositing film.
Plasma enhancement may also be used to locally in
crease the plasma density. This plasma enhancement may be
accomplished by using local rfflelds,61 thermo electron emit
ting surfaces,62 hollow cathode electron emitters,63 deflec
tion of secondary electrons, or localized higher gas pressure.
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SUBSTRATE HOLMA
SHUTT£II
tON GUN
C'. SPUTTERED REflECTED ~ ATOMS NEUTRALS
~~' (VAPORANT
.......
a GAS kEf \ (--flEA" FIG. 2. Some configurations for bombarding a
surface during deposition by using ion beam
system(s): (a) single beam giving both sput
tered particles and reflected neutrals, (b) single
beam combined with an evaporation source, (c)
dual beam given both ions and high-energy neu
trals for bombardment, and (d) plasma
chamber with extraction grid (s) and a gaseous
chemical precursor species. b
SUBSTIIATE
CHEMICAL VAPOR
PRECURSOR GAS
c
The plasma confinement and enhancement may also be in
creased by the use of magnetic fields which cause the elec
trons to spiral around the magnetic field lines thus increas
ing their path length (magnetron configurations). Some of
the most dense plasma sources have been developed for the
magnetic fusion community.64 Many of these sources use rf
c
VARIABLE LEAK GAS
INSULATOR
MOVEABLESHUTTER~~~~;r==~~r===~r=~
EVAPORATOR FILAMENT
CHAMBER
HIGH CURRENT -__ -'
FEEDTHROUGHS
FILAMENT SUPPLY CURRENT
MONITOR
FIG. 3. An ion plating configuration using a de diode discharge and a sput
tering vapor source at ground potential (SIP) (Ref. 35).
J. Vac. ScI. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 d
power input or thennoe1ectron emitting surfaces65 along
with confining magnetic fields.
PUMPING PORT
GAS INLE;..:T __ --. +900V
+ 1000V BIAS/ION
HT CLEANING
I
,
-;<J
GETTER CHAMBER
FIG. 4. Sputter ion plating (SIP) system (Ref. 35).
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II. BOMBARDMENT EFFECTS ON SURFACES AND FILM
GROWTH
The physical effects of energetic particles on surfaces
and depositing films bombardment is very dependent on the
mass, flux, and energy of the bombarding particles. Also of
importance is the incident flux of non energetic particles, i.e.,
depositing or absorbing species. In many cases these fluxes
are not determined or controlled except by the deposition
parameters.
Figure 5 depicts the effects on the surface and the sub
surface region by bombardment by energetic species. Sur
face effects include (i) desorption of weakly bonded surface
species, (ii) ejection of secondary electrons, (iii) reflection
of the energetic species as high-energy neutrals, (iv) sputter
ejection ("physical sputtering") of surface atoms by mo
mentum transfer through "collision cascades," (v) sputter
ing and redeposition of sputtered species by collisions in the
gas phase, by ionization and acceleration back to the surface,
and by "forward sputter deposition" due to the ejection an
gle on a rough surface, (vi) enhanced surface mobilities of
atoms on the surface, and (vii) enhanced chemical reaction
of adsorbed species on the surface to produce condensed spe
cies ("reactive deposition") or volatile speciesl7 ("reactive
ion etching" (RIE) J.
In the subsurface region: (i) the impinging particles
may be physically implanted, Oi) the collision cascades
cause displacement of lattice atoms and the creation of lat
tice defects, (iii) surface species may be recoil implanted
into the subsurface lattice, (iv) mobile species may be
trapped at lattice defects, and (v) much ofthe particle kinet
ic energy is converted into heat. Lattice channeling pro
cesses can carry these effects deeply into the surface.
The desorption of weakly bound surface species is im
portant to plasma cleaning and may be used to reduce incor
porated contaminants in deposited films.66•67 The desorption
may also be useful in desorbing unreacted species in reactive
ENERGETIC deposition processes giving rise to a more stoichiometric de
posit.
Secondary electrons are emitted from surfaces bom
barded by energetic particles. These secondary electrons are
accelerated away from the cathode and are necessary to sus
tain the discharge in the de diode plasma configuration.
These electrons may also play an important role in the chem
ical process that occurs on the surface.
When surfaces are SUbjected to bombardment by high
energy ions a portion of the particles are reflected as high
energy neutrals.26•27 If these high-energy particles are not
thermalized by collisions in the gas phase, they bombard the
growing surface of a depositing material giving film property
modification.68•69
The physical sputtering of a surface may lead to a sur
face texturing to give a roughened surface.6 Preferential
crystallographic sputtering will result in some crystalline
orientations being etched at a faster rate than are others
(sputter etching). Preferential physical sputtering can cause
changes in the chemical composition of aHoy and compound
surfaces.70,71
If a reactive species is used for bombardment the surface
may be etched (reactive ion etching, chemical sputtering) if
the resulting chemical species is volatile or the surface may
be converted to a compound if the chemical species is not
volatile ("surface modification," e.g., plasma nitriding,
plasma anodization). Concurrent energetic particle bom
bardment enhances chemical reactions at the surface. The
nature of this enhancement is poorly understood since heat
ing, physical collisions, molecular fragmentation, formation
of intermediate species, and the presence of energetic elec
trons (secondary electrons) may each playa role.
Energetic bombardment of surface can also introduce
lattice defects into surfaces. In semiconductor surfaces these
defects may act as electron traps when an interface is
formed.72 In semiconductor device fabrication these types of
PARTICLE REFLECTED
SURFACE
REGION
NEAR
SURFACE
!lEGION o ENHANCED IONS/NEUTRALS SECONDARY
E ..... ·NCED \ CHEMICAL 0 ELECTRONS "'.... REA"'TIONS _ SPUTTERED SURFACE MOBILITY" e
~ /
/ 0.0 ATOMS liONS)
SPUTTERED-I ADSORBED" . REDEPOSITED . ~
SURFACE " AD ATOllS
SPECIES '0 ~ ')
A I:,} (BACKSCATTEREO)
!U!COIL- V LATTICE
IMPLANTED DEFECTS 'r-T~----~~--------~----'k-- _SURFACE
DISPLACEMENT ~~ lh:.ALTEREOO
@ I I t·· REGION t I ?
TRAPPING IO~
IMPLANTED I i ~ COLLISION
CASCADE
CHANNEliNG
FIG. 5. Schematic depiction of the energetic particle bombardment effects on surfaces and growing films. See the text for discussion.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989
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defects must be avoided during surface preparation and film
formation.73
The implantation of bombarding species into a surface
increases the chemical potential between the surface region
and the bulk thereby increasing the diffusion rate of mobile
species (such as hydrogen) into the bulk of the material.
III. BOMBARDMENT EFFECTS ON FILM PROPERTIES
A. Film adhesion
The adhesion of a deposited film to a surface depends on
the deformation and fracture modes associated with the fail
ure.12,13 Energetic particle bombardment prior to and dur
ing the initial stages of film formation may enhance adhesion
by (i) removing contaminant layers, (Ii) changing the sur
face chemistry, (iii) generating a microscopically rough sur
face, (iv) increasing the nucleation density by forming nu
cleation sites (defects, implanted and recoil-implanted
species), (v) increasing the surface mobility of adatoms,
(vi) decreasing the formation of interfacial voids, and (vii)
by introducing thermal energy directly into the surface re
gion thereby promoting reaction and diffusion. Film adhe
sion may be degraded by the diffusion and precipitation of
gaseous species at the interface, The adhesion may also be
degraded by the residual film stress due either to differences
in the coefficient of thermal expansion of the film and sub
strate material in high-temperature processing or the residu
al film growth stresses developed in low-temperature pro
cessing.
B. Film morphology I density
Physical sputtering and redeposition, increased nuclea
tion density, and increased surface mobilities of adatoms on
the surface under bombardment conditions may be impor
tant in disrupting the columnar microstructures that devel
op during low-temperature atomistic deposition pro
cesses, \6.17 Figure 6 shows the fracture cross section and
surface morphology of rf sputter deposited chromium films
at zero bias and with a --500 V bias during deposition. Note
that the bombardment completely disrupted the columnar
microstructure and the surface morphology, The bias also
improves the surface coverage and decreases the pinhole po
rosity in a deposited film. This increased density is reflected
in film properties such as better corrosion resistance, lower
chemical etch rate, higher hardness, lowered electrical resis
tivity of metal films, and increased index of refraction of
optical coatings. However, it has been found that jfthe bom
barding species is too energetic and the substrate tempera
ture is low, high gas incorporation gives rise to voids.74
C. Residual film stress
Invariably atomistically deposited films have a residual
stress which may be tensile or compressive in nature and
may approach the yield or fracture strength of the materials
involved. The origin of these stresses is poorly understood
although several phenomological models have been pro
posed?' Generally, vacuum deposited films and sputter-de
posited films prepared at high pressures ( > 5 f.1) have tensile
stresses which may be anisotropic with off-normal angle of
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A, Vol. 7, No, 3, May/Jun 1989 PIG, 6. Fracture cross section (bottom) and surface morphology (top) ofa
thick rfsputterdeposited chromium deposit (Ref. 17). Ca) without bias (no
bombardment) and (1:» with concurrent bombardment ( --500 V bias on
the substrate).
incidence depositions,76,77 In low-pressure sputter depo
sition and ion plating, energetic particle bombardment may
give rise to high compressive film stresses due to the recoil
implantation of surface atoms.17,69,7K-Sj This effect is some
times called "atomic peening." Studies of vacuum evaporat
ed films with concurrent bombardment have shown that the
conversion of tensile stress to compressive stress is very de-
150 ,---.---..---,---.--'-~-~--~ 8
100 \RF SPUTTER-DEPOSITED 7
50 \. CHROMIUM 6Z 'iii 0
.lit.
I -50
II)
13 -100
~ -150
(I) -200
01 I
500 ~5g
/~4~ f// 3~ V 2~
! I j: ~
-100 -200 -300 -400 -500
BIAS (volts DC)
FIG, 7. Residual stress and gas content of a rf sputter deposited chromium
deposit as a function of substrate bias during rfsputter deposition (Ref. 17),
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J sr z
N Q
II)
S Z
L!J " i-Z 3 ro
0 0 ...
m -3 (J)
I.IJ z a: -6 0 t- ii) (J) III
:! ~9 w a: ...I !l.. u: :!i: -12 0 u 2 5 I i j
6 7 11
PRESSURE, microns
!J = VERT. (II)
6= HORIZ, (J.) 1"· 100
50
1-50
-j -100
~ -150
J -200 FIG. 8. Residual stress and stress anisotropy in
molybdenum films deposited by post cathode
magnetron sputtering as a function of sputter
ing pressure (Ref. 69). The stress anisotropy is
probably due to an anisotropy in the flux of
high-energy neutrals formed by reflection from
the post cathode.
-15
~ __ ~ __ ~ __ ~ __ ~ __ ~~I~!~~~ __ L-__ L-__ ~ __ ~I
0 o 0 0 ."oo~." 0 0 ~
II)
ci ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ o 0 0 00000 0 0 ci
MOLYBDENUM THICKNESS, microns
pendent on the ratio of bombarding species to depositing
species, 82,8~, The residual film stress anisotropy may be very
sensitive to the sputtering target configuration and gas pres
sure69 during sputter deposition.
Film stress is typically measured by the deformation of a
substrate.84 If the total film stress is sufficiently high, the
film may fail by buckling from the surface (compressive
stress) or microcracking and peeling from the surface (ten
sile stresses).13 Where rather thick films of high modulus
materials are involved, these stresses must be controlled or
spontaneous failure (adhesion, cracking, blistering) will oc
cur. Figure 7 shows the residual stress and gas content in
sputter deposited chromium films as a function of substrate
bias.17 Figure 8 shows the residual film stress and stress ani
sotropy in post magnetron sputter deposited molybdenum
films as a function of sputtering pressure, 69
The lattice strain associated with the residual film stress
represents stored energy and this energy along with a high
concentration oflattice defects may lead to 0) lowering of
the recrystallization temperature in crystalline materials,
(iO a lowered strain point in glassy materials, (iii) a high
chemical etch rate, (iv) electromigration problems in metal
lization, (v) room-temperature void growth in films, and
other such mass transport effects.
D. lattice defects
Energetic particle bombardment of surfaces and grow
ing films may lead to the creation of a high population of
lattice defects (1-20 at. %). The concentration and trap
ping energies of such defects have been studied by the trap
ping and thermal desorption spectroscopy of mobile spe
cies.85-87 The creation oflattice defects in the surface region
may increase the adatoms nucleation density by forming nu
cleation sites. In the extreme, the increased lattice defect
density may lead to a decreased grain size and to the forma
tion of an amorphous surface region.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. As Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 E. Crystallographic orientation
Under proper bombardment conditions the crystallo
graphic orientation of the deposited material is developed
such that the more dense crystallographic planes are parallel
to the bombarding direction. 8~.89 This effect is attributed to
the channeling of the bombarding species into the film thus
decreasing the sputtering rate under this orientation. Under
more energetic bombardment conditions, however, the crys
tallographic orientation is disrupted due to the formation
and consolidation of defects.
F. Gas incorporation
When a depositing film is bombarded during deposition
by energetic gaseous particles the incorporated gas content is
dependent on the particle energy, substrate temperature,
film material, and bombarding species. Generally low atom
ic mass bombarding particles may be more easily incorporat
ed than are large mass particles. The gas incorporation gen
erally increases with energy of the bombarding species up to
the point where heating aids gas desorptionY Under some
conditions very high concentrations of normally insoluble
gas may be incorporated into the depositing film by concur
rent bombardment during deposition. An example is the in
corporation of 20 to 40 at. % hydrogen and helium in
gold90•91 and the incorporation of krypton in amorphous
metals films. '12 This incorporation is probably due, in part, to
the high lattice defect concentration in the bombarded mate
rial which traps mobile species. At very high gas contents the
gas will precipitate into voids. Gas incorporation can be
minimized by using low-energy bombarding species (i.e.,
< 100 eV for instance), an elevated substrate temperature
during deposition (300-400 °C) , and/or using higher atom
ic weight bombarding species (Kr, Xc, Hg).
G. Surface coverage
The macroscopic and microscopic surface coverage of a
deposited film on a substrate surface may be improved by the
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use of concurrent bombardment during film deposition. The
macroscopic ability to cover complex geometries depends
mostly on scatteting of the depositing material in the gas
phase. If gas scattering is extensive, then gas phase nuclea
tion ("gas evaporation") will occur forming ultrafine parti
cles93 and the resulting deposit will be poorly consolidated.
If a plasma is present and the substrate is at a negative poten
tial, the gas phase nucleated materials will become negative
ly charged and be repelled from the substrate. In addition,
bombardment will heat, densify, and consolidate the depos
ited material into a high-quality film over the whole surface.
On a more microscopic scale, the random deposition direc
tion resulting from gas scattering and the sputtering and re
deposition of the depositing film material will lead to better
coverage on micron- and submicron-sized features. 74.94·-98
On the atomic scale the increased surface mobility, increased
nucleation density, and erosion/redeposition will disrupt
the porous columnar morphology. 16.17 In total the use of gas
scattering, along with concurrent bombardment, increases
the surface covering ability and decreases the microscopic
porosity of the deposited film material as long as gas incor
poration does not generate voids.
Ii. Compound deposition
In reactive deposition processes concurrent bombard
ment enhances chemical reactions. This enhanced chemical
reaction, along with the desorption of weakly bonded species
and film densification, can produce films of compound ma
terials that have better properties than those formed by just
heating alone.
I. Unique materials
The plasma environment allows the deposition of amor
phous inorganic films such as amorphous silicon.9'1 Plasma
deposited silicon may be deposited in the amorphous form
by the incorporation of hydrogen into the lattice from in
complete decomposition of the precursor chemical vapor
species SiH4• Amorphous carbon and boron may also be de
posited from a plasma. 100 Diamond and diamondlike films
can be deposited from a plasma using concurrent bombard
ment during the deposition. 100.101
High-voltage pulsing of substrates immersed in plasmas
is also being studied as a way to modify surf~ces by ion bom
bardment. 102 This technique could be used as a means for
modifying an the stages of film deposition by bombardment.
IV. PROBLEM AREAS
A major problem area in using energetic particle bom
bardment to modify film properties is how to obtain a uni
form and controlled bombardment over a surface. In the
utilization of ion beam techniques this is usually done by
rotation of the substrates and using multiple-beam sources.
In plasma techniques nonuniformity can arise from a num
ber of sources including (i) geometrical arrangement of
power input electrodes and substrate fixturing, (ii) substrate
geometry, (iii) the presence of surfaces that allow recombi
nation and loss of species in the nearby plasma, and (iv) in
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 the case of reactive deposition, reactive surfaces that deplete
the supply of reactive gas at the growing film surface.
As a general rule the best plasma system design is one
that is geometrically symmetric. The SIP system shown in
Fig. 3 is a good example of this approach. However, in many
instances a symmetric geometry is difficult to attain. The use
of magnetron configurations are one example. It is difficult
to obtain a uniform magnetic field over a large or complex
surface and small changes in magnetic parameters can give
large changes in target erosion; in addition the use of a mag
netic field to confine electrons and increase the local plasma
density in one region leads to a decrease in plasma density in
some other region.
For complex surface geometries the electric field around
points and corners on a substrate focus the bombardment
giving high erosion rates. The low cross section of a thin
region gives poor thermal conductance and results in local
heating. Holes and reentrant features give low electric field
gradients giving high plasma densities but low bombard
ment. In these regions heating will be high and erosion will
be low given poor cleaning and allowing reaction with conta
mination.
In some cases, high transparency grids at the substrate
potential may be used to surround the substrate giving a
more uniform bombardment over a complex surface. This is
the basis of the equipment developed for the "ion vapor de
position" (lVD) process 103 and in the "barrel-plating" ion
plating configuration.104 A grid configuration may also be
useful in coating dielectric materials where charge buildup
may be a problem or in the coating of moving substrates
where electrical contact may be a problem.
When using plasmas and bombardment effects there are
many processing variables that are unknown. Processing
unknowns include (i) the portion of the measured substrate
current that is due to secondary electron emission, (ii) the
flux and energy spectrum of the bombarding ions and ener
getic neutrals, and (iii) the flux and adsorption of neutral
gaseous (reactive) species. Generally, no attempt is made to
determine these process variables during the processing but
rather they are controlled by controlling other processing
variables such as (a) gas pressure, (b) gas composition, (c)
gas flow rate (s), (d) substrate and system temperatures, (e)
contaminants in the plasma. and (f) substrate power input
per unit area (voltage and current).
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by the Department of Energy
under Contract No. DE-AC04-76DP00789.
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1.101217.pdf | Highfield perpendicular conduction in GaAs/AlAs superlattices
A. Sibille, J. F. Palmier, C. Minot, and F. Mollot
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 54, 165 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.101217
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.101217
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Appl. Phys. Lett. 56, 1356 (1990); 10.1063/1.102513
Optical detection of highfield domains in GaAs/AlAs superlattices
Appl. Phys. Lett. 54, 1757 (1989); 10.1063/1.101282
Electronic structure and transport properties of GaAsGaAlAs superlattices in high perpendicular electric fields
J. Appl. Phys. 62, 558 (1987); 10.1063/1.339782
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132.174.255.116 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:33:41Highafield perpendicular conduction in GaAsl AlAs superlaUices
A. Sibille, J. F. Palmier, and C. Minot
Centre National d'Etudes des Tfdecommunications, 196 Avenue Henri Ravera, 92220 Bagneux, France
F. Mollat
Laboratoire de Microstructures et de lWicroidectronique, Centre National de fa Recherche Scientifique, 196
Avenue Henri Ravera, 92220 Bagneux, France
(Received 13 Apri11988; accepted for publication 26 October 1988)
Miniband conduction in undoped GaAs/ AlAs superlattices (SLs) has been investigated
through current~voltage measurements on n+ -SL-n+ structures. From the comparison with
simulations based on an effective medium approximation for the conduction through the
superlattice, we directly obtain the field dependence of the electron velocity perpendicular to
the layers. Our data show strong evidence of negative differential velocity in a 35.5/20 A
(wellibarrier width) SL.
Electronic transport perpendicular to the layers of sup
perlattice (SL) structures has been the subject of several
experimental and theoretical efforts in the past, partly moti
vated by the hypothetical possibility of achieving high fre
quency Bloch oscillations. I Although a few works show evi
dence of miniband conduction,2,3 the only observed negative
differential resistance effects in SLs are due to the formation
of highly localized high-field domains,4-6 or to wen to well
tunneling in multiquantum wells. 7 We show here that a uni
form SL can electrically behave as a new tailorable bulk ma
terial and, in particular, exhibit negative differential velocity
(NDV) effects which are strongly dependent on the SL pa
rameters.
The samples studied in this work (Fig. 1) were grown
by molecular beam epitaxy on n + -GaAs:Si substrates. The
"active" superlattice section ("'" 1.3 pm thick, hereafter re
ferred to as SL) was undoped and therefore lightly p-type
because of residual acceptors (O.5-2x 1015 cm-3). The rest
of the structure involved GaAs contact (2000 A) and buffer
layers on one hand, and a Gao.> Alo.s window (3000 A) for
optical time~of-ftight investigations8 on the other. Except for
the SL, all the layers were heavily Si doped (= 1.5 X lOts
atoms/cm3). The three heterojunctions were smoothed out
by gradual composition layers. The latter (as well as the
window) were conveniently obtained in the form of small
period superlattices (3 monolayers of AlAs; 3 or m.ore layers
ofGaAs).
The above thicknesses and doping levels were checked
by secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) analysis, using
a CAMECA-IMS 3F and found to be very close to the ex
pected values. Excellent simple x-ray diffraction spectra
were also obtained, which yielded precise values of the per~
iods. From the latter and the knowledge of the number of
periods, the SL thicknesses were thus very accurately deter
mined. We also deduced the individual well and barrier
widths from the average SL composition measured by dou
ble diffraction. Two superlattice samples were grown for a
fixed GaAs well width (13 mono layers, =36 A) and AlAs
barrier widths of 3 and 7 monolayers. From now on they will
be referred to as (13/3) SL and (13/7) SL. The SL periods
and thicknesses were, respectively, 45.85 A and L334pm for
the first and 55.50 A and 1.248 pm for the second. Transmis
sion electron microscopy revealed the presence of a single slightly enlarged barrier in the (13/3) SL, presumably due
to the accidental successive growth of two AlAs barriers.
The consequences of this "defect" will be discussed later. In
contrast, the (13/7) SL looked perfectly regular. A refer
ence sample was also grown, in which the SL was replaced by
a 3 pm un doped p-GaAs layer, the rest of the structure being
unchanged.
Sample processing involved recess of the window, mesa
etching up to the n f buffer layer, and Au-Ge-Ni alloying at
450°C of ohmic top and back contacts. These operations
were performed by standard photolithographic techniques,
and yielded devices of variable area, in a proportion ranging
from 1 to 3. Thus, the validity of all the measurements pre
sented here could be ensured by checking the proportional
ity of current to device area.
Current~voltage (/-V) measurements at 300 K are
shown on Fig, 1 for the three devices. They exhibit only little
asymmetry. The rectifying behavior is inherent to the p-type
character ofthe undoped layer which induces a built-in ener
gy barrier for the electrons, which can be almost totally can
celled by applying a bias.') As is evident on Fig. 1, we could
obtain an excellent agreement between J-V data and numeri-
E
..0:::
:5
>I-
Vi
15 10-2
Cl
I
Z
UJ a::
0::
=> w 10-4 .. ..
GaAs
(referencel
quasi-alloy
Ga~.sAIO.5As In<)
.. AuCieNi \
~~/
CiaAs substrate (n<)
~ ... _.L~~Ge~i- _ .. ,_~_~~ o 1 2 3 4
VOLTAGE (V)
FIG. I. 1-V data at 300 K for the three samples studied (crosses. do is. and
circles), and the corresponding simulations (full curves). The data below
1. g V for GaAs and 0.3 V for ( 13/7) SL are not proportiol1al to device area
and should not be compared to the calculated current.
165 Appl. Phys. Lett. 54 (2), 9 January 1989 0003-6951/89/020i 65-03$01.00 © 1989 American Institute of Physics 165
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132.174.255.116 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:33:41cal simulations. The latter rest on the self-consistent resolu
tion of drift diffusion and Poisson equations, using a finite
difference scheme and an iterative algorithm. Each layer,
including the SL, is precisely defined by all the relevant pa
rameters, i.e., thickness, effective densities of states, band
gap, and electron affinity, velocity-field (V-F) relations for
both carriers, and shallow impurity concentrations. In this
approach the SL is thus regarded as an effective medium, Le.,
a new bulk material with tail arable parameters. The main
underlying assumption is that of local equilibrium which
neglects overshoot effects. In view of the length scales and
mobilities involved, we consider this approximation as ade
quate. A fuH description of these simulations win be present
ed in another publication (see also Ref. 9). The only un
known parameters of real importance are in fact the acceptor
concentration NA and the V-F relation for electrons in the
undopcd layer. Furthermore, NA and I-l influence computed
/-V curves in a strongly different way, which means that (at
least in principle) a unique set ofthese parameters can yield
a satisfactory fit. In practice we estimate the uncertainty to
10% for NA and a factor 2 for p (since the low-voltage data is
insensitive to the high-field part of the V-F curve, a linear
relation V = pF was assumed in the simulations of Figs. 1
and 2).
The situation is even better in the GaAs reference sam
ple where only NA is unknown. The excellent agreement we
could obtain over 6 decades of current for NA = 7.7 X 1014
cm 1 demonstrates the validity of our measurement tech
nique (see also Fig. 2).
One first interesting result of these experiments is the
absolute value of the perpendicular mobility, namely =400
cm2/V s for (13/3) SL (NA = 1.6x 1015 em 3) and "",040
cm2/V s for (1317) SL (NA = l.4x 1015 cm-3). Here, the
measurement procedure (low enough negative bias, current
limited by injection) ensured that the presence of the above
mentioned enlarged barrier (situated close to the anode) did
not cast doubt on the determination of /1, in the ( 13/3) SL
We have calculated the theoretical perpendicular mobil-
2000 ,.---,-,~, :;==':-:-:: rr _-----or---i
N
E ,
«
>-
~ 1000 z w co
0-
Z w
0::
0:: ::l LJ r
t:i1 o -' WJ >
Z
CJ a:: 0-w
W
w:j 0" v 2
! --
B
FIG. 2. High-field data (circles) for GaAs together with three simulations
(fullline~) differing only by the V-F curves; the latter are shown in the inset.
Only the true V-F relation with NDV yields a sublinear J-V, in agreement
with the data.
166 Appl. Phys, Lett., Vol. 54, No.2, 9 January 1989 ity in two extreme cases. In one, pure miniband conduction
occurs and the mobility is limited by polar-optic phonon
scattering; we then obtain 2700 and 230 cmz /V s, respective
ly, for the two samples. In the other, the electron wave func
tion is assumed entirely localized in the well, and conduction
occurs by phonon-assisted hopping from wen to welL lO We
find in this case 0.25 and 0.04 cm2/V s. Since the experimen
tal values are in between these two cases but closer to the
first, we can conclude that the electron perpendicular trans
port occurs mainly through miniband conduction, with,
however, the prevalence of some additional scattering mech
anisms. In particular, we can guess that the unavoidable in
terface roughness will seriously contribute to reducing the
mobility just as in parallel transport. I 1.12
When a large bias is applied on the present devices, the
macroscopic space-charge barrier has been almost complete
ly eliminated and a mixed regime of diffusion near the cath
ode and drift near the anode occurs for the electrons. Since
the injected electron concentration then exceeds N4, the cur
rent is space-charge limited. Consequently, one expects a
superlinear but not exponential dependence of Ion V ( V2_
like law). However, this is true only if the velocity-field ( V
F) curve is monotonic, as we systematically found in all our
simulations in which we imposed a simple saturation ( VI) at
high fields without NDV.
Such a V-F dependence is, however, in stark conflict
with the experimental data for the GaAs reference sample
(Fig. 2). On the other hand, if the true V-F curve for GaAs is
taken (inset of Fig. 2), we obtain a qualitatively and quanti
tatively excellent agreement. Particularly important is the
negative curvature of the J-V, compared to that of a pure
saturation law, which has indeed the same sign as experi
mentally found (see also Fig. 4). We can therefore safely
state that a sublinear 1-V in the present device structures
gives strong evidence of NDV; in fact, such a behavior is a
precursor to negative differential resistance which would oc
cur in an isotype structure. These conclusions can addition
ally be analytically proven from a careful analysis of trans
port equations. 13
The data concerning the superlattice samples are shown
in Figs. 3 and 4, with the corresponding simulations. For SL
( 13/3) a simple saturation law yields a fairly good fit to the
data with Vi = 1.5 X 107 em s 1. It might be argued that the
enlarged barrier present in this sample will influence the cur
rent under large biasing. In the field range investigated in
Fig. 3, however, no effects such as observed in Ref. 5 are
found and there is no obvious ground to reject the effective
medium description adopted here. On the other hand, SL
(13/7) requires the incorporation of NDV, as is evident
from the previous discussion and the negative curvature of
the /-V. An excellent fit to the data is obtained with a phe
nomenological V-F law of the form: V(F) = pF / (1 + F2/
F~), where f.l = 40 cm2 V--1 s -I is the low-field mobility
and Fc = 16.5 k V cm -I is the critical field, corresponding to
a peak velocity Vp = 3.3 X 105 em 5-1. The strong sensitivity
of this fit to Fe is exemplified in Fig. 4, as well as the complete
inadequacy of a simple saturation law.
For completeness we want to point out that it cannot be
at present conduded that NDV does not exist in SL ( 13/3).
Sibille et al. 166
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132.174.255.116 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:33:41L..-....... __ ............. ""'----- L _____ ~ o 1 2
VOLTAGE (VI
FIG. 3. High-field data (crosses) for sample SL (13/3) and the corn!
sponding simulation using the V-F curve shown in the inset. The simulated
band diagram under 3 V is also presented.
Because oftne larger mobility compared to (1317), smaller
voltages and, therefore, smaller electric fields have to be ap
plied to avoid permanent damage.
NDV is SL ( 13/7) may have different origins:
(i) It can be a direct consequence of the negative effec
tive mass for electrons heated by the field beyond the inflec
tion point of the miniband dispersion relation. I With a co
sine approximation of this relation and by imposing the true
low-field mobility 40 cm2/V s, we calculate Fe = 128 kV I
em (from the simple model of Ref. 1). This value ]s obvious
ly much too large compared to experiment. On the other
hand, more sophisticated Monte Carlo simulationsl4 yield
markedly smaller critical fields, so that no definite answer
can yet be given.
(ii) It can occur because of r-x transfer offield-heated
electrons. This effect is harder to estimate precisely; how
ever, the low peak velocity is not necessarily in contradiction
with this mechanism since the X band edge in AlAs is close
to the r band edge of GaAs. 15
(iii) It can result from a Bloch to hopping transition due
to electric field induced localization of the wave functions. In
In this case Fe =IJ. (qd) -1 = 21 kVem·· 1, where t:. is the
mini band width (12 meV from envelope function calcula
tions), q the electron, and d the period. The measured criti
cal field is quite close to this value, which renders this mech
anism quite plausible.
In conclusion, we have demonstrated the existence of
NDV in a regular GaAsl AlAs superlattice, from J-V mea
surements on nl -SL-n + structures under high bias, Since
the critical field and peak velocity are SL parameters depen
dent, they are tailorable. If, as suspected, this phenomenon
results from electric field induced localization or is a nega
tive mass effect, it may be intrinsically faster than phonon
mediated electron transfer. In the frame of possible fast os
cillator design, it is interesting that large voltage and large
current density operation at room temperature and above
are then possible.
Note added in proof True negative differential resistance at
167 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No.2, 9 January i 989 "'i
.::::
:5
:>0-f-200
\2100
~
Cl
I
Z
W
'" 0::
=> w
2 a:F,=10kVfcm i
b:F,=16.5kV fern r with NOV
cF,=20kVfcm ) j
d:vl"3x105cm/s
1 I I wit~O\Jt ~OV i
4 5 6
VOL TAGE IV) 7 8 9
FIG. 4. High-Held data (dots) for sample SL (lJ/7) and several simula
tions using the ,arne low-field rnohility p = 40 em'IV s; a. b, c: V-Frelation
with NDV for various critical fieJds F, (sublinear 1-V); d: V-Frelation (in
set) without NDV (superlinear J-V). An excellent agreement is obtained
with NDV and F, ~ 16.5 kV lem.
300 K has recently been observed in several n-type (13/7)
superlattices, from which a V-Frelation very close to that of
Fig. 4 was directly deduced [A. Sibille, J. F. Palmier, F.
MoUot, H. Wang, and J. C. Esnault (unpublished) ] .
The authors wish to thank H. Le Person for fruitful dis
cussions, F. Glas, M-C. Joncour, and Y. Gao for expert
structural and chemical characterization of the samples, and
J. C. Esnault and S. Vuye for device processing.
'L. Esaki and R. Tsu, IBM J. Res. Develop. 14,61 (1970).
'J. F. Palmier, C. Minot, J. L. Uevin, F. Alexandre, J. C. Harmand,
J. Dangla, C. Dubon-Chevallief. and D. Allkri, App]. Phys. Leu. 49, ]260
(1986).
3D. Deveaml, J. Shah, T. C. Darnen, B. I,amber!, and A. Regreny, Phys.
Rev< Lett. 58, 2582 (1987).
4L Esaki and L. L Chang, Phys. Rev. l.ett. 33, 495 (1974).
'R.. A. Davies, M. J. Kelly, and T. M. Kerr, Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 1114
( 1(85).
"K. K. Chot, B. F. Levine, R. J. Ma.lik, J. Walker, and C. G. Bethea, Phys.
Rev. B 35,4172 (1987).
'F. Capasso, K. Mohammed, and A. Y. Clio, IEEE J. Quantum Electron.
22,1853 (1986).
"e. MinoL H. Le Person, F. Alexandre, and J. F. Palmier, App!. Phys. Lett.
51, ! 626 (1987).
"J. F_ Palmier, H. Lc Person, e. Minot. and A. Sibille, J. Phys. (Paris) 48,
Suppi., C5-443 (1987); J. F. Palmier,.T. Dangla, E. Caquot, and M. Cam
pana, NASECODE IV Proceedings, edited by J. J. H. Miller (Hoole, Duh
lin, 1(85).
IOD. Calecki, 1. F. Palmier, and A. Chomctte, J. Phys. (Paris) en. 5017
(1984): see also 1. F. Palmier and A. Chomettc, ibid., 45,381 (1985).
II A. Sibilic, J. F. Palmier, C. Minot, J. e. Harmaml, and e. Dubon-Cheval
lier, Superlatt. Microstruct. 3,553 (1987).
IOH. Sakaki, T. Noda, K< Hirakawa, M. Tanaka, and T. Matsusue, App!.
Phys. Lett. 51, 1934 (I98i).
"J. F. Palmier (lmpublished).
14M. Artaki and K. Hess, Superlatt. Microstruct. 1,489 (\985).
"D. 1. Wolford. T. F. Kueeh. 1. A. Bradley. M. A. Gell, D. Ninno, and
M. Jaros, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. B 4,1043 (1986).
IhR. Tsu and G. Diihkr, Ph)s. Rev. B 12, 680 (1975).
Sibille et a/. 167
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1.342695.pdf | Molybdenum deposition from the decomposition of molybdenum hexacarbonyl
C. C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 3035 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342695
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342695
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44Molybdenum deposition from the decomposition of molybdenum
hexacarbonyl
c. C. Choal and S. L. Bernasek
Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
(Received 21 March 1988; accepted for publication 9 December 1988)
Molybdenum metal deposition from the decomposition of Mo (CO) 6 adsorbed on Si ( 100),
Mo. and Cu surfaces was studied by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Auger electron
spectroscopy, thermal desorption spectroscopy, and low-energy electron diffraction. Pyrolytic,
photolytic, and electron-induced MO(CO)6 decomposition were observed and indicated
different dissociation mechanisms, Thermally decomposed MO(CO)6 was found to leave
metallic Mo in the presence of C and O. Electron-induced decomposition resulted in the
formation of molybdenum carbide on the surfaces. Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of adsorbed
Mo (CO) 6 induced new peaks in XPS and TDS spectra, suggesting the formation of an
unsaturated molybdenum carbonyl adsorbate. MO(CO)6 was found to form a multHayer on
these surfaces at low temperatures, and desorb with zero~order kinetics. Although both
adsorbate desorption and decomposition took place when the samples were heated. desorption
was the dominant reaction path, UV irradiation of gaseous and coadsorbed Mo (CO) 6 and O2
was also investigated. UV irradiation of the gas-phase mixture leads to Mo02 and Mo03
deposition; however, UV irradiation of coadsorbed Mo (CO) 6 and O2 resulted in unsaturated
molybdenum carbonyl. The effects of annealing and Ar + bombardment on the Mo~deposited
Si ( 100) surface are also reported.
!. INTRODUCTION
The adsorption and reactive properties of organometal
lic compounds on surfaces have attracted increasing atten
tion recently. Some studies have been motivated by the at
tempt to further understand the chemical bonding between
metallic atoms and the ligands of organometallic complexes,
the interactions between adsorbate and substrate, and the
transitions between the homogeneous chemistry of organo
metallic dusters and the heterogeneous chemistry of transi
tion-metal surfaces. 1-3 Other studies have been motivated by
more practical requirements: metallization processes from
organometallic compounds have exhibited strong potential
for their application in various fields such as catalyst forma
tion and semiconductor device fabrication. The understand
ing and control of the metallization processes will be essen
tial for the improvement of these productS.4,5
In the present paper, a study of molybdenum deposition
from the decomposition of molybdenum hexacarbonyl on
Si ( 100), polycrystalline Mo, and Cu surfaces is reported,
Molybdenum is an interesting material for depositing on
semiconductor surfaces because it has exhibited good poten
tial as a new material for metallic gates and interconnects in
microelectronics devices,6.7 PolycrystaUine Si and Al have
been used as the gate and interconnect material for most
integrated circuits. However, as the feature dimensions of
devices continue to decrease, the resistance of polycrystal
line Si starts to impede high-speed performance, and Al films
deteriorate due to electromigration problems.8,9 The low re-
a) Current address: Department ofChemis,ry, University of Toronto, Tor
onto, Ontario M5S iAI, Canada. sistance, higher thermal stability, and good pattemability of
molybdenum thus makes it an attractive substitute. The de
position of molybdenum on Si also offers a route for the
formation of molybdenum sUicide. which is another promis
ing candidate of low resistivity and high thermal stability,
and is useful in integrated circuits as a Schottky barrier. 10 In
this work. different substrates were employed to investigate
the effect of adsorbate-substrate interactions and the influ
ence of the deposited layer upon further adsorption.
Prior to recent studies of the interaction of transition
metal carbonyls with surfaces,; 1-2l the decomposition of or~
ganometallic compounds in the gas phase,22-28 in liquid solu
tion,29 or in low-temperature matrices, 3{~ 32 has been
extensively investigated. Among these works, photon in
duced metal carbonyl decomposition has been most widely
studied. Metal carbonyls absorb radiation in the ultraviol.et
(UV) range and exhibit high quantum yield for photodisso
ciation reactions. In the gas phase, these carbonyls are be
lieved to absorb one or more photons and to dissociate one
CO ligand before the other CO ligands are eliminated se
quentially. Various photofragments, such as neutral atoms
M,22 excited atoms M", 2J ion fragments like M +, and
M(CO),,+ _.~,24 have been observed. In CH4 or Ar matrices,
Mo(CO)s, as well as two secondary photolysis products,
MO(CO)4 and Mo(CO)" have been produced sequentially
by UV irradiation ofMo(CO)6,:lo.31 Laser flash pyrolysis of
refractory hexacarbonyls in perfluoromethylcyciohexane
generated highly reactive coordinatively unsaturated penta
carbonyls, which complex with CO, M(CO)6' or cyclohex
ane, with large rate constants,29
Surface sensitive techniques such as Auger electron
spectroscopy (AES), thermal desorption spectroscopy
(TDS), and high-resolution electron energy loss spectrosco-
3035 J. AppL Phys. 65 (8), 15 April i 9813 0021-8979/89/083035-09$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of PhYSics 3035
' ••••• -.c ••••••••• '>..,. .. ~, ........ ~ ' ••••• "~"'.' •• '~"""". ...~ •••••• ,. ';,0,' ...................................... ~.'. , ..... _ ........... ....,..;-••••••••• rr r
•••••• ~. '~ ••• +.", ••• -.-.................... ii ••••••••• '.~;:.;: •• , .............................. ..-...... ' •••••••••••••• <; •• • ••• ·.v.· •. o; .............. ; ••••• o,o ••••••••• <; ••••• ;.-;.o.-.. r •••••••••••••• v .... v ...... 0; •••• <;>; •••• -0;.< ••••••••••••••• <; •••• """'.~ •••• <;" ............... , ...... ~
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44py (HREELS) have been applied to analyze some UV irra
diated metal carbonyls adsorbed on surfaces, Mo (CO) 6 was
found to adsorb as a multilayer on Si(100) and desorb at
210-230 K. KrF laser irradiation (248 nm) partially de
composed the adsorbed MO(CO)6 and released gas phase
CO in the process. Mo (CO) 5 was proposed as the product of
the photodissociation reaction. 13 The splitting of the main c
O stretching mode and the formation of a new C-O stretch
ing mode in HREELS, after adsorbed Mo (CO) 6 on Si ( 111 )
was irradiated by a 257-nm laser light, 18,19 also suggested the
existence of a surface stabilized photoreaction product. On
the other hand, no partially decarbonylated iron carbonyl
fragment was detected by infrared spectroscopy subsequent
to exposure to UV photons.2' By comparing the results from
laser irradiation at two different wavelengths, UY irradia
tion was believed to decompose adsorbed MO(CO)6 by the
same metal-ligand charge transfer dissociation mechanism
as observed in the gas phase, 14 while visible light apparently
induces thermal desorption ofMo(CO)6'
UV laser induced photodeposition from refractory hex
acarbonyls at room temperature has achieved high depo
sition rate, good deposit resistivity, and conformal step cov
erage.Il,l2,I5 However, C and 0 contamination was found in
the deposited layers. The deposit layer produced by irradiat
ing Mo (CO) 6 adsorbed on Si ( 100) and flashing the irradiat
ed crystal also exhibited C and 0 contamination with a stoi
chiometry of MoCOO.3 .13 Recently, photodeposited Fe from
Fe(CO)s without C or 0 residue has been reportedY
Studies of thermally decomposed metal carbonyls are
relatively fewer. A laser pyrolysis study of metal carbonyl
showed that, once the first metal-CO bond is broken, ther
mal decomposition of Mo (CO) 6 proceeds to completion, re
sulting in metal particulate products. The first bond scission
is usually the rate determining step for most metal car
bonyl28 photodissociations.
In the present study, various methods such as thermal
heating, UV irradiation, and electron bombardment have
been used to decompose molybdenum hexacarbonyl. XPS
was used as the major tool to identify the chemical states of
the adsorbate and the reaction products. TOS, AES, and
low-energy electron diffraction (LEEO) were also em
ployed. Both a wide band UV lamp and a nitrogen laser (337
nrn) have been used as the light sources. In addition to the
study of the decomposition reactions, the UV irradiation ef
fect upon mixed gaseous and coadsorbed Mo (CO) 6 and O2
has been studied, The structure and composition of the de
posited layers and the effects of thermal heating and Ar+
bombardment on these layers were also investigated.
II. EXPERIMENT
Since the detailed experimental setup has been reported
elsewhere,33 only a bri.ef description will be given here. The
experiments were performed in two ultrahigh vacuum
chambers. One chamber was equipped with a Mg anode x~
ray source, a double-pass cylindrical mirror analyzer for x
ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and AES, a quadru
pole mass spectrometer, and a differentially pumped 0-
5-ke V ion sputtering gun. The second chamber was fitted
3036 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, 15 April 1969 with four-grid LEED optics, a single-pass cylindrical ana
lyzer for AES, a 0-3-keV ion sputtering gun, and a quadru
pole mass spectrometer. Each chamber was connected with
a reaction chamber, which could be isolated from the main
chamber by a valve and permitted studies at low vacuum or
at atmospheric pressure. In both systems, samples could be
transferred between the reaction chamber and the main
chamber under ultrahigh vacuum conditions, cooled to be
low 110 K by liquid nitrogen, and heated to above 1270 K by
either resistive heating or electron bombardment. Chromel
alumel thermocouples were used to monitor the sample tem
perature.
Si( 100) samples were obtained from AT&T Engineer
ing Research Center in Princeton. They were cleaned by
rinsing with 1 % HF solution and pure methanol in air, fol
lowed by Ar+-bombardment, and flashing to 1170 K in the
UHY chamber. The samples were characterized by Auger
spectra and the observation of a sharp (2 Xl) LEED pat
tern. Polycrystalline Mo and eu foils were obtained from
Alfa Products with purities of99.97% and 99.999%, respec
tively. They were also prepared by standard bombardment
and annealing processes and characterized by AES. Since
the vapor pressure ofMo(CO)6 powder, obtained from Al
drich, is high (-0.2 Torr) at room temperature, gaseous
MO(CO)6 could be produced in a sman chamber containing
solid MO(CO)6 after several vacuum pumping cycles for
cleaning. Gaseous MO(CO)6 was then introduced into the
main chamber or reaction chamber by way of a leak valve.
A mercury lamp and a Molectron UV22 pulsed N laser
were used as UV sources in the photon reaction experiments.
The laser beam was focused slightly to the sample size ( ~ 1
cm2) with pulse duration of IOns, repetition rate 20 Hz, and
average laser power 6 mJ/pulse. Sapphire windows were
used in these experiments.
III. RESULTS
A.. Adsorption of Mo(CO)s
Because the sticking coefficient of MO(CO)6 on solid
surfaces at room temperature was found to be very smail, the
studies of adsorbed Mo (CO) 6 were performed by exposing
the samples at 110 K to gaseous molybdenum carbonyl. In
the adsorption ofMo(CO)(', on Si( 100), the binding energies
of the Mo(3d3!z), Mo(3d 5IZ)' Si(2p), COs), and O(1s)
photoelectron peaks were monitored. These binding ener
gies were calibrated using the CU(2P3/2) peak (939.4 eV)
and the Cu L3 VV Auger peak (334.9 e V). The binding ener
gies ofthese peaks were found to be 232.6, 229.4, 99.0, 291.7,
and 534.3 eV, respectively. The peak intensity ratio for Mo,
C, and 0 is 1.0:0.68:2.2.
TDS experiments have shown that Mo(eO)" desorbs
from Si(100) 13 and SiC 111) 18 surfaces with zero-order ki
netics. Similar results were found upon the desorption of
Mo (CO) 6 from the polycrystaHine Mo surface. The thermal
desorption spectrum of Mo (CO) 6 from polycrystalline Mo
is shown in Fig. 1. The asymmetric peak shape and the fact
that higher desorption peak positions were observed with
increased surface adsorbate coverage are consistent with
zero-order desorption. Arrhenius analysis of the leading
edge desorption yield showed that the activation energy for
C, C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek 3036
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<C ;z
'" 00
'" E " <I>
'" Mo(COls-Mo
I ! ! ! ! !
150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250 260
TEMPERATURE (K)
FIG.!. TDS spectra ofMo(CO)6 from a polycrystalline Mo surface. (a)
(e) areMo(CO)" exposures in Langmuir. The CO " mass signal wasmoni
tared.
desorption was 15.9 kcallmol. The peak area is linearly de
pendent on the dosage, suggesting the formation of multi
layers. The heating rate for these desorption spectra was 10
K/s. With this heating rate, only a trace amount of Mo was
detected by AES or XPS on the surface after the desorption.
However, when the samples were heated more slowly, signif
icant Mo deposition was observed. Other chemical states
during the heating process were also detected by XPS and
win be discussed in the following section.
Et Thel'mal~jnduced decomposition of Mo(CO)e
After adsorption of Mo( CO) 6 at low temperature, the
samples were heated at about 1 K/min while XPS spectra
were taken, Figure 2 shows the XPS spectra of the Mo 3d
region at various temperatures for Mo(CO)r, adsorbed on a
polycrystaHine Mo surface. The spectrum of clean Mo foil is
shown at the top for comparison. The positions of the
Mo(3d 3!2) and (3ds!2) peaks for the clean Mo surface are
227.4 and 230.6 eV, respectively, Following MO(CO)6 ad
sorption at 110 K, the Mo(3d) peaks appeared at 228.6 and
231.8 eV. These peak positions remain constant at low tem
perature for multiple XPS scans indicating that the adsorbed
layer is not affected by the x-ray radiation. The peak posi
tions remain constant until the temperature is increased to
about 190 K and shifted to 227.7 and 230.9 eV thereafter.
The adsorption of Mo ( CO) 6 on polycrystalline Cn was also
studied by the same procedure (Fig< 3) and exhibited results
very similar to those for adsorption on Mo< The Mo( 3d)
peaks had binding energies of 232.1 and 228.9 eV at 109 K
which remained constant until around 190 K. At higher
temperatures, the Mo peaks shift to 231.6 and 228.4 eV. The
peaks shift back to slightly higher binding energies at yet
higher temperatures (above 310 K). Without the interfer
ence of the substrate Mo peaks as seen in Fig. 2, deposited
Mo could be seen clearly from 194 to 450 K on the Cu sub
strate.
The spectra of the adsorbate at 110 K are due to physi
cally adsorbed MO(CO)6< The adsorbate decomposes and
3037 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, 15 April 1989 '" ... 'iii 1'-----c
1111-----S
236 234 232 230 228 226 224
Binding Energy (eV)
FIG. 2. XPS spectra of the Mo( 3d) region for Mo( CO)6 adsorbed on poly
crystalline Mo at low temperature and heated to variolls temperatures.
forms metallic Mo in the presence of C and 0 when the
substrate temperature is increased above 190 K. High-tem
perature heating (above 310 K) oxidizes the deposited Mo
and converts 0 and C into oxide and carbide, as evidenced by
the peak shifting toward higher binding energy at this tem
perature on the eu surface. On the Mo surface, the high-
Mo(3c!)
Binding Energy (eV)
FIG. 3. XPS spectra of the MoOd) region for MoC COlo adsorbed Oil. po\y
crystalline eu at low temperature and heated to various temperatures.
c. C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek 3037
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44temperature peak shift due to the Mo oxidization process is
obscured by the background peaks of the Mo substrate.
However, by monitoring the C( Is) region, species corre
sponding to these chemical states can be clearly observed
(Fig. 4). The initial C peak at 291.5 eV is due to physisorbed
MO(CO)6' The peak at 290.3 eV results from thermally de
composed Mo(CO)6' When the sample is heated to 450 K,
molybdenum carbide is formed as indicated by shifting the
C( Is) peak to 287.8 eV.
The XPS spectra of MO(CO)6 on Si(lOO) at various
temperatures are shown in Fig. 5. Although the ratio be
tween the peak areas of Mo, C, and 0 is similar to that ob
served on Mo and Cu substrates, MO(CO)6 adsorption at
140 K exhibited a slightly higher Mo(3d) binding energy
(232.6 and 229.4 eV) on Si(100) than the other two systems.
The transition from molecular MO(CO)6 to Mo deposition
on Si( 100), occurring at about 160 K, was approximately 25
K lower than on the two metal substrates. Beside the differ
ences of peak positions and transition temperatures, the ad
sorptionofMo(CO)6 on Si( 1(0) exhibited an unusual peak
shifting from 149 K to 168 K. The Mo peaks shifted toward
higher binding energy with diminishing peak amplitudes as
the sample temperature is increased over this range. This
shifting may be caused by a different decomposition mecha
nism or by a different surface intermediate in this case. It is
also possible that the peculiar peak shifting might be due to
charging of the overlayer on the Si substrate. Although the
constancy of the spectra wi.th varying x-ray beam fiux argues
against charging for these low coverage layers, it has been
observed that if the adsorbed Mo (CO) 6 layer is thicker than
50A, a charging effect forces all the peaks to shift toward
higher binding energy_ 2
4~OK
26,K
(SIr<
151K
(6TK
145K
all 29' 291 lIB; l!8'1' 1I./J 1!!J3 201
B!ndlng Energy CaV)
FIG. 4. XPS spectra of the C(ls) region of Mo(CO)" adsorbed on poly
crystalline Mo at low temperature and heated to various temperatures.
3038 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, 15 April 1969 ::.. -'iii c:
~
~ Mo(CO)a -Cu
I
238 236
Binding Energy (eV) 226K
187 K
178 K
l68K
FIG. 5. XPS spectra of the Mo(3d) region for Mo( CO)" adsorbed on
SiC 100) at low temperature and heated to various temperatures.
c. Photon~induced decomposition of MO(CO}6
When the physisorbed Mo (CO) 6 layer on polycrystal
line Mo and Cu surfaces was irradiated by UV light, a new
species was observed. This new species, probably unsaturat
ed molybdenum carbonyl, was produced on these surfaces
only after UV irradiation. This species left significant metal
lic Mo on the substrates after the irradiated systems were
heated to room temperature.
The chemical states of the physisorbed Mo (CO) 6' the
photoproduct layer, and the deposited Mo layer were moni
tored by XPS. These spectra are shown in Fig. 6. Curve (a)
is physisorbed MO(CO)6 on polycrystalline Mo at 120 K.
The spectra of the clean Mo substrate are shown in (e) for
comparison. Spectrum (b) is the spectrum obtained after the
adsorbed Mo(CO)6 is irradiated by a wide band mercury
lamp. The UV irradiation broadened the Mo(3d) peaks of
the physisorbed Mo (CO) 6 toward the lower binding energy
side. This peak results from the overlap of the unreacted
Mo ( CO) 6 adsorbate and a new species (designated the a
adsorbate for convenience in the following discussion) pro
duced after the UV irradiation. Spectrum (d) was taken
after the physisorbed Mo (CO) (,IMo was heated to 450 K,
with a heating rate of 10 Kls, and recooled to 120 K. Since
the Me (CO) 6 adsorbate was desorbed by the heating pro
cess, the peak positions in this spectrum are the same as
those from the Me substrate. Since curve (d) showed that
flashing the adsorbed MO(CO)6 did not induce any reaction
except desorption from the surface, heating the irradiated
Mo (CO) 6 should also remove the original Mo (CO) 6 adsor
bate. Spectrum (c) is thus obtained by heating the a adsor
bate. The peak positions of this spectrum suggest formation
of oxidized molybdenum.
The irradiation and heating of Mo (CO) (, adsorbed on
C. C. CM and S. L. Bernasek 3038
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44MoreO). Mo
lel cleM Mo
~ tel l,(a) heofedio4
en z
1&1
~ z:
238
BINDING ENERGY (to< 1
FIG. 6. XPS spectra of the Mo(3d) region for Mo(CO)6 adsorbed on poly
crystalline Mo at 120 K (a) after Mo exposed to 90-L Mo(CO),,; (b) sur
face of Ca) irradiated by wide band UV lamp; (c) surface of (b) heated to
450 K a.nd recooIed; (d) surface of (a) heated to 450 K and recooled; (e) is
from clean Mo.
ell has also been studied (Fig. 7). Without the interference
of the substrate Mo atoms, Fig. 7 (b) indicates that only
trace amounts of Mo can be detected after adsorbed
Mo(CO)6 is heated rapidly (10 K/s) to 450 K. Spectrum
(c) results from a mixture of both reacted and unreacted
MC(CO)6 adsorbate after UV irradiation. Spectrum (d)
shows that after flashing the UV irradiated Mo (CO) 6 adsor
bate, significant amounts ofMo were left on the surface. The
peak positions in this spectrum suggest the formation of oxi
dized Mo. Peak positions for C( Is) and O( Is) spectra of
MO(CO)f on all three substrates (Si, Cu, Mo) for various
experimental conditions are summarized in Table L Molyb
denum carbide and oxide peak positions from previous stud
ies are included for comparison.
The nature of the a adsorbate is further illustrated by Mo(COle-Cu
FlG. 7. XPS spectra ofthe Mo( 3d) region forMo(CO)6 adsorbed on poly
crystalline Cu at 100 K (a) afterCu exposed to90-LMo(CO)h; (b) surface
of (a) heated to 450 K and recooled; (c) surface of (a) irradiated by wide
band UV lamp; (d) surface of (c) heated to 450 K.
thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) results. As men
tioned previously, MO(CO)6 desorbed with a sharp asym
metric peak at about 170 K [Fig. 8 (a) ]. The peak shape and
position are the same whether CO+, Mo-+-, or Mo(CO)3+
mass signals are monitored. However, after the adsorbed
MO(CO)6 was irradiated by a Nzlaser (337 nm) (or with
the mercury lamp), a second peak was observed at around
230 K when CO+ was monitored in thermal desorption.
[Fig. 8(b)J. In contrast, this new second peak can not be
detected by monitoring the Mo + signal [Fig. 8 (c) ], This
new CO peak was examined further in the following way:
The UV irradiated surface was heated to 250 K to desorb the
new CO peak. This surface was then cooled to 130 K and
redosed with Mo(CO)6 or CO, and the thermal desorption
spectrum recorded. This spectrum did not show the new CO
TABLE I. XPS peak positions for Mo(CO)" adsorbed on various substrates. T* is transition temperature discussed in text.
Substrate
Mo
Cu
Si(lOO)
" Reference 41.
b Reference 42. < 130K
291.5
291.3
291.7 T*
290.3
290.1 C( Is)
>450K
287.8
288.2
3039 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, i 5 April 1989 Peak positions in cV
carbide
282,9" <l30K
534.3
534.4
534.3 T*
532.6
532.5
532.5 O(1s)
>450K
531.5
531.4
531.6
C. C. Cho and $. L. Bernasek oxide
530.8h
3039
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44I-
Z
::> (a l a:i a: <t
.J <t
Z
:!)
iii
!b)
(c)
.00 150 Mo[CO)e-Mo
Before UV{~31nml Irradialio!l
CO, Mo,Mo{C013
Irradiation
CO
Afillf Irradiallan
Me
fOC 250
TEMPERATURE! K)
FIG. 8. TDS spectraofMo(CO)6 on Mo (a) before irradiation by N2 iaser
(337nm); (b) afterirradiationmonitoringCOf mass signal; (c) afterirra
diation monitoring Mo + mass signal.
peak (at 230 K), suggesting that this peak is not due to
MO(CO)6 or CO adsorption on a UV deposited Mo layer.
Since no Mo desorption was detected at the temperature of
the new peak and it is still quite low (below the desorption
temperature for CO on Mo), the decomposition ofunsatu
rated molybdenum carbonyl with the Mo atom bonding to
the substrate is likely to be the origin of the second TDS
peak. When the unsaturated carbonyl is heated, the bonds
between central Mo atom and CO ligands break and Mo is
left on the substrate, with the CO desorbing directly.
D. Photonainduced reaction of Mo(CO)e and O2
The effect of UV irradiation of gaseous and coadsorbed
Mo(CO)6 and O2 mixtures has also been studied. After the
cleaning and characterization process, polycrystalline Mo,
Cu, and SiC 100) samples were transferred to the reaction
chamber, dosed with Mo(CO)6 and O2 mixtures (typically
1:3 MO(CO)6:0Z' total pressure 1-5 Torr) with the surface
held at room temperature or 120 K, and irradiated by a mer
cury lamp. The samples were then transferred back to the
main chamber and analyzed by XPS and AES.
Molybdenum oxide was found to be deposited on these
samples after UV irradiation in the gas phase of the
MO(CO)6/02 mixture with the substrate at room tempera~
turc. Both Mo02 and MoO} are detected (see Fig. 9, lowest
trace), with more MoO} present at higher 02:Mo(CO)6 ra
tios. In contrast, when the substrate was held at 120 K and a
Mo(CO)(J/O z coadsorbed layer was formed, molybdenum
oxide was not observed to form on the surface following di~
3040 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, i 5 April 1989 MoO. 51! 100) MO!3d)
)-i-
fJ ~' It! i-
!!: 920K
~4 2~
BINDING ENERGY (IV I
FIG. 9. XPS spectra of the Mo(3d} region from deposited MoO, on
Si ( 1(0)' after annealing to various temperatures.
rect UV irradiation of the coadsorbed layer. The peaks in the
Mo(3d) region were the same as the irradiated Mo(CO)6
adsorbate without 0 coadsorption, suggesting the formation
of unsaturated molybdenum carbonyl.
E. Electronuinduced Mo(CO)& decomposition
The electron gun in the Auger spectrometer was used as
an electron source to study the electron-induced decomposi
tion ofMo(CO)6. Two types of electron-beam induced de
composition experiments were carried out. The MO(CO)6
multilayer deposited an the substrate at 120 K was irradiat
ed with the electron beam, and the room~temperature sub
strate exposed to 10-7 Torr ofMo(CO)6 vapor was electron
bombarded as well. It was found that electron beam induced
metal deposition occurred from either gaseous or adsorbed
MO(CO)6' and resulted in similar film compositions. With
3-keV incident electron collisions, the deposited layer
showed a Mo, C, 0 ratio of 1: 1.2:0.4. The C composition is a
factor of 2 higher than those layers deposited thermally or
UV photolytically (1:0.6:0.4 and 1:0.7:0.5, respectively). By
analyzing the C peak shape of the deposits, the Auger spec~
tra suggested that molybdenum carbide was formed during
the electron bombardment deposition.
Based on the sample current, electron spot size and the
amount of Mo deposited on the surface, the decomposition
cross section of the adsorbed Mo (CO) 6 is estimated to be
about to-15 cm2 which is on the same order as the decompo
sition cross section of gaseous Mo (CO) 0,24 The high decom
position cross section indicates that AES is highly destruc
tive of the low-temperature deposited MO(CO)6 overIayer.
c. C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek 3040
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Although extensive studies were not carried out, electron
beam~induced changes in the UV or thermally deposited lay
ers were not observed, in contrast to the effects described for
the low~temperature-deposited MO(CO)6 overlayer. The
nondestructive feature ofXPS thus offers a great advantage
for the investigation of this system.
F. Surface treatment after deposition
LEED patterns were examined after MO(CO)6 was de
posited on the Si( 100) surface at low temperature. No new
ordered structure was observed. The original (2 Xl) LEED
pattern gradually faded away with increasing Mo( CO) 6 ex
posure. At low coverage, the LEED pattern could be recov
ered by flashing the sample to about 1170 K . At high cover~
age, the intermixing of Mo and Si from heated samples
permanently disordered the surface.
In most cases, du.ring the annealing of UV~irradiated
surfaces, which exhibited no LEED pattern, the original
(2 Xl) pattern started to regrow with dim, broad LEED
spots after the sample was heated to 1070 K and cooled for
LEED observations. The LEBD spots became sharper after
the crystal was heated to higher temperature. If the Si sam
ple with UV-irradiated Me(CO)" overlayer was flashed to
t 170 K for a short time, a (4 X 2) LEED pattern and a very
clean Si Auger spectrum could then be seen after the sample
was cooled. Since this LEBD pattern is believed to be asso~
dated with defects on the clean Si(100) surfaces,34 the
LEED and AES results consistently suggested that Mo
atoms removed C, 0, or even Si atoms as a scavenger during
the desorption process. However, if the Sf surface was cov
ered by multilayer Mo or if the sample was heated up slowly,
Si atoms apparently segregate to the surface and become
mixed with the Mo layer, which could then be detected by
AES.
In some cases, a rotated LEED pattern has been ob
served after flashing the Si ( 100) surface covered by submon ~
olayer Mo to 1120 K. Figure lO(a) shows a normal (2 Xl)
LEED pattern. Figure lO(b) is a rotated pattern, the rota
tion angle being 36" ± 10 in this case. Rotation angles of
18° ± 1 cor 10° ± 10 have also been observed. LEBD patterns
with different rotation angles have been observed in different
regions of the same sample. A uger spectra showed that no
detectable Mo was left on this surface in any region. Figure
10 (c) is a (4 X 2) pattern observed after the surface of (b)
was further annealed to 1270 K. The rotation pattern is be
lieved to be caused by the formation of microfacets. Facet
formation from clean SiC 100) at temperatures ranging from
3041 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, 15 April 1989 c FIG. 10. LEED patterns ofSi( 100) with 45-eV in
cident elcctron energy. (a) Clean surface; (b) after
flashing Mo deposited Si( 100) to about 1130 K;
(e) after (b) was heated to 1270 K.
1375 to 1500 K has been observed by high-energy electron
diffraction (RHEED),J5 LEED,3n and scanning tunneling
microscopy (STM).34 Our results showed that the facet
structure could appear at lower temperatures when Mo was
deposited on the surface. This may be due to the removal of
Si atoms with desorbing Mo, leaving the surface with high
step density and thus offering an appropriate condition for
facet formation. Wen-ordered Sic 100) could be recovered
by annealing the surface at about 1270 K.
The deposited molybdenum oxide film on SiC 100), re
sulting from the UV irradiation of gaseous mixtures of
Mo (CO) 6 and 02> was treated by thermal heating and Ar +
bombardment. The XPS results are shown in Figs. 9 and 11.
When the molybdenum oxide was bombarded by 3.G-keV
Ar l-, it was reduced efficiently and formed metallic Mo
atoms on the surface before they were gradually sputtered
At Spytl~ll!g
MOOl~Si{iOO)
FlO. 11. XPS spectra of the Mo(3d) region after Mo( CO)6(g) and O2(.0)
were (a) irradiated by a UV lamp; (b)-(d) after 2.0-keV Ar+ bombard
ment ofsurface (a) for 6, 16, and 26 min, respectively.
C. C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek 3041
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44away. During the annealing process, molybdenum oxide was
reduced to metallic Mo after 1 170-K heating. The dimin
ished peak area in Fig. 11 indicated that MoOx either de
sorbed from the surface or dissolved in the substrate during
the heating process, which is consistent with the LEED
study discussed above.
IV. DISCUSSION
Generally speaking, Mo(CO)6 behaves quite similarly
on different substrates, reflecting the nature of a weakly ad
sorbed layer. Nonetheless, slightly different interactions be
tween substrate and adsorbate can be inferred from the dif
ferent peak positions and transition temperatures. The
detection of thermally desorbed species by mass spectrosco
py and the observation of thermally deposited Mo showed
that both desorption and decomposition reactions occurred
during the sample heating process. However, the desorption
reaction overwhelmed the decomposition reaction in most
cases.
Since CO adsorbs dissociatively on Mo and associative
lyon Cu at room temperature, the great similarity between
the adsorptions ofMo (CO) 6 on these two substrates, indud
ing peak positions, transition temperatures, and adsorbed
species at various temperatures, suggests that the bond
breaking between C and 0 of the CO ligand is not involved in
this decomposition process. Rather, Mo-CO bond break
ing appears to occur during the thermal dissociation reac
tion, followed by immediate CO desorption.
On the other hand, the C and 0 contamination found on
the deposited layers in previous reports12." is likely to be
formed by the dissociation of CO induced by the decarbony
lated Mo atom on the surface. The fact that MO(CO)6 is
highly reactive with O2 at room temperature under (IV irra
diation indicates that the extremely high 0 fraction in some
deposited films may be caused by the reaction of the irradiat
ed Mo(CO)6 with background O2 gas in the reaction
chamber.
In the photoelectron spectra of the adsorbed Mo (CO) 6'
shake-up peaks around the Mo(3d) and C( Is) regions have
been observed. After UV irradiation, the shake-up peak at
237.2 eV shifted to 236.4 eV [Figs. 7(a) and 7 (c)]. The fact
that the shake-up peak can still be seen after irradiation and
that it exhibits a different peak position provides further evi
dence that unsaturated molybdenum carbonyl is the photon
induced product. The shake-up peaks in these metal car
bonyl compounds are proposed to be from a metal-ligand
electron transfer final state.2 A substituted Mo(CO).,L or
unsaturated MO(CO)6 __ x thus still tend to exhibit this
shake-up structure with slightly different energy levels. In
contrast, the fact that our study of thermally decomposed
MO(CO)6 did not show the shake-up peak (Figs. 2-5) indi
cates the formation of a different product in this case, which
appears to be Mo deposited with C and 0 atoms, as discussed
previously.
Using IR and Raman spectroscopy, UV photolysis of
Mo (CO) 6 isolated in O2 doped Ar or CH4 matrices at 10K
has been studied. 37 Mo (CO) 5 and CO were produced initial
ly but further irradiation yielded MoOl and Mo03 as final
products. Mo (0) 2 (CO) 4 with both 0 atoms from the same
3042 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.8, 15 April 1989 O2 molecule was suggested to be the possible intermediate
structure. These results indicated that Mo(CO)6 exhibited
quite different reaction mechanisms under irradiation de
pending on the environment of the complex molecule. In
gas-phase photoreactions "naked" Mo atoms can be formed
rapidly and react with adjacent O2 molecules because of the
high mobility of the molecules. When MO(CO)6 was ad
sorbed on the surface, photodissociated ligand(s) were re
placed by surface atoms and thus lost the ability to react with
coadsorbed O2 molecules. While in a low-temperature inert
matrix, Mo (CO) 610st one CO ligand under UV irradiation,
and was stablized by the surrounding inert atoms or mole
cules until it was further dissociated by UV irradiation and
then reacted with the O2 in the matrix.
Electrochromic devices have been produced by various
deposition techniques such as evaporation, sputtering, ano
dization, spray pyrolysis, and colloidal oxide gel technology.
Lately Mo03 has been deposited for electrochromic material
by plasma deposition from a Mo ( CO) 6 and O2 mixture as a
new deposition technique.38 The observation here that
Mo03 can be formed efficiently by the UV photoreaction of
Mo (CO) 6 and O2 mixtures offers another possibility for for
mation of electrochromic films.
The fact that electron induced metal deposition resulted
in a higher C fraction than 0 has also been observed in the
studies ofironlO•1I•3J and osmium15 carbonyls. It is interest
ing to note that electron stimulated desorption (ESD) stud
ies have shown a similar trend.19 The cross sections for the
rupture of an internal bond in a weakly adsorbed molecule
are usually found to be larger than the cross sections for the
rupture of a metal---atom bond under the electron bombard
ment ofESD experiments. For example, considering the ad
sorption of CO molecules on a Ni surface, the C-O bond is
easier to break than the C-Ni bond. Consequently, more C
tends to be left on the surface after the electron bombard
ment. These results indicate the possibility of a similar elec
tron excitation mechanism in this case.
The ion sputtering effect on molybdenum oxide deposit
ed Mo metal has been studied previously with various ion
voltage, current, and incident angle.40 Reduction of molyb
denum oxide has been observed. However, the fact that in
our study a reduced metallic Mo thin layer can be produced
before the deposited MoOx is sputtered away might offer a
process to create Mo metal from Mo03 insulator covered
device structures.
Yo CONCLUSIONS
Molybdenum deposition from the decomposition of
MO(CO)6 on SiC 100), polycrystalline Mo, and Cu has been
studied by XPS, AES, TDS, and LEED. The adsorption,
decomposition, and desorption of adsorbate Mo( CO) 6' the
photoreactions of gaseous and adsorbed Mo (CO) fl'Oz mix
tures, and the properties of the deposited layers were investi
gated. The results are summarized as foHows:
( 1) Mo (CO) 6 adsorbs weakly on Si ( 100), polycrystal
line Mo, and eu surfaces, and desorbs with zero-order kinet
ics. For each substrate, the adsorbed layer exhibits similar
thermal decomposition processes, indicating weak adsor
bate-substrate interactions. Although both desorption and
c. C. Cho and S. L. 8srnasek 3042
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69.166.47.134 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 03:03:44decomposition take place at low temperature when the sam
ples are heated, the desorption process dominates the adsor
bate decomposition reaction. Decomposition can be en
hanced by slow heating of the substrate.
(2) During the thermal decomposition process, the mo
lecular MO(CO)6 adsorbate is first converted to metallic
Mo in the presence of C and O. Higher temperature heating
induces the formation of molybdenum carbide and oxide.
(3) UV irradiation of the Mo (CO) 6 adsorbate produces
unsaturated molybdenum carbonyl with the Mo atom at
tached to the surfaces. The Iiberted CO is desorbed in a new
TDS peak from this surface. Heating of the irradiated adsor
bate dissociates the other CO ligands and leaves molyb
denum carbide/oxide on the surfaces.
( 4) UV irradiation of a gaseous Mo (CO) 6/02 mixture
leads to the deposition of Mo02 and Mo03; however, UV
irradiation of a coadsorbed MO(CO)602 mixture results in
unsaturated molybdenum carbonyl. This result indicates
that UV irradiation of adsorbed Mo (CO) 6 does not result in
the formation of reactive Mo atoms which are readily oxi
dized, in contrast to what is observed in the UV irradiation of
gas phase Mo (CO) 6'
( 5 ) Electron collisions with gaseous or adsorbed
MO(CO)6 result in a high C composition deposit which ap
pears to be molydenum carbide.
(6) Mo deposition on SiC 100) obscures the LEED pat
tern of the substrate. The LEED pattern can be recovered
from a low coverage Mo/Si ( 100) surface by flashing the
crystal to a high temperature, but thermal heating of a high
coverage Mo/Si( 100) surface induces intermixing of Mo
and Si and creates surface disorder. Rotated LEED patterns
have been occasionally observed after the low coverage
Mo/SiC 100) surface is fiashed. BothAr-~ bombardment and
high-temperature heating reduce the molybdenum oxide
film on SiC 1(0). Metallic Mo atoms are formed on the sur
face by Ar + bombardment before they are gradually sput
tered away.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work has been supported by the Air Force Office of
Scientific Research.
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C. C. Cho and S. L. Bernasek 3043
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1.341583.pdf | Limit cycle oscillation in negative differential resistance devices
E. S. Hellman, K. L. Lear, and J. S. Harris Jr.
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 64, 2798 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.341583
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.341583
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/64/5?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.102.42.98 On: Mon, 24 Nov 2014 22:12:58limit cycle oscillation in negative differential resistance devices
E. S. Hellman,a) K L. Lear, and J. S. Harris, Jr.
Solid State Electronics Laboratory, Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford,
California 94305
(Received 21 March 1988; accepted for publication 19 May 1988)
We present experimental current-voltage curves for GaAsl AIGaAs resonant tunneling diodes
which show complicated multiple step structures when biased into negative differential
resistance. We show that these results can be explained as limit cycle oscillations in the
nonlinear dynamical system consisting of a negative differential resistance device loaded with a
resonant circuit. Two circuit models, a resistor-capacitor-inductor load, and the dispersionless
transmission-line load, are discussed. The limit cycles in the second model exhibit a variety of
behaviors characteristic of nonlinear systems, such as bifurcations, period doubling, and
Devil's Staircases, resulting in good qualitative agreement with experiment.
The observation of nonlinear conductance at frequen
cies above 1 THz in GaAsI AIGaAs resonant tunneling di
odes 1 has caused a resurgence ofinterest in high-frequency
negative differential resistance (NOR) devices. Both funda
mental research and practical applications of these devices
depend on the stabilization of their conductance characteris
tics when they are biased in the negative differential resis
tance regime. This can be particularly difficult for devices
which have high cutoff frequencies, because they must be
properly loaded over such a large frequency range. In view of
this difficulty, it is often convenient to measure current-vol
tage characteristics of devices without proper loading. Un
der these circumstances, spontaneous osciHations can arise
when the device is biased to have a negative differential resis
tance. The onset of oscillations often appears as discontin
uity in the measured dc current-voltage characteristics, even
if oscillating voltages do not appear at the voltmeter.
Several recent studies have focused on fundamental
aspects of the resonant tunneling process for diodes biased
into NDR. For example, Goldman, Tsui, and Cunningham2
attributed step structure in the negative differential resis
tance region of GaAsl AIGaAs resonant tunneling diodes to
quantum-mechanical interactions between the central quan
tum well of the device and the quantized states in the accu
mulation layer at the cathode barrier interface. Berkowitz
and Lux3 have proposed a similar effect. Goldman et af.
claim that a lO-nF capacitor connected in parallel with the
resonant tunneling diode is effective in suppressing oscilla
tions in their devices, although this claim is controversial. 4
In this communication we will present current-voltage
measurements of resonant tunneling diodes made in our lab
oratory, some of which show remarkably complex step
structure in the NDR region. This structure is entirely due to
spontaneous oscillations in the devices. We win then discuss
the behavior of two simple model circuits in which limit cy
cle oscillations result in similar current steps. These models
consider the coupling of a nonlinear negative differential re
sistance element to a resonant circuit.
Resonant tunneling diodes are fabricated in our labora
tory using GaAsl AIGaAs epitaxial layers grown by molecu
lar-beam epitaxy. dc current-voltage characteristics of both
0) Also at the Department of Applied Physics. wafer probed and bonded devices are measured using an
Hewlett-Packard 4145 semiconductor parameter analyzer.
Figure 1 shows two examples of the negative differential re
sistance current-voltage characteristics for resonant tunnel
ing diodes made in our laboratory. Note that both curves are
characterized by multiple "stair" regions within which the
conductance is less negative or even positiveo In particular,
note the pair of substairs in the "legs" and "back" of the
main stair in Fig. 1 (a). Observation of the diode current on
an oscilloscope confirmed the existence of oscillations with
frequencies in the 10-100-MHz range in the stair regions.
Figure 2 shows oscilloscope traces with two different time
scales taken from the device of Fig. 1 (b). Figure 2(a) shows
a typical current oscillation waveform. The maximum and
minimum current in the waveform are larger and smaller
than the peak and vaHey current afthe device, while some of
the local maxima and minima correspond closely to the peak
and valley currents. This suggests that a voltage oscillation is
occurring at the device. Figure 2 (b) shows a bUl'st of oscilla
tions, a phenomenon which seems to occur in the substair
regions. The oscillation frequency in this device did not
change more than 5% over the range of stair biases.
The simplest circuit in which a negative differential re
sistance device might be expected to sustain oscillations
would be the simple resistor-capacitor-inductor (RLC) load
attached to a NDR element with current bias depicted in
Fig. 3(a). For a NDR current-voltage characteristic given
by i = iNOR (v), the differential equation governing the vol
tage v across the NDR element is
25D
(a, 300 350
voitage (mV) 400 200
200
(b) 250 300
voltage (mV)
FIGo 1. Experimental current-voltage characteristics for two GaAsl
AIGaAs resonant tunneling diodes.
2798 Jo AppJ. Phys, 54 (5), 1 September 1988 0021-8979/88/172798-03$02.40 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 279B
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130.102.42.98 On: Mon, 24 Nov 2014 22:12:58soc
~ 400
<:: 300
<» t: 200 :! 0 100
0
0 ~o 20 30 40 50
(a) time (ns)
500
~
<:: 3ea
~ 200 :!
<:.> 100
100
(b) time (ns)
FIG. 2. Oscilloscope traces of the cllrrent for the device of Fig. l(b): (a)
oscillations in diode biased at 260 m V; (b) oscillation burst in diode biased
at 300 m V. The oscillations in the burst resemble the oscillations shown in
(a) on a faster time scale.
--rii = V + iNDR (v)R -IR + ro[Zif..DR (v) + ~), (1)
where Z =,Jr Ie, .. = ..[Le', I is the bias current, and
i' = dildv. This equation can display a variety of asymptotic
behaviors depending on the values of the parameters 1, R,
and Z for a given NDR characteristic. Dynamical systems
described by this sort of equation are very well understood,
as it can be considered to be a variant of the van der Pol
equation.s
Integration ofEq. (1) can be done to compute a current
voltage characteristic for the RLC model. Figure 4 (a)
shows the results of such a computation for models with
R = 1, Z = 1.4,2.0, and 4.0, and a negative resistance device
characteristic given by iNDR (/J) = 3v3 -6.Sv2 + 4v. The or
dinate in Fig. 4 is the total applied bias current which flows
both through the diode and the load resistor R, in parallel.
The current in the stairs is given by the average current
drawn by the NDR element as it undergoes limit cycle oscil
lations. The widening and flattening of a single stair with
increasing Z is clearly seen. The RLC model fails in several
respects to explain the more complicated aspects of the oscil
lations apparent in the data of Figs. 1 and 2. While the stairs
are wen explained, the mUltiple stairs seen in the experimen-
! ~ Imas I
1~lbias
Z H 1\
~ 'In i ',1'1 ? c T i nd!V) R
.1 (b) ~
FIG. 3. Schematics ofmooels for interaction of It nonlinear negative resis
tance device with a resonant circuit. (a) RLC load model. (b) Transmis
sion-line load model.
2799 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.5, i September 1988 1.0r----------
0.9
0.7
0.6
la) -~~\ U
, .. " L~ z_,
2 "" ~.4
~.2 <,.3 1.4 1.5 ~.6
tQtai tmts cummt 1.4 1.5 1.8
(b) total bi&s ciJfTenl
FIG. 4. Calculated current bias characteristics for an idealized nonlinear
negative resistance device interacting with resonant loads. The abscissa is
the average cllrrent drawn by the negative resistance load, and the ordinate
is the total bias current. The negative resistance device characteristic is giv.
en by I(u) = 3v' --6.Sv' + 4v. (a) RLCioad, withR = LandZ = 1.4,2.0,
and 4.0. (b) Dispersionless transmission-line load, with termination resis
tance R = 1 and transmission-line impedances, Z = 1.33,2.5, and 6.0. The
numbers adjacent to the curves indicate the limit cycle period. Curves for
Z = 2.5 and 6.0 are shifted upward for claIity.
tal data cannot be produced using the simple RLC model.
Calculation of de current-voltage curves using this model is
also computationally expensive because the differential
equation must be integrated for each bias current until the
system converges to an asymptotic behavior. A natural ex
tension of the RLC load model to allow more complicated
behavior would be the addition of one or more LC stages.
The system with two LC stages is described by two coupled
equations similar to Eq. (1), resulting in a four-dimensional
phase space. The extraction of current-voltage curves from
such a model would be computationally very expensive, par
ticularly since no asymptotic behavior is insured.5
Ifwe instead consider the case ofa circuit with infinitely
many identical LC stages (the ideal transmission line) the
computational difficulties are circumvented. The model is
depicted in Fig, 3 (b). It consists of an ideal transmission line
terminated at one end by the nonlinear NOR device and at
the other end by a resistor. A current bias is applied at the
resistor. The impedance of the transmission line, Z, and the
load resistance R are used as parameters for the model. Re
flections from the unmatched resistor provide feedback to
the negative differential resistance device, allowing it to sup
port oscillations. The transmission lines are assumed to be
dispersionless, which simplifies the calculation immensely.
The calculation is reduced to a simple iteration of a function
describing the amount of current which is reflected by the
NOR load and terminati.on resistor in one round trip of the
transmission line.
This model has been implemented numerically. Typical
average load current versus bias characteristics produced
using the model are shown in Fig. 4(b) for transmission-line
impedances, Z = 1.33, 2.5, and 6, and R = 1. The NOR
characteristic is the same as that used in the computations
using the RLC model. The conditions on Z and R required
for oscillatory behavior are found to be identical to those
found for the RLC model. For Z > !.R~:-, where r min is the
minimum negative resistance of the NDR characteristic, os
cillations (convergence to a cycle) are observed. for a range
of bi.ases around the midpoint of the negative resistance re
gion. As Z is increased, increasing the feedback, the limit
Hellman, lear, and Harris, Jr. 2799
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130.102.42.98 On: Mon, 24 Nov 2014 22:12:58cycle stair becomes more pronounced and in fact develops a
positive slope, with discontinuities at either edge, For even
larger Z, substairs and higher periodicity limit cycles appear.
The character of the apparent discontinuities is found to de
pend on whether or not the reflection matching condition
has more than one solution. When the reflection matching
condition is single valued, the average current in the NDR
element changes continuously with bias. Transitions in the
cyclic behavior occur by bifurcations of the recurring vol
tages. Biases at which these occur are characterized by cusps
in the load current characteristics. Period doubling (simul
taneous bifurcation of all of the recurring solutions) is ob
served for some parameter ranges. This period doubling be
havior is universal in smooth mappings with extrema, in the
limit of many period increases, and is important for transi
tions to chaotic behavior, (, For larger Z, when the reflection
matching condition has three solutions, the transitions in the
cyclic behavior result in true discontinuities in the load cur
rent characteristics. Examination of the discontinuities on a
finer bias mesh typically reveals multiple discontinuous
transitions to regions of higher periodicity. For example, the
curve for Z = 2.5 in Fig, 4(b) shows regions of cycle 3, 5, 7,
etc. between the main two-cycle stair and the one-cycle
curve. In this way, the current bias curve reflects a Devil's
Staircase in the limit cycle period. In fact, the "bistable,"
discontinuous mapping which appears in our model in this
range has some similarities to maps of the circle known to
generate Devil's Staircases.7
The tendency of negative differential resistance devices
to oscillate is, of course, one reason for their usefulness; the
fact that these oscillations show up in current-voltage char
acteristics has been widely known, at least since the early
work on tunnel diodes, g In fact, the behavior of tunnel diodes
attached to transmission-line loads was reported by Nagumo
and Shimura9 in 1961, Although the possibility of very high
frequency oscillations in resonant tunneling diodes may
complicate matters, the effect of oscillations in this case is
also widely recognized.4,lo Aperiodic behavior and chaos in
nonlinear dynamical systems involving coupled tunnel di
odes have also been studied by several groups.! 1.12 Chaos in
circuits with piecewise linear negative resistance devices
("Chua's circuits") has also been studied in detail.
Both circuit models discussed here use a current source
and load resistor to bias the NDR elements, In real current
voltage measurements, voltage biases are typically used.
This corresponds to the use of a very sman R with current
bias in these models. Thus, it is very likely that the stray
inductances and capacitances in the measuring circuit will
result in enough feedback of the conect sign for oscillations
(Z>~Rrmin)' Careful circuit design should be ahle to use
the known stability requirements to suppress oscillations.
2800 J. Appt. Phys .. Vol. 64, No.5, 1 September 1986 The shape of the current bias characteristic predicted by
the transmission-line model strongly resembles the experi
mental curve in Fig. 1 (a), especially if the parameters Rand
Z are optimized to fit the size and slope of the substair re
gions. The experimentally observed oscillations in Fig. 2 are
considerably more complicated than would be predicted by
the simple models, The actual measurement circuit consists
of inductance and capacitance of the probe tip, wiring induc
tance, and coax running into an unmatched voltmeter, The
transmission-line model should be thought of as an approxi
mation of a complicated multidimensional dynamical sys
tem which describes the actual circuit by a one-dimensional
nonlinear map. The strong similarities between the current
bias characteristics predicted by the RLC and transmission
line models suggest that this approximation may be a good
one.
In this work, we have shown experimental measure
ments of resonant tunneling diodes which show complex be
havior in the negative differential resistance region. We
point out that limit cycle oscillations can occur when nonlin
ear negative differential resistance elements interact with
resonant loads, and although the multiple steps in the experi
mental data cannot be explained using an RLC load, they are
reproduced in computationally efficient models which use
an idea! transmission line a.') a resonant load.
The authors would like to thank P. Hadley, S. Diamond,
and G. Sollner for helpful comments on the manuscript.
This work was supported by the Joint Services Electronics
Program, Contract No. DAAG29-84-K0047. E. S. H. ac
knowledges the support of an IBM Fellowship.
IT. C. L. G. Soilner, W. D. Goodhue, P. E. Tannenwald, C. D. Parker, and
D. D, Peck. App!. Phys. Lett. 43, 588 (1983).
'V. J. Goldman, D. C. Tsui, and J. E. Cunningham, Phys, Rev. Lett. 58,
1256 (1987).
'n. L. Berkowitz and R. A. Lux, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. B 5, 967 (1987).
·T. c. L G. Sollner, Phys. Rev. Lett. 59, 1622 (1987).
'L. O. Chua, C. A. Desoer, and E. S. Kuh, Linear and Nonlinear Circuits
(McGraw-Hili, New York, 1987), pp. 426-439.
OM. j, Feigenbaum, Physica 7D, 16 (1983).
7B. B. Mandelbrot, The Fractal Geometry of Nature (Freeman, San Fran
cisco, CA, 1982).
"W. F. Chow, Principles of Tunnel Diode Circliits (Wiley, New York,
1964), pp. 151-182.
9J. Nagumo and M. Shimura, Proc. IRE 49,1281 (1961).
lOT. 1. Shewchuk, J. M. Gering, P. C. Chapin, p, D. Coleman, W. Kopp, C.
K. Peng, and H. Morko,!, AppL Phys. Lett. 47, 986 (1985).
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12J. P. Gollub, T. O. Bnmner, and B. G. Danly, Science 200, 48 (1978).
uS. Wu, Proc. IEEE 75,1022 (1987).
Hellman, Lear, and Harris, Jr. 2800
........................................... :.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: .... :.: ........... .
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1.37620.pdf | Radiation generated by rotating electron beams
Y. Y. Lau
Citation: AIP Conference Proceedings 175, 210 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.37620
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.37620
View Table of Contents: http://aip.scitation.org/toc/apc/175/1
Published by the American Institute of Physics210
RADIATION GENERATED BY ROTATING ELECTRON BEAMS
Y. Y. Lau
Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375-5000
ABSTRACT
It is shown that the degree of bunching in a rotating electron
beam depends sensitively on the manner in which the equilibrium
rotation is supported. Maximization or elimination of small signal
growth can be achieved by adjusting the radial electric field and
the axial magnetic field which are needed to support the equilibrium
rotation. A simple dispersion relation is given for general
combinations of electric and magnetic fields, and for arbitrary
electron energy and beam current. The model encompasses a large
class of radiation sources currently under active investigation.
Some potential applications and proof-of-principle experiments are
indicated.
I. INTRODUCTION
There has been sustained interest in the interaction between a
rotating electron beam and its surrounding structure. This
seemingly old subject still plays a major role in the recent
developments in high power microwave electronics 1'2 and high current
cyclic accelerators. 3'4 Depending on the device, the electron
rotation is supported either by an axial magnetic field, or by a
radial electric field, or by a combination of both. Even for the
case of a thin beam, the crucial dependence of the beam dynamics on
the equilibrium type was noted only in the last few years. Here, we
summarize some of these recent findings. We shall show that, for a
given geometry and a given kinetic energy of the beam, highest small
signal growth is obtained if the rotation is supported by a radial
electric field alone. We shall also give the condition under which
the dynamical instabilities and the resistive wall instabilities are
minimized. As we shall see, these are the basic properties of space
charge waves on a rotating electron beam.
© 1988 American Institute of Physics
211
In this paper, we adopt a highly simplified model to mimic a
wide class of radiation sources (Fig. i). The analysis is self-
contained. We state from the outset that we focus mainly on the
longitudinal modes, i.e., on radiation generated by the bunching of
the electrons along their rotational orbits. The transverse modes,
which do not involve bunching but are also efficient modes of
operation (especially when wall corrugations are introduced) will be
addressed only briefly toward the end of this paper.
2. EOUILIBRIUM
For simplicity consider a thin cylindrical layer of electrons
which rotates concentrically about the z axis at velocity v = e O
Vo(r) = e r ~o(r) between two coaxial metallic pipes. Whatever
axial magnetic field B and radial electric field E which are O O
required to support the equilibrium rotation, v must satisfy the O
radial force balance:
2 V O e
YO r-- = - m-- (Eo + VoBo)" (i)
O
Here e < 0 is the electron charge, m is the electron rest mass, O
Yo = (I - v2/c2) -I/2 is the relativistic mass factor, and c is
O
the speed of light. It is important 5 to include the relativistic
effects once the electron kinetic energy exceeds 5 keV.
To label various types of equilibrium corresponding to different
devices, we introduce a dimensionless quantity h, defined by
-er E
h - o 3 2" (2)
moYoV O
2 is the ratio of the electric force to the Physically, yo h
centripedal force in equilibrium. From Eqs. (1) and (2) we may
characterize various electron devices according to the value of h
[Fig. i]:
212
9
MAGNETRON
--LIKE r O 1/7o 2 h
I / , ORBITRON
INVERTED-MAGNETRON
--LIKE
LARGE ORBIT GYROTRON,
PENIOTRON,
GYROMAGNETRON
Fig. I. Correspondence between various electron devices and the
values of h. A detailed comparative study of these devices was
given in Ref. 6.
7-12 (i) h d 0 corresponds to the large orbit gyrotron,
peniotron,13-17 _ 18-21,8 22-24,7,12 gyromagne[ron, Astron, etc.,
where the equilibrium rotation is supported by an axial
magnetic field alone, and the only electric field is due to
the beam's, own charge (E ° = 0).
(ii) h = I/y~ corresponds to the orbitron model, 25-29'6 in which
the rotation is supported solely by a radial electric field
[B ° = 0].
O
(iii) h > > I/y~ corresponds to an inverted magnetron, with the
cathode at the outer conductor and the anode at the inner
conductor. 30 The rotation is approximately given by the E x B
drift (centrifugal force is small).
(iv) h << - I/y~ corresponds to a conventional magnetron, with the
cathode at the inner conductor and the anode at the outer
conductor 31'32 Again, the rotation is approximately given by
the E x B drift and the centrifugal force is small compared
with either the electric or Lorentz force in equilibrium.
(v) The planar limit is recovered formally as r ~ = (fixing Eo,
Vo). That is, ]h[ ~ = corresponds to the planar limit.
213
The
governed
equation
metallic 3. DISPERSION RELATIONSHIP
self-excited modes in the system described in Sec. 2 are
by a rather complicated second order ordinary differential
subject to the appropriate boundary conditions at the
walls. 26'33 For a thin beam, the growth rates have been
obtained analytically to two orders in z/R, where ~ is the beam
thickness and R is the mean radius of the beam. The dispersion
relation takes into account of the effects of the DC self field of
the beam, and has passed various tests, including comparisons with a
direct numerical integration of the governing equation. 26 Given
below is a heuristic derivation of just the leading term (in ~/R) of
the dispersion relation, intending to illustrate the dominant
physical processes and the salient features. A more detailed
discussion of various issues is given in Ref. 6.
As usual, we shall first calculate the density response of the
beam to some imposed electric field. A dispersion relation is
obtained when this electric field is required to be excited by the
density perturbation.
Ignoring axial motion and axial variation, one anticipates that
the rotating thin beam interacts most strongly with the azimuthal
component of the perturbed electric field (Ele) which the beam
experiences. This interaction would be very strong if this field
co-rotates with the beam. Conservation of energy gives
e VoEle = d ~/dt (3)
where e is the total energy (kinetic and potential) of a beam
electron. Upon using the chain rule, we express
de/dr = (de/dt)/(d e/d~) = (~/R)/(de/dc) (4)
in terms of the linear azimuthal displacement ~ of an electron from
its unperturbed position. Thus, (3) becomes, upon linearization,
~" = e R VoEle(dmo/d~) = e Ele/Mef f, (5)
where the equilibrium value e = m is expressed as a function of the o
particle energy. 34'35 In analogy with the force law "F = ma", we
define in (5) an effective mass Mef f = (R Vod~o/de)-l. It is not
difficult to show from (I) and (2) that, with 8 ° = Vo/C,
214
I; o + "eff= mo o
which can either be positive or neEative [Fig. 2]. (6)
I~O0"
MASS
ill I MASS
I
I
1
-1 _~o 2 o
2
-1
/ Meff
"toMo
"yo 2
'- "NEGATIVE" MASS
i 11.,,o 2 I
I
I i
Fig. 2. The normalized effective mass (Meff/y ° mo) as a
function of h.
For a perturbation proportional to exp(i~t - i~e), d/dt stands
for i(m - ~o ) where ~ is the azimuthal mode number. Associated
with the azimuthal displacement ~ is a surface charge density
perturbation al, given by
% ~_~ -i~% e Ele (7)
~i = R ae - R
(~ -~ ~o)2Heff '
in which a ° is the unperturbed surface charge density and EIe is
evaluated at the beam radium r = R. In writing the last expression,
we have used (5). Equation (7) expresses the surface charge density
perturbation on the beam in response to some imposed azimuthal
215
electric field. Note that the various equilibrium types and the
dynamics enter in Mef f (Fig. 2) and that the electromagnetic
properties of the structure have thus far not entered into
consideration.
To complete the analysis, we need to determine what kind of
perturbed electric field would be excited if there is a charge
perturbation a I on the beam. Since Maxwell equations are linear the
field Ele at the beam radius is proportional to al; the
proportionality constant is ig:
EIe = ig ~i' (8)
where g is proportional to the "impedance" which depends only on e,~
and on the surrounding structure. 34'35'7'26 Inserting (8) into (7),
we obtain the dispersion relationship for space charge waves on a
rotating electron beam:
:_ r 1.
This is the dispersion relationship to the lowest order in ~IR, if
we represent the surface density a ° = Po ~' Po being the volume
density of the beam.
4. SMALL SIGNAL GROWTH OF SPACE CHARGE WAVES
The dispersion relation (9) is valid for general container
geometry and for arbitrary energy Vo and h, as long as the beam is
sufficiently thin. 26 For convenience of discussion of the beam
dynamics, we shall assume g to be real and positive, (except if
otherwise stated). We may draw the following conclusions regarding
the growth of the space charge waves on a rotating electron beam:
(a) When h = 0, Eq. (9) indicates that enhanced bunching
of the beam occurs as a result of the "negative mass" instability.
This instability growth is a result of the relativistic effect 34.
Physically, the electron rotation frequency, [e l Bo/Yomo, is a
decreasing function of energy (yo). A test electron in front of
some charge condensation on the beam is accelerated; its mass
increases but its rotational frequency decreases. Thus, the test
216
particle in effect falls back to the condensation and the
condensation grows. This "negative mass" instability [cf. Eqs. (5),
(6)] has been known to place a limit on the beam current in cyclic
accelerators. It is shown to be identical 10 to the cyclotron maser
instability when this growing space charge wave is synchronized with
_ 37,38 the waveguide structure. The radiation generated in gyrotrons
is a product of this interaction.
(b) The "negative mass" effect persists as long as
h > - 8~/2. It is maximized with respect to h when h = i/~, as is
readily demonstrated from Eq. (9). This case corresponds to the
orbitron configuration [Figs. 1,2]. In other words, for a given
rotational energy and a given geometry, the instability is most
pronounced when the equilibrium rotation is supported by a radial
electric field alone ( as in the orbitron model given in Refs.
25,26), regardless of the beam energy. From Fig.2, one sees that
the orbitron growth is particularly pronounced at low energies (low
go ).
(c) We digress to remark that the negative mass effect
disappears if [ cf. Eq.(9), Fig. 2 ]
- ~2o/2. (iO) h <
That is, negative mass instability may be stabilized by a negative
radial DC electric field of a suitable magnitude. 26 In terms of an
external potential V imposed between the inner conductor at r = a
and the outer conductor at r = b, the stability condition reads
levl > (m c2/2)e4y3~n(b/a). (ll) o oo
Note that this stabilization mechanism is independent of the beam
velocity spread, and is insensitive to the beam current or container
geometry, or mode number. Although it is impractical to stabilize a
high energy electron beam against the negative mass instability by
this method due to the 7~ dependence in (ll), it becomes attractive,
however, if this method is applied to cyclic acceleration of high
energy ions (~ 500 MeV) of intermediate atomic mass (atomic number
of order twenty).
217
(d) If the wall is lossy, g becomes complex and the
resistive instabilities would result whether the effective mass is
positive or negative. 39 However, even this resistive instability
can be stabilized if h = - ~/2, as is evident in the dispersion
U
relation (9). Physically, when h = - ~/2, the effective mass of a
rotating electron is infinite 40 [cf. Fig." 2]. The beam is very
rigid azimuthally and is reluctant to transfer its rotational energy
to the resistive wall, which is the physical mechanism for the
excitation of the resistive instability.
(e) The negative mass instability should disappear in the
planar geometry limit. This intuition is also reflected in the
dispersion relation (9). In the planar limit, h ~ ~ by (2) and the
right hand member of (9) tends to zero. What remains is then the
diocotron instability (i.e., Kelvin-Helmholtz instability) which
arises from the velocity shear in the equilibrium E ° x B ° drift.
This shear is due to the DC self electric field of the beam and its
effect enters only 26 in the higher order term (in T/R) not displayed
in the dispersion relation (9). Thus, the diocotron instability is
the residual instability when the curvature effect is absent.
DRIFT TUBE
1
E BEAM
Fig. 3. Schematic drawing of an amplifier configuration to test the
response of an electron beam to an external input signal.
218
All of above predictions regarding the dynamical dependence of
beam bunching on the equilibrium type could be tested in a
controlled experiment such as the one proposed in Fig. 3. The
response of the electron beam may be monitored at the output cavity,
after an external radio frequency (rf) signal is impressed upon the
beam at the input cavity. The orbit of the beam is bent either by a
magnetic field B ° or by an electrostatic field, or by both. The
polarity and the magnitude of the externally imposed voltage (V) and
the external magnetic field B ° may be adjusted to correspond to
various values of h [Figs. 1,3]. Such an experiment may be carried
out with an electron beam of energy < 10 KeV, B ° < 100G, IEol < 5
KeV/cm, and beam current < 0.1A.
Note that under suitable conditions, the configuration in
Fig. 3 serves as a power amplifier. 36 The input rf signal modulates
the beam. The space charge wave grows as the beam propagates along
the circular drift tube. Accompanying a propagating density
perturbation is a strong rf current which excites the output cavity,
where the amplified signal is extracted. A high power amplifier
41 experiment based on this configuration is currently being planned.
5. DISCUSSION
In this section we shall address several issues of current
interest.
As we have seen above, the cyclotron maser derives its energy
from the rotational motion of the electrons. A variation of this
device, the cyclotron auto-resonance maser (CARM), utilizes both the
rotational energy and the considerable axial kinetic energy of the
spiralling electrons. 42-45 CARM is attractive in producing high
frequency (~ lO0's GHz) radiation, using only a modest magnetic
field and electron beams of several hundred KeV. A simple argument
would show, however, that the successful operation of CARM would
require a rather good quality electron beam, and, if an ordinary
wavegulde circuit is used, the avoidance of the absolute
instabilities near waveguide cut-off. 46 A CARM employing a quasi-
optical configuration has been proposed 47 to alleviate these
difficulties.
219
The strong negative mass behavior exhibited in the orbitron
configuration implies that a beam may easily be bunched when its
rotation is supported only by an outward radial electric field. In
spite of its impressive small signal gain9 especially at low
energies, the radiation generated in an orbitron derives mainly from
the potential energy of the system. The reason follows. At non-
relativistic energies, v ° = ~o r = constant [cf. Eq. (1)]. As the
rotating electrons lose energy to the rf, they fall to a smaller
radius, maintaining the same linear velocity v . Moreover, as the
O
electrons release their potential energy by falling to smaller
radii, their angular frequency m ° increases, leading to a gradual
detune from the mode of operation. Thus, unless some form o£ phase
focusing is introduced, the operation efficiency of orbitron may be
limited to only a few percent. The nonlinear theory 28 showed that
this is indeed the case. Efficiency enhancement in the orbitron
configuration remains to be demonstrated.
So far, we have focused only on the radiation resulting from
the bunching of a rotating electron beam along its orbit. It should
be emphasized that a rotating beam may also yield its energy to
radiation without a bunching process, especially when ridges or
periodic structures are introduced on the walls of the waveguide
circuits. 6'38'48 In that case, under suitable conditions, the rf
field extracts the energy of thebeam by causing the beam electrons
to migrate in the transverse direction, into a region of stronger
fringing fields set up in the ridges. Magnetrons and peniotrons are
prime examples where this transverse migration plays a dominant role
in the energy conversion.
13-17 In the case of peniotron, there is a general consensus
that the transverse mode operation may reach a very high theoretical
efficiency. In some examples, efficiencies reaching a hundred per
cent have been simulated. One should also remember, however, that
the presence of waveguide ridges or periodic structure may also
18,19,21 encourage harmonic generation of the longitudinal modes.
When there is a large number of periodic structures on the
circumference, it might not be a simple matter to predict~ or even
220
to identify, the mode of operation, especially when there are axial
variations (in the tuning magnetic field, for instance). The
transverse modes might compete with the longitudinal modes. The
former ones might be more efficient but the latter ones might have a
lower starting current. Nevertheless, efficient operation using
either class of modes would lead to a substantial reduction of the
magnetic field requirement.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research. It
was an outgrowth of my earlier collaboration with David Chernin
(Ref. 26).
221
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223
DISCUSSION
MARSHALL: You mentioned the low efficiency of the orbitron. What
about its coherence? Also, do you understand theoretically the
mechanism of how coherence is obtained, or is that obscure?
LAU: Alexeff, kept telling me that he saw clean spectrum in his
orbitron oscillators. Much work remained to be done in the theory of
mode control, however.
TRIVELPIECE: To some extent, orbltrons look llke an electrostatic mass
analyzer, a 127-degree mass spectrometer. Has anybody tried to inject
and use that effect for spatial focusing as well as bunching along the
beam direction?
REISER: During the electron ring work we did in the early '70s at
Maryland it came upon me that an electric field produced by an inner
conductor inside of the ring could stabilize the negative mass
instability. I was trying to write something out, but I did not publish
it, and so I was very pleased to hear that Y. Y. Lau is now developing
a theory on this effect.
The other day he told me about this 127 degree spectrometer, which
matches the parameters of our electron-beam experiment in Maryland. It
would be very nice first to grow the instability by choosing a good
combination of electric and magnetic fields; and second to suppress it,
so that in one case you get bunching and in another case you don't. It
is a nice academic experiment.
As a comment, I think the major problem is that for high power you
need stronger focusing than the weak focusing.
DAVIDSON: I would like to agree with your enthusiasm for the CARM as a
microwave source concept. I think one point you made was very impor-
tant. It is very sensitive to axial momentum spread. There are a
number of experiments being planned around the country, and I think it
is quite important that these experiments have very high beam quality.
Otherwise, the experiments may fall even though it is still a good
concept.
|
1.584514.pdf | Etching of GaAs for patterning by irradiation with an electron beam and Cl2 molecules
K. Akita, M. Taneya, Y. Sugimoto, H. Hidaka, and Y. Katayama
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B 7, 1471 (1989); doi: 10.1116/1.584514
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.584514
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvstb/7/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 140.254.87.149 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 22:52:38Etching of GaAs for patterning by Irradiation with an electron beam
and CI2 molecules
K. Akita, M. Taneya, Y. Sugimoto, H. Hidaka, and Y. Katayama
Optoelectronics Technology Research Laboratory, 5-5 Tohkodai, Trukuba 300-26, Japan
(Received 30 May 1989; accepted 7 July 1989)
Etching of GaAs for patterning by an electron beam (EB) and C]' molecules is described. When a
GaAs substrate is exposed to a 10 ke V EB and C12 molecules, etching of GaAs is observed only in
the ED-scanned area. Etch rates are obtained as a function of substrate temperature.
Morphologies of the etched surface are rather smooth and the photoluminescence intensity
indicates that this etching process introduces much less damage to the sample than some
processes using ions.
I. INTRODUCTION
There has recently been great interest in the in situ wafer
processing of III-V compound semiconductors in an ultra
high vacuum (UHV) environment. Considering the lateral
patterning process for in situ wafer processing, it is obvious
that an ordinary organic resist film cannot be used because of
its incompatibility with the subsequent crystal growth.
Maskless etching using some energetic ions or electrons
seems a hopeful candidate for such patterning processes. To
date, some studies on the mask less etching for lateral pat
terning have been reported. For instance, Ochiai et al. re
ported the focused ion beam (FIB) -assisted Cl2 etching of
GaAs/ AlGaAs using Ga+ ions.1 Also, Temkin et al. indi
cated that FIB sputtering was effective for patterning an ul
trathin InGaAs layer which would act as a mask for dry
etching of the underlying InP layer.2 Although such FIB
processes have the advantage of maskless patterning, they
create a severe problem, that is, ion-induced subsurface
damage of the processed sample.3 The ion-induced damage
is extended rather deeply into the sample even when the ion
energy is reduced to 100 eV.4 Accordingly, some patterning
processes using electrons are the most likely alternative be
cause they appear to introduce much less damage than ion
beam processes.;) There have been reports about the electron
beam (EB)-induced etching of Si using SF6 gas6 and XeF2
gas.7•X In IU-V compound semiconductors, we showed EB
induced etching of GaAs using Cl2 gas for the first time.9
In this paper we describe some details of the characteris
tics of GaAs etched by an EB and Cl2 gas. The etch rate is
measured under various conditions of substrate tempera
ture. Surface morphologies and photoluminescence (PL)
spectra of the etched sample indicate that this EB-induced
Cl2 etching is one of the desired damage-free etching pro
cesses.
II, EXPERIMENTAL
Figure 1 shows the etching system utilized. The etching
chamber was pumped with a sputter ion pump (SIP) and a
turbomolecular pump (TMP), which kept the base pressure
below 1 X 10-6 Pa. A load-lock chamber was installed for
exchanging samples without exposing the etching chamber
to the air. The EB column consisted of two chambers which
were differentially pumped for the purpose of preventing the ZrO/W electron emitter from corrosion caused by the Cl,
gas. The EE was accelerated to 10 keY and focused on th~
sample surface at a spot size of about 1 ,11m. The EB was
raster scanned in areas such as 200 X 260 ,11m2 with a scan
speed of 10 ms/line and 500 lines/frame. To introduce the
Cl2 gas into the etching chamber, a thin stainless-steel noz
zle, which was located 1 mm above the sample was used and
directed toward the EB-scanning area. A sample stage with a
heater was used to control sample temperatures in the range
from room temperature to 300°C.
The samples in this experiment were n-type GaAs sub
strates with a (00 1) orientation and a carrier concentration
of 4 X 1017 cm -3. The usual preparation of the sample for
EB-induced Cl2 etching was as follows: First, the substrate
was rinsed in an organic solvent and etched in a solution of
H2S04:H202:H20 = 3:1:1 at 80°C for 60-90 s to remove the
layer damaged by polishing. The substrate was then treated
by trichloroethane, acetone, methanol, and de-ionized wa
ter, and dried with N2 gas. This treatment is believed to form
an adsorbate and/or a chemically reacted thin layer at the
substrate surface. Samples prepared in this way were loaded
through the load-lock chamber into th~ etching chamber,
where EB-induced Cl2 etching was carried out. The average
electron flux was varied from 1 X lOLl to 1 X 1015 elcc-
EB COLUMN
c:> SIP -C
BUFFER -7 ,
CHAMBER "'-----7
TO LOAD LOCK
CHAMBER
TMP/S!P c:> TMP/SIP
CI2 PRESSURE
CONTROLLER
j
FIG. 1. Schematic illustration of the etching system. The EB column is
differentially pumped by TMP and SIP to protect the ZrO/W elect roll
emitter from corrosion.
1471 J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 7 (6), Nov/Dec 1989 0734-211X/89!061471-04$01.00 Cc) 1989 American Vacuum Society 1471
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trons/cm2 s by changing the beam current and the EB
scanned area. Chlorine flux was varied from 2 X 1015 to
4 X 1017 molecules/cm2 s using a el2 pressure controller
with a mechanical leak valve. Substrate temperature was
varied between 25 and 150°C.
Photoluminescence spectra of the etched area were ob
tained to evaluate the etching-induced damage. In these
measurements, the 514.5 nm line of an Ar+ ion laser whose
intensity was 50 m W was focused onto the sample surface at
a diameter of -200 ,urn. A Jovin-Yvon HR-320 monochro
mator with a 600 groove/mm grating and a cooled S 1-type
photomultiplier were used for the measurement.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The photograph of a typical sample directly patterned by
the EB-induced Cl2 etching is shown in Fig, 2, which con
firms that only the area exposed to both EB and Clz mole
cules was etched and resulted in pattern etching. The EB
induced elz etching of GaAs is affected by substrate
temperature, the Clz flux, and the EB flux as described be
low.
A. Etch rate dependence on substrate temperature
The time dependence of etch depth measured by a Tencor
Alpha Step is shown in Fig. 3 (a). The substrate temperature
was varied between 50 and ! 50 "C. Cl2 flux and EB flux were
fixed at 7XlOl6 molecules!cm2s and, ~2XlO14 elec
trons/ cm" s (~3 nA for a scanning area of 120 X 90 I1m,2)
respectively. Etch depth increases linearly with etching time,
although there is a lag time before the etching begins when
the substrate temperature is lower. This lag time reflects the
existence of some adsorbate and/or a chemically reacted
thin layer on the GaAs surface.
The etch rate of GaAs increases as the substrate tempera
ture increases. An Arrhenius plot of the etch rates is shown
in Fig. :3 (b). The open circles indicate the data obtained in
this study and the closed ones indicate the etch rate in a Cl2
i ETCH~D 300 ~m
AREA
FIG. 2. Microphotograph of the sample etched at 70·C for 60 min, which
was taken using a differential interference microscope.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. S, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 (a)
'2
E .....
E S
W I-«
Ct:
::z::
U I-
W
(b) 1.5 ,...-----------,
o
102
10 .e12 • 7)(10" molecules/em2. sec
.EB • _2)(1014 electrons/em!. sec
150 'C 100 'C
o 10 20 30 40 50 60
TIME (min)
TEMPERATURE ('C)
100 50 20
o EB induced CI, etchin9
• el. gas etching
(ofler Furuhola et al)
10~~--~---------L------~
2.5 3.0 3.5 1472
FIG. 3. (al Time dependencc of etch depth at the various substrate tempera
tures. The CI2 flux .pC12 and the averaged EB flux .pEB were fixed at the
values listed in the iigure. (bl Arrhcnius plot of the etching rate. (O) Re
sults of this study; (.) etching rates reported in the Cl2 gas phase etching of
a (001) GaAs by Furuhata et at. (see Ref. 10).
gas phase etching of a GaAs epitaxial layer with a clean
surface, which was reported by Furuhata et al. 10 These data
indicate the same activation energy of about 7 kcal/mol.
The coincidence of etch rate between this EB-assisted Clz
etching and the Clz thermally activated etching suggests that
the main mechanism of the EB-induced el2 etching is the
same as that of the C12 thermally activated etching as de
scribed in Sec. III B. An important difference of the result is
that etch patterns can be formed on GaAs by this EB-in
duced Cl2 etching.
B. Lag time ofEB~induced CI2 etching and adsorbate
As described in previous Sec. in A, there is a lag time
before the etching begins. To make this lag time clear, an
etching experiment was performed. In this experiment, the
GaAs substrate was chemically etched and treated by trich
loroethane, acetone, methanol, and de-ionized water, and
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 140.254.87.149 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 22:52:381413 Akita et sl.: Etching of GaAs for patterning by Irradiation
E .a-
Z i-n..
~
Z
U i-
!.oJ 1.5 ,----------- ............
1.0
0.5
o ~EB
(eleclrons/cm2. sec)
2)(1014
3)(10'3
o 10 20 30 40 50 60
TIME (min)
FIG. 4. Time dependence of etch depth for samples held in air for 60 min
prior to loading into the vacuum chamber. Lag time becomes shorter as the
EB flux increases.
exposed to air for 60 min prior to loading into the vacuum
chamber. The EB-induced Cl2 etching was carried out with a
C12 flux of 3,6X 1017 molecules/cm2 s and a constant elec
tron current of ~ 3.5 nA. Substrate temperature was fixed at
100 "C. The EB scanning area was 40 X 55, 90 X 120, or
200 X 260 p..m2, which corresponded to an EB flux of
1 X 1015, 2x 1014, and 4X 1013 electrons/cm2 s, respectively.
The time dependence of the etch depth obtained in this
experiment is shown in Fig. 4. The time at which the EB
induced el2 etching begins depends on the EB-scanned area,
i.e., the smaller the area is, the shorter the delay time be
comes, while the etch rates are almost the same. In the
smaller scanned area, the surface was irradiated by a dense
EB flux. This dependence of lag time on EB flux can be
understood by assuming the existence of an adsorbate
and/or a chemically reacted thin layer on the surface, which
is removed by the combined irradiation with an EB and C12
molecules. The lag time is thought to be the time required for
the removal of this layer from the GaAs surface, which pre
sumably depends on the EB flux.
An adsorbate and/or a chemically reacted thin layer ap
pears to be the origin of patterning in this EB-induced Cl2
etching. The reasons are that CO etching occurs only in the
area irradiated by both the EB and C12 and (ii) etching char
acteristics are similar to elz thermally activated etching as
described in Sec. IlIA. In Auger electron spectroscopy mea
surements, oxygen and carbon were detected on the sample
surface before the EB induced C12 etching, suggesting that
the adsorbate and/or the reacted layer likely consists of oxy
gen and/or carbon-containing substances.
Co Morphologies of the etched surface
One of the important features ofEB-induced etching is the
quality of the morphologies that can be obtained. Figure 5
shows microphotographs taken with a Nomarski micro
scope of the samples etched at 100 ·C. In all the samples
shown in this figure, the etch depth was constant at ~ 50 nm.
When the el2 flux is small, the etched surface shows a slight
ly rough morphology. However, the larger the e12 flux, the
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. EI, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 (bl
tC!! .. 2 x,d'
moleculesl em:!! • S
T s '" 100 "C 1473
(c)
flCI! .. 7 x,cf
molecules/em:;!' S
FIG. 5. Microphotographs of the sampl~s etched at a substrate temperature
of 100 T. The etch depths of these samples arc about 50 nm.
smoother the surface becomes. The morphology of the sam
ple shown in Fig. S(c) (C12 flux = 7X 1016 molecules/
cm2 s) is excellent. Such good morphologies would be desir
able for subsequent crystal growth.
D. Photoluminescence measurements
To evaluate the damage induced by the etching process,
PL spectra were obtained at room temperature in the initial
sample and in the sample etched by EB-induced Cl2 etching.
The PL spectra of the near-band-edge emission were mea
sured. These spectra were much the same at the peak wavc
length, the fun width of half-maximum intensity, and the
total PL intensity, which indicates that the BB-induced el2
etching introduces less damage in the sample.
In the case of Ga + FIB-assisted elz etching, the PL inten
sity of the etched region decreased. For example, when the
energy ofGai FIB was 10 keY, the PL intensity decreased
to l/30th-l/ 40th of that of the unetched region? This dif
ference of PL intensity in samples processed by EB-induced
elz etching to that in FIB-assisted el2 etching is thought to
be due to the difference of momentum transfer to the lattice.
From this point of view, EB-induced el2 etching seems
promising as a damage-free etching technique.
IV. SUMMARY
Etching of GaAs for patterning by an EB and a Cll gas
was described. When a GaAs substrate was exposed to a 10
ke V EB and Clz molecules, etching of GaAs is observed only
in the EB-scanned area. The dependence of the etch rate on
the sample temperature suggests that the main mechanism
ofEB-induced elz etching is the same as that of Cl2 gas phase
etching. Patterning in this method is considered to occur by
the removal of an adsorbate and/or a chemically reacted
thin layer by the combined EB and el2 irradiations. The
merit ofEB-induced ell etching lies in the lower damage to
the etched sample, which renders it more suitable for subse
quent epitaxial growth.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The authors would like to thank Dr. 1. Hayashi for discus
sions.
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ION. Furuhata, H. Miyamoto, A. Okamoto, and K. Ohata, J. App!. Phys.
65,168 (1989).
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1.342603.pdf | The hole photoionization cross section of EL2 in GaAs1−x P x
P. Silverberg, P. Omling, and L. Samuelson
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 3721 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342603
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342603
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 09:18:16I A. Chiang, M. W. Gels, and L. Pfeiffer, Eds., Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Free.
53 (1986).
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The hole photolonization cross section of El2 in GaAs1_X P x
P. Silverberg, P. Omling, and L. Samuelson
Department of Solid State Physics, University of Lund, Box 118, S-221 00 Lund, Sweden
(Received 31 October 1988; accepted for publication 3 January 1989)
The hole photoionization cross section d:, of EL2 is determined at T = 80 K for different x in
GaAs 1 _ x p x' From these data, the energy position ofthe EL2 level relative to the valence band
is determined for different alloy compositions. The results are compared with the previously
determined energy positions of the EL2 level relative to the conduction band and with the
corresponding change in the direct band gap with aHoy composition.
In the attempt to identify the notorious EL2 defect in
GaAs, various techniques and methods have been used. I
One such method is the investigation of the EL2 level as a
function of aHoy composition. The information obtained
from these measurements includes electronic localization,
influence of band structure on the defect energy position,
and, sometimes, identification of the defect by tracing it
from one binary compound to the other where the defect
might already have been identified.
In the case of EL2, only a few attempts have been made
to trace the energy level through an aUoy system.2-8 The
most detailed investigations, so far, are in the GaAsl _ x p x
aHoy system where the properties ofEL2 have been investi
gated using different space-charge techniques.6•7 Using
deep-level transient spectroscopy CDLTS) and photocapa
chance measurements, the EL2 level (Ec -EEL2) was
traced from GaAs (direct band gap) to the indirect band
gap side (x>0.46). From an extrapolation of the deduced
energy values for different values of x to x = 1.0 (GaP), the
energy position for the corresponding EL2 candidate in GaP
was suggested. Unfortunately, the spread in the data result
ed in quite a wide "possible" energy range for the EL2 level
in GaP, if at all present there. It would, therefore, be of great
importance to reduce the spread in the data, making a more
accurate prediction of the energy position in GaP possible.
Recently, a method of measuring the hole photoioniza
tion cross section 0-;; of GaAs:EL2 at low temperatures was
presented. I;> This method is, however, also suitable for mea
surements of the d:, cross sections of EL2 in alloy systems,
such as the GaAsl _ x P x :EL2 system. If these data could be
obtained, the complementary binding energy of the EL21ev
el (i.e., relative to the valence band (EEL2 -E v) J for differ
ent values of x could be deduced and the accuracy in the determined energy dependence of the EL2 level with alloy
composition could be increased.
The purpose of this communication is to report on ex
perimental ~ data for different aHoy compositions, deduce
the EL2 binding energy relative to the valence band as a
function of aHoy composition x, and to compare these new
data with those previously obtained from measurements on
the a;: cross sections.
The experimental photocapacitance measurements
were performed using Schottky diodes fabricated on n-type
GaAs1 _ -' P x' grown by metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy
(MOVPE), with free-carrier concentrations in the range
5 X lOl5_2 X 1016 em -~3 and grown-in EL2 concentrations in
the range 5X 1Ou-2x 1014 cm-3• A description of the ex
perimental equipment and a review of the photocapacitance
technique in general can be found in Refs. 6 and 10, respec
tively. The measurements of the hole photoionization cross
section (T~ were performed using the initial slope technique
and the optical filling procedure presented in Ref. 9. The
initial occupation of the EL2 levels (EL2 levels empty) was
set by illumination with 1.38-eV photons. Since (7~ ~!7~, al
most ail EL2 levels are empty, and the initial slope technique
can be used directly at low temperatures. The experimental
data from such a~ measurements at T = 80 K are presented
in Fig. 1 for x = 0.0, 0,04, 0.08, 0.11, and 0.20. The EL2
origin of the signal was verified by the quenching properties.
After iHumination with intense light centered around 1.1 e V,
the signal was quenched. Also shown in Fig. 1 are data ob
tained at T = 150 K for the electron photoionization cross
section (T~ from Ref. 7.
Since the energy position of the EL2 level in GaAs has
previously been determined, and since, furthermore, the
shape of the d:, spectrum does not change significantly with
3721 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (9),1 May 1989 0021-8979/89/093721-03$02.40 ® 1989 American institute of Physics 3721
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 09:18:1610-16 10-15
p~& -.. 'f )( ti:t*.., *
'" 10-17 ~ ,;:< c" " ... ~ 10-16
E ~ ):( ~ ,a;sf!IP
"if x ~ 111111'" '" ~ " II '" 'J ,," e.,8 *** c:
0 )( 0 &~ *
13 :'X f!:$~ ~
" .",. is >I< (I) 1 O-~8 ". · TOO 10-17 tJ) " " .,.0 to * c 0.04 (f) x .... 008 Ul , 1. : 0" .,:" 0 ... ".. * p" 020 0
(0 " o '" lef! axis
() : *"'" 10-18 a 10-19 0.. '"
0 .. ~ * I {a.oo
~: t crO is 0.04
n ... 0.08 .. A '" 0.27
10.20 I '" ,Ight axis " , , . '10-19
0.7 0.9 1.1 1.3
Photon energy (eV)
FIG. 1. Optical cross sections a:, (this work) and d,; (from Ref. 7) for EL2
in GaAs"I\. The d; data were obtained at 80 K, and the d,; data were
obtained at 150 K.
alloying, it is possible to determine the EL2 energy-level po
sition for different values of x by measuring the shift of the
measured d}, (x) spectra relative to the (J"~ (x = 0) spectrum.
The shift with alloying is interpreted as the shift ofthe ener
gy position orEL2 from the position in GaAs, and the energy
position of EL2 relative to the valence-band edge, can thus
be determined. In the same way, shifts in the d;, cross sec
tions were interpreted as energy shifts of the EL2 level rela
tive to the conduction-band edge. To a first approximation
the energy position determined in this way is independent of
the temperature used for measurements (i.e., the a~ cross
sections can be obtained at a different temperature than the
if,; data).
The energy position of EL2, determined from the a~
measurements (this communication) and from (J";: measure
ments (from Ref. 7), are plotted as a function of the aHoy
composition in Fig. 2. The composition dependence of the
energy difference between the r conduction band and the
valence band is given by Eg = 1.508 + 1.366x
+ O.174x(x ~ 1) eV,l1 which for x lower than 0.46 corre-
sponds to the band gap. The good agreement between the
two measurements reduces the previously obtained uncer
tainty in the slope of the ELl level with alloy composition.
The slope is determined to be 6 meV /% (solid line in Fig. 2),
a value which is considered accurate, at least on the direct
band-gap side.
I t should be noted that the spread in these optical data is
much smaller than the spread in the data determined from
thermal methods, even though the effect of alloy broadening
was accounted for in the latter case. A complication with the
thermal data is the capture processes. The thermal emission
rate e;, is related to the capture cross section (J";, by the de
tailed balance relationship 12 e;, = O':,utl1Nc
X exp( -AGJkT), where Un, is the thermal velocity, Nc is
the effective density of states, and AGn is the change in
Gibb's free energy when an electron is emitted into the con-
3722 J. Appi. Phys., Vol. 65, No.9, 1 May 1989 >
~
-0 15 c:
CIl
.D
<D
<..:> c
(!)
<ii > 1.0
'0
0.
.9
E ,g 0.5
>.
e>
<D c:
UJ
Valence Band
0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3
X in GaAs1•x Px
FIG. 2. EL2 energy position plotted as a function of x in GaAs, -xP X' The
circles (0) denote values obtained from ~ data and show the energy posi
tion from the valence band. The crosses ( + ) denote data obtained from a;;
data and show the energy position relative to the conduction band. The
hand structure is plotted at 77 K.
duction band from EL2. The thermal energy has not been
compensated for changes in the capture cross section due to
alloying. This might explain the divergence between the
thermal and optical data especially on the indirect band-gap
side (x> 0.46).7
In case an EL21evel does exist in GaP, the present data
[with EEU-EV=O.78 eV for x=O and
a(EEI.2 -Ev )/ax = 6 meV 1% PJ give the energy position
of such a level at EEL2 -E v = 1.38 eV (or Ec -EEI.2
= 0.97 + 0.05 e V) for x = 1.0. Further work on the indirect
band-gap side is, however, needed in order to see if this pre
diction will be helpful when one tries to identify the EL2
counterpart in GaP.
This work was supported by the Swedish Natural
Science Research Council and the Swedish Board for Tech
nical Development. We would also like to thank Khalil Ah
mad for assistance with the photocapacitance measure
ments.
's. Makram·Ebied.l'. I"anglade, and G. M. Martin, Semi-Insulating III-V
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Silverberg, Omling, and Samuelson 3722
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Doping of InP and GalnAs with S during metalorganic vapor .. phase epitaxy
R. A. Logan, T. Tanbun-Ek, and A. M. Sergent
AT&T Bell Laboratori<?s, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
(Received 26 September 1988; accepted for publication 5 January 1989)
The doping characteristics of S in the metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxial growth of InP and
GalnAs are studied using three different but consistent methods of determining the doping
level in the crystal, Hall effect, electrochemical C-V profiling and by C-Vbias over distances of
~O<5 p.m. It is shown that under the same growth conditions the doping level in InP is 3.5
times lal"ger than in GaInAs and increases lOO-fold when the growth temperature is decreased
from 625 to 525 "c. S is shown to be a useful donor, essentially completely ionized at room
temperature, easily incorporated at levels .s 1018 em--3 into metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy
growth at 625 ·C where crystal morphology is optimized and at high levels _1020 cm-3 to
form low-impedance n-contact layers with growth at 525 "C.
The donor sulfur may be conveniently introduced as a
dopant in vapor-phase epitaxy since it is avaiJable as a stable
mixture ofH2S in Hz, with Hz being the carrier gas generally
used in metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy (MOVPE). The
molecule H2S readily dissociates at the growth temperature
(500-650 ·C). S is a donor residing on the group-V subIat
tice so that it competes with the group-V constituent in crys
tal growth. The growth ofInP from phosphine (PHJ) and
trimethylindium (TMln) is nearly independent of the PH3
flow rate (above a minimum level) but depends linearly on
the TMIn flow rate. 1 The competition between the two vola
tile constituents P and S for the group-V sub lattice sites in
the growth process has not been studied in the GalnAsP
MOVPE system. In addition, the utility of this growth pro
cess requires control of the doping levels to provide low
resistance contacts to high-current density devices such as
lasers. This requirement often dictates the growth of an addi
tional contacting layer where the dopant solubility is high
and the contact resistance can be optimized. In GaAsl
AIGaAs lasers, aGe-doped GaAs contacting layer is rou
tinely used to provide a low-resistance contact to the
AIGaAs cladding layer since the Ge ionization energy in
creases rapidly with Al concentration, reducing the carrier
concentration and hence the layer conductivity. 2
The objective of this study is therefore to characterize
the dopant properties of S in MOVPE growth of lnP and
InGaAs as a function of growth temperature and H2S level
in the growth ambient.
MOVPE was performed at atmospheric pressure on InP
substrates oriented in a ( 100) direction. The constituents are
AsH3, PH3, trimethylindium (TMln), and trimethylgal
Hum (TMGa), with the latter two held at 30,0 and
-15.0 ·C, respectively. The dopant source was 200 ppm
H2S in H2• The H2 carrier gas at 5000 seem dominates the gas flow.
lnP was grown with the addition of 20 seem PH3 and a H2
flow of 65 seem through the TMln source bubbler. The
growth rates ranged from 10 A'/s at 625°C to 6 A/s at
525 "C. GaInAs, lattice matched to InP with f:.a/a-1O~-4,
was grown at 625 ·C with additions to the carrier gas of 5.75
sccm AsH, and H2 flows of 5 and 65 seem through the
TMGa and TMln sources, respecti.vely.
The flow of 200 ppm HzS in H2 ranged from 0 to 20 secm
and its variation caused a negligible effect on the concentra
tion ofthe other constituents of the gas stream, especially the
ratio of group-V to group-III elements, which could affect
the impurity solubility.
The doping level was determined by van der Pauw HaH
effect measurements, by electrochemical C-V profiling, and
by C-V profiling in lightly doped samples where the space
charge could be swept appreciable distances (-0.5 ,urn).
The net donor concentration in undoped layers was ~ 1015
cm---3•
The carrier concentration as a function of dopant mole
fraction in the H2 carrier gas stream is shown in Fig. 1 for
growth of InP and GalnAs at 625°C. The reduced doping
level of GalnAs compared to InP at a given level of HzS in
the growth ambient is much larger than the difference in
layer growth rates and is in marked contrast to the usual
behavior of increased doping in the ternary cladding layer
such as exhibiting by the acceptor Zn.3 The agreement
between the Hall effect which measures carrier concentra
tion and the capacitance measurements of net donor concen
tration, IND -l'(~ jcm-3, implies that the dopant S has a
shallow energy level which is essentially fully ionized at
room temperature. This agreement in measurements also
obviates the confirmation of these results by SIMS analysis.
A p-n junction was constructed, as shown in the inset of
3723 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (9),1 May 1989 0021-8979/89/093723-03$02.40 @ i S8S American Institute of Physics 3723
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1.2811122.pdf | New Books
Citation: Physics Today 42, 8, 70 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2811122
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2811122
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/8
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsKruer's small book.
The Physics of Laser Plasma Inter-
actions grew out of lecture notes from
a course Kruer taught in the applied
science department of the University
of California, Davis. As the foreword
states, such books tend to have a
rough, informal style, and this is true
of Kruer's book. While Kruer states
that the book does not assume an
extensive knowledge of plasma phys-
ics and that the treatment is based onsimple physical models, I suspect that
a student coming to the subject cold
would have trouble learning from this
book. Many plasma theorists who are
used to more formal, detailed treat-
ments of plasma processes may find
the style too rough for their tastes.
However, Kruer is presenting a
broad-brush picture of the physics of
laser-plasma interactions; he pre-
sents us with the forest and not
detailed, leaf-by-leaf descriptions of
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Circle number 40 on Reader Service Cardthe trees. His broad physical pictures
are supported by a large amount of
work on numerical models and by
experimental results. Kruer dis-
cusses these, but I suspect that the
reader will not get a true feel for the
imposing bulk of the supporting work.
Some hint of its sheer magnitude
comes through in the large number of
cited references. If the book is used in
a course, the instructor can undoubt-
edly fill in details and answer ques-
tions students have on the support-
ing material.
This is an excellent book, filled with
insights into many of the complex
phenomena involved in the interac-
tions of intense electromagnetic
waves with plasma. I recommend it
to any student of the subject or, for
that matter, to anyone interested in
nonlinear processes in plasma.
JOHN M. DAWSON
University of California, Los Angeles
NEW BOOKS
Acoustics
Acoustical Imaging, Vol. 16. L. W.
Kessler, ed. Plenum, New York, 1988. 658
pp. $115.00 he ISBN 0-306-43011-8. Com-
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Acoustical Measurements. Revised edi-
tion. L. L. Beranek. AIP, New York, 1988.
841 pp. $30.00 he ISBN 0-88318-590-3.
Monograph
Engineering Noise Control: Theory
and Practice. D. A. Bies, C. H. Hansen.
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ISBN 0-04-620022-3. Text
Astrophysics
The Atmosphere of the Sun. C. J. Dur-
rant. Adam Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP, New
York), 1988. 168 pp. £23.50 ($64.00) Ac
ISBN 0-85274-375-0. Monograph
Classical Novae.
eds. Wiley, New
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graph compilation
Dark Matter. Rencontres de Moriond 23;
M59. Proc. Mtg., Les Arcs, France, March
1988. J. Audouze, J. Tran Thanh Van, eds.
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France, 1988. 498 pp. 410 FF ($63.00) Ac
ISBN 2-86332-057-2
The Fundamentals of Stellar Astro-
physics. G. W. Collins. Freeman, New
York, 1989. 494 pp. $47.95 he ISBN 0-
7167-1993-2. Monograph
Gravitational Lenses. Lecture Notes in
Physics 330. Proc. Conf., Cambridge,
Mass., June 1988. J. M. Moran, J-N-
Hewitt, K. Y. Lo, eds. Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1989. 238 pp. $31.40/icISBNO-
387-51061-3. Festschrift for Bernard BurkeM. F. Bode, A. Evans,
York, 1989 . 341 pp.
0-471-92058-4. Mono-
70 PHYSICS TODAY AUGUST 1989Highlights in Gravitation and Cosmol-
ogy. Proc. Conf., Goa, India, December
1987. B. R. Iyer, A. Kembhavi, J. V. Narli-
kar, C. V. Vishveshwara, eds. Cambridge
U. P., New York, 1988. 441 pp. $59.50 he
ISBN 0-521-36125-7
Hot Spots in Extragalactic Radio
Sources. Lecture Notes in Physics 327.
Proc. Wksp., Tegernsee, FRG, February
1988. K. Meisenheimer, H.-J. Roser, eds.
Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989. 301 pp.
$37.10 he ISBN 0-387-50993-3
Knowledge-Based Systems in Astron-
omy. Lecture Notes in Physics 329. A.
Heck, F. Murtagh, eds. Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1989. 280 pp. $31.40 he ISBN
0-387-51044-3
Large-Scale Motions in the Universe: A
Vatican Study Week. Princeton Series in
Physics. Proc. Mtg., Vatican City, Novem-
ber 1987. V. C. Rubin, G. V. Coyne, eds.
Princeton U. P., Princeton, N. J., 1988.
604 pp. $95.00 he ISBN 0-691-08524-2;
$39.50 pb ISBN 0-691-08525-0
Nuclear Astrophysics. Research Re-
ports in Physics. Proc. Sch., La Rabida,
Spain, June 1988. M. Lozano, M. I. Gal-
lardo, J. M. Arias, eds. Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1989. 355 pp. $55.90 pb ISBN
0-387-50751-5
Particle Physics and Astrophysics:
Current Viewpoints. Proc. Conf.,
Schladming, Austria, February 1988. H.
Mitter, F. Widder, eds. Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1989. 309 pp. $50.80 he ISBN
0-387-50699-3
Supernova 1987A, One Year Later; Re-
sults and Perspectives in Particle
Physics. Les Rencontres de Physique de la
Vallee d'Aoste. Proc. Mtgs., La Thuile,
Italy, February 1988. M. Greco, ed. Edi-
tions Frontieres, Gif-sur-Yvette, France,
1988. 825 pp. 520 FF ($80.00) he ISBN 2-
86332-058-0
White Dwarfs. Lecture Notes in Physics
328. Proc . IAU Colloq. 114, Hanover,
N. H., August 1988. G. Wegner, ed.
Springer-Verlag , New York, 1989. 524 pp.
$58.30 he ISBN 0-387-51031-1
Biophysics
Electric Field Phenomena in Biologi-
cal Systems. IOP Short Meetings 21.
Proc. Mtg., London, March 1989. R. Paris,
ed. IOP, Bristol, UK (AIP, New York),
1989. 87 pp. £17.50 ($32.00) pb ISBN 0-
85498-521-2
Exposure of the US Population from
Diagnostic Medical Radiation. NCRP
Report 100. Natl. Council on Radiation
Protection and Measurements, Bethesda,
Md. (20814), 1989. 103 pp. $14.00 pb ISBN
0-92600-1-0
Laser Picosecond Spectroscopy and
Photochemistry of Biomolecules.
Adam Hilger Series on Optics and Optoe-
lectronics. V. S. Letokhov, ed. Adam
Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP, New York), 1987.
309 pp. £48.00 ($130.00) he ISBN 0-85274-
469-2. Monograph compilationMacro-Evolutionary Dynamics: Spe-
cies, Niches and Adaptive Peaks. N.
Eldredge. McGraw-Hill, New York, 1989.
226 pp. $28.95 he ISBN 0-07-019474-2;
$14.95 pb ISBN 0-07-019476-9. Monograph
Non-Ionising Radiation: Microwaves,
Ultraviolet and Laser Radiation. Medi-
cal Physics Handbooks 18. H. Moseley.
Adam Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP, New
York), 1988. 293 pp. £37.50 ($102.00) he
ISBN 0-85274-166-9
The Physics of Medical Imaging. Medi-cal Science Series. S. Webb, ed. Adam
Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP, New York), 1988.
633 pp. £65.00 ($176.00) he ISBN 0-85274-
361-0; £19.50 ($53.00) ISBN 0-85274-349-1.
Compilation
A Primer on Theory and Operation of
Linear Accelerators in Radiation Ther-
apy. C. J. Karzmark, R. J. Morton. Medi-
cal Phys. Publ., Madison, Wis. (53706),
1989. 41pp. $12.00p6 ISBN 0-944838-07-3
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72 PHYSICS TODAY AUGUST 198944. Intl. Comm. on Radiation Units and
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Fluids and Plasmas
llth International Conference on Nu.
merical Methods in Fluid Dynamics,
Lecture Notes in Physics 323. Proc. Conf.,
Williamsburg, Va., June 1988. D. L
Dwoyer, M. Y. Hussaini, R. G. Voigt, eds.
Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989. 622 pp
$65.00 he ISBN 0-387-51048-6
From Particles to Plasmas: Lectures
Honoring Marshall N. Rosenbluth.
Proc. Symps., Austin, Tex., February 1987-
San Diego, Calif., April 1987. J. W. Van
Dam, ed. Addison-Wesley, Redwood City
Calif., 1989. 368 pp. $44.25 he ISBN 0-201-
15680-6. Festschrift
Fusion Energy and Plasma Physics.
Proc. Energy Independence Conf., Rio de
Janeiro, August 1987. P. H. Sakanaka,
ed. World Scientific, Singapore (Teaneck,
N. J.), 1988. 892 pp. $96.00 he ISBN
9971-50-749-8
An Introduction to Alfven Waves.
Adam Hilger Series on Plasma Physics. R.
Cross. Adam Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP,
New York), 1988. 221 pp. £19.50 ($53.00)
he ISBN 0-85274-245-2. Monograph
Numerical Simulation and Optimal
Control in Plasma Physics with Appli-
cations to Tokamaks. Wiley/Gauthier-
Villars Series in Modern Applied Math-
ematics. J. Blum (translated from French
by D. Chillingworth). Wiley, New York,
1989. 363 pp. $77.95 he ISBN 0-471-
92187-4. Monograph
Physicochemical Hydrodynamics: In-
terfacial Phenomena. NATOASISeries
B: Physics 174. Proc. Inst., La Rabida,
Spain, July 1986. M. G. Velarde, ed. Ple-
num, New York, 1988. 1111 pp. $165.00
he ISBN 0-306-42905-5
Physicochemical Hydrodynamics: An
Introduction. R. F. Probstein. Butter-
worths, Boston, 1989. 353 pp. $65.00 he
ISBN 0-409-90089-3. Monograph
The Physics and Technology of Ion
Sources. I. G. Brown, ed. Wiley, New
York, 1989. 444 pp. $52.95 he ISBN 0-471-
85708-4. Compilation
Plasma Diagnostics. Plasma-Materials
Interactions. O. Auciello, D. L. Flamm,
eds. Academic, San Diego, Calif., 1989.
Vol. 1: Discharge Parameters and
Chemistry. 456 pp. $89.50 he ISBN 0-12-
067635-4. Vol. 2: Surface Analysi s and
Interactions. 337 pp. $79.50 he ISBN 0-
12-067636-2. Compilation
Plasma Physics for Nuclear Fusion.
Revised edition. K. Miyamoto (translated
from Japanese). MIT P., Cambridge,
Mass., 1989 [1987]. 618 pp. $27.50 pb
ISBN 0-262-63117-2. Text
Plasma Waves. D. G. Swanson. Aca-
demic, San Diego, Calif., 1989. 422 pp.
$39.95 he ISBN 0-12-678955-X. Text
Reviews of Plasma Physics, Vol. M.
B. B. Kadomstsev, ed. (translated fromDOOKb
Russian by J. G. Adashko). Consultants
Bureau (Plenum), New York, 1989. 252
pp. $85.00 he ISBN 0-306-11004-0. Com-
pilation
The Riemann Problem and Interaction
of Waves in Gas Dynamics. Pitman
Monographs and Surveys in Pure and Ap-
plied Mathematics 41. Tung Chang, Ling
Hsiao. Wiley, New York, 1989. 272 pp.
$64.95 he ISBN 0-470-21014-1. Monograph
Small Plasma Physics Experiments.
Proc. Symp., Trieste, Italy, May 1987. S.
Lee, P. H. Sakanaka, eds. World Scientif-
ic, Singapore (Teaneck, N. J.), 1988 383
pp $55.00 he ISBN 9971-50-768-4
Theoretical Physics
Applications of Self-Adjoint Exten-
sions in Quantum Physics. Lecture
Notes in Physics 324. Proc. Conf., Dubna,
USSR, September 1987. P. Exner, P. Seba,
eds. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989.
273 pp. $31.40 he ISBN 0-387-50883-X
Connections Among Particle Physics,
Nuclear Physics, Statistical Physics
and Condensed Matter. Proc. Sch., La
Plata, Argentina, July 1987. J. J. Giam-
biagi, G. G. Dussel, L. N. Epele, C. A. Gar-
cia Canal, H. Wio, eds. World Scientific,
Singapore (Teaneck, N. J.), 1988. 618 pp.
$78.00 he ISBN 9971-50-405-7
Frontiers and Borderlines in Many-
Particl e Physics. Enrico Fermi Interna-
tional School of Physics 104. Proc. Sch.,
Varenna, Italy, July 1987. R. A. Broglia,
J. R. Schrieffer, eds. North-Holland, New
York, 1988. 460 pp. Dfl 325.00 ($171.00)
he ISBN 0-444-87113-6
Gauge Fields: Classification and Equa-
tions of Motion. M. Carmeli, K. Huleihil,
E. Leibowitz. World Scientific, Singapore
(Teaneck, N. J.), 1989. 136 pp. $24.00 Ac
ISBN 9971-50-745-5. Monograph
Schrodinger's Mechanics. World Scien-
tific Lecture Notes in Physics 28. D. B.
Cook. World Scientific, Singapore (Tea-
neck, N. J.), 1988. 150 pp. $32.00 Ac ISBN
9971-50-760-9
Superstring s and Grand Unification.
Proc. Sch., Puri, India, January 1988. T.
Pradhan, ed. World Scientific, Singapore
(Teaneck, N. J.j, 1988. 136 pp. $42.00 he
ISBN 9971-50-527-4
Texts and Popularizations
Advanced Calculus for Users. A. Rob-
ert. North-Holland, New York, 1989. 364
pp. Dfl 115.00 ($60.50) he ISBN 0-444-
87324-4. Student text
The Art and Science of Lecture Demon -
stration. C. Taylor. Adam Hilger, Bris-
tol, UK (AIP, New York), 1988. 181 pp.
£7.50 ($21.00)pb ISBN 0-85274-323-8. Pop-
ularization
The Crumbs of Creation: Trace Ele-
ments in History, Medicine, Industry,
Crime and Folklore. J. Lenihan. Adam
Hilger, Bristol, UK (AIP, New York), 1988.157 pp. £12.50 ($34.00) he ISBN 0-85274-
390-4. Popularization
A Course in Mathematics for Students
of Physics, Vol. 1. P. Bamberg, S. Stern-
berg. Cambridge U. P., New York, 1988.
405 pp. $49.50 he ISBN 0-521-25017-X.
Student text
Data Analysis for Research Designs:
Analysis of Variance and Multiple
Regression/Correlation Approaches.
G. Keppel, S. Zedeck. Freeman, New
York, 1989. 594 pp. $42.95 he ISBN 0-
7167-1991-6. Student textThe Path of No Resistance: The Story
of the Revolution in Superconductivi-
ty. B. Schechter. Simon and Schuster,
New York, 1989. 200 pp. $18.95 he ISBN
0-671-65785-2. Popularization
Polynomials. Problem Books in Math-
ematics. E. J. Barbeau. Springer-Verlag,
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PHY5IC5 TODAY AUGUST 1969 73 |
1.2810979.pdf | Laser Analytical Spectrochemistry and Laser Photoionization
Spectroscopy and Photoacoustic and Thermal Wave Phenomena in
Semiconductors
V. S. Letokhov , Vladilen S. Letokhov , and A. Mandelis Richard Lee ,
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 66 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810979
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810979
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsQuick & Easy
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bined with the attendant myriad of
excited states, makes low-tempera-
ture plasmas very complicated. Un-
derstanding their kinetics is essential
to improving and extending their
applications.
The book begins with an introduc-
tory chapter on basic plasma phenom-
ena, including Debye shielding, equi-
librium conditions and transport.
The succeeding chapters go on to
develop the theme of the book: the
elementary collisional and radiative
processes that exist in low-tempera-
ture nonequilibrium plasmas, and the
kinetics that result. The kinetics of
the population of excited states, ioni-
zation and recombination are consid-
ered in detail. One interesting and
very useful chapter is on radiative
transport. Radiation trapping, which
is often important for weakly ionized
plasmas, is thoroughly discussed.
The electron energy distribution func-
tion is derive d with the relevant
inelastic processes included. The fi-
nal chapters include brief treatments
of transient effects in nonequilibrium
plasmas and of the kinetics of molecu-
lar plasmas.
The book gives a useful understand-
ing of the fundamental processes that
govern low-temperature nonequilibri-
um plasmas. As such, it would be of
value for developing a collisional-
radiative model of a plasma or for
quantitative spectroscopy. The lack
of an index is unfortunate; however,
the book contains useful appendices.
A number of topics of practical
importance are covered only cursorily
or not at all. Topics such as sheath
effects and plasma-material interac-
tions, which are important in, for
instance, reactive-io n etching, are
clearly beyond the scope of this book.
Also, very little attention is given to
radiofrequenc y plasma excitation:
No specific discharge configurations
are discussed.
The book would be a useful refer-
ence text for a graduate course in the
fundamentals of low-temperature
plasmas; the rather abbreviated deri-
vations would make it difficult to use
the book as the primary text. The
authors make extensive use of energy-
space diffusion models to discuss the
kinetics of excited states and ioniza-
tion-recombination. In doing so they
provide an excellent physical picture
for the onset of the departure from
equilibrium in terms of competition
among processes. Although the ana-
lytical techniques the authors discus s
can be quite useful, they largely
neglect the more powerful numericalmethods of analysis, which are now
relatively easy to implement with the
wide availability of computers.
There is much current interest in
gaining a better understanding, thor-
ough diagnostics and modeling, of the
plasmas used in various technological
applications. Despit e some shortcom-
ings, Kinetics of Nonequilibrium Low-
Temperature Plasmas makes an im-
portant contribution toward achiev-
ing this objective.
JOSEPH L. CECCHI
Princeton University
Loser Analytical
Spectrochemistry
Edited by V. S. Letokhov
Adam Hilger, Bristol, UK
(US dist. Taylor and Francis,
New York), 1986 [1985].
412pp. $109.00 he
ISBN 0-85274-568-0
Laser Photoionization
Spectroscopy
Vladilen S. Letokhov
Academic, San Diego, Calif.,
1987. 353pp. $57.50 he
ISBN 0-12-444320-6
Photoacoustic and
Thermal Wave
Phenomena in
Semiconductor s
Edited by A. Mandelis
North-Holland, New York,
1987. 480pp. $75.00 he
ISBN 0-444-01226-5
The Institute of Spectroscopy of the
USSR Academy of Sciences, located in
Troitsk, outside Moscow, was estab-
lished in 1968, and since its inception
researchers there have been engaged
in the development of new techniques
of laser spectroscopy. Important re-
sults have been achieved in fields such
as hole-burning spectroscopy, laser
detection of single atom s and mole-
cules, and laser cooling of atoms.
They have had particularly impres-
sive successes in ultrahigh-resolution
and ultrasensitive spectroscopies.
Based on their successes they have
developed analytical methods that use
photoacoustics, induced fluorescence
and multiphoton resonance coupled to
other techniques such as gas chroma-
tography or mass spectrometry.
Laser Analytical Spectrochemistry,
edited by Vladilen S. Letokhov, direc-
tor of the institute, contains eight
separately authored chapters pre-
senting tutorial reviews of several
laser analytical techniques that were
developed at the institute. The book
66 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989A selection of North-Holland publications on
STATISTICAL PHYSICS
J.D. van der Waals: On the
Continuity of the Gaseous and
Liquid States
edited with an introductory
essay by J.S. Rowlinson
1988 xiii + 280 pages
US $ 84.25 /Dfl. 160.00
The core of this book is a new edition of
the English translation of the classic
Leiden thesis of 1873 of J.D. van der
Waals. A long introductory essay
explains the historical context of the
work and why it is still of great interest
to physicists and chemists working in
the fields of statistical mechanics,
phase transitions and properties of
liquids.
The thesis is followed by a translation
of Van der Waals' first great paper on
the theory of liquid mixtures, which is
also frequently quoted, but which has
not hitherto been available.
Simple Models of Equilibrium
and Nonequilibrium
Phenomena
edited by J.L. Lebowitz
1987 xii + 272 pages
US $92.00/Dfl. 175.00
This book consists of two articles of
particular interest to researchers in the
field of statistical mechanics. Its appeal
is, however, not limited to this group.
The first article is based on the premise
that the best way to understand the
qualitative properties that characterize
many-body (i.e. macroscopic) systems
is to study "a number of the more
significant model systems which, at
least in principle , are susceptible of
complete analysis."
The second article deals exclusively
with nonequilibrium phenomena. It
reviews the theory of fluctuations in
open systems to which the authors
have made important contributions.
Like the first article it emphasizes
simple but interesting model examples.
The Wonderful World of
Stocha sties
A Tribute to Elliott W. Montroll
edited by M.F. Shlesinger and
G.H. Weiss
1985 xiv + 382 pages
US $47.75 /Dfl. 140.00
Elliott W. Montroll had a profound
influence on physics, beginning with
his classical works on imperfect gases,
the Ising model and the latticedynamics in the early 1940's. His
innovative research continued over the
next four decades with work ranging
from the flow of electrons in
amorphous semiconductors, to the flow
of traffic on highways . This memorial
volum e contains ten original
contributions by noted scientists to
statistical and mathematica l physics , a
bibliography and review of Montroll's
works, plus reprints of twelve of
Montreal's classic papers.
The Kind of Motion We Call Heat
A History of the Kinetic Theory
of Gases in the 19th Century
by S.G. Brush
Book 1: Physics and the
Atomists
1976 (1st reprint 1986) xiv + 326 pages
US $30.00/Dfl. 75.00
Book 2: Statistical Physics and
the Irreversible Processes
1976 (1st reprint 1986) xiv + 494 pages
US$34.00/Dfl. 85.00
Comprising two volumes this work
provides a particularly comprehensive
account of the development of kinetic
theory and statistical mechanics up to
the beginning of the 20th century.
Book 2 is completed by an unusually
comprehensive bibliography.
Stochastic Processes in Physics
and Chemistry
by N.G. van Kampen
1981 (3rd reprint 1985) xiv + 420 pages
US $ 30.00 / Dfl. 75.00
Although the number of articles on
fluctuations and the stochastic method
for describing them must run to
thousands, the physicist or chemist
who wants to become acquainted with
the field cannot easily find a suitable
introduction. This book is an attempt to
fill this gap in the literature.
Simulation of Liquids and Solids
Molecular Dynamics and Monte
Carlo Methods in Statistical
Mechanics
edited by G. Ciccotti,
D. Frenkel and I.R. McDonald
1987 (paperback) xii + 481 pages
US $ 32.50 / Dfl. 75.00
(also available as hardcover)
Circle number 33 on Reader Service CardThis book is a collection of key reprints
of papers on the computer simulation
of statistical-mechanical systems,
introduced and commented upon by
the editors.
Statistical Physics
Invited papers from STATPHYS 16
edited by H.E. Stanley
1986 xvi + 432 pages
US$15.00/Dfl. 50.00
The 52 papers in this volum e are based
on the principal invited talks presented
at STATPHYS-16. These papers form a
concise but coherent summary of the
"state of the art" of statistical physics in
1986.
In Preparation:
Hydrodynamics of Dispersed
Media
edited by AM. Cazabat, F.
Carmona, E. Guyon and J.P.
Hulin
This book is part of the series
Random Materials and
Processes'
series editors: E. Guyon and
H.E. Stanley
This book is based on the 4th EPS
Liquid State Conference on the
Hydrodynamics of Dispersed Media. It
includes an extended general
introduction presenting the various
aspects of the hydrodynamics of
disperse d media, followed by five main
chapters from a microscopic to a
macroscopic description: I. Wetting
Phenomena and Interfacial Effects. II.
Particle Dynamics in Dispersed Media.
III. Statistical Descriptions of Multiple
Scale Processes in Porous Media. IV.
Macroscopic Description of Transport
Processes in Dispersed Media. V.
Experimental Approaches of Porous
Media.
For more information on the
above-mentioned books, please
contact:
Eugene P.M. Wijnhoven,
North-Holland Physics,
P.O. Box 103,
1000 AC Amsterdam,
The Netherlands.
US $ prices are valid only In the USA and Canada In all
other countries the Dutch Guilder (Dfl.) price Is definitive.
404/B/332
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Circle number 34 on Reader Service Cardopens with Letokhov's introduction to
the properties of lasers and to prob-
lems of laser spectroscopy. The suc-
ceeding chapters cover applications in
analytical chemistry including atom-
ic fluorescence, photoionization, in-
frared absorption, photoacoustic and
desorption spectroscopies .
Although the book is not a step-by-
step guide, the novice can read it
easily. This book presents the materi-
al with even more of a practical
emphasis than does Nicolo Omenet-
to's Analytical Laser Spectroscopy
(Wiley, New York, 1979) or Edward H.
Piepmeier's Analytical Applications
of Lasers (Wiley, New York, 1986).
Over the past decade laser photo-
ionization spectroscopy—also known
as resonantly enhanced multiphoton
ionization—has become a powerful
technique for the study of atomic and
molecular structure as well as for the
detection of atoms and molecules in
various environments. Stirred by suc-
cesses such as G. S. Hurst's experi-
mental demonstration in 1977 of sin-
gle-atom detection, this distinct sub-
field of laser spectroscopy is being
used by researchers in fields ranging
from atomic and molecular physics to
geochemistry. Letokhov, one of the
early pioneers in the field, has written
Laser Photoionization Spectroscopy, a
monograph geared to this diverse
audience.
The book can be separated into
three sections : fundamental physics
of ionization, techniques for produc-
ing free atoms and molecules, and
applications. Letokhov presents first
an introduction to resonant interac-
tions between laser light and atoms or
molecules . He follows this with de-
scriptions of photoionization, field
ionization and collisional ionization
as well as an introduction to the
comparative sensitivities of different
excitation schemes: absorption, flu-
orescence, resonant deflection and
photoionization.
Letokhov presents fairly complete
descriptions of the current experimen-
tal configurations in which photo-
ionization studies are done. He in-
forms the reader of the ultrasensitive
and selective nature of photoioniza-
tion measurements. He also presents
some noteworthy results obtained at
the Institute of Spectroscopy, such as
the achievement of a sensitivity of a
few parts in 1011 for the detection of
Na in semiconductors. In addition
Letokhov presents a comprehensive
survey of applications.
Laser Photoionization Spectroscopy
is a valuable source book for anyone
interested in resonance ionization
spectroscopy. While books such as
S. H. Lin, Y. Fujimura, H. J. Schlagand E. W. Neusser's Multiphoton
Spectroscopy of Molecules (Academic,
Orlando, Fla., 1984); Multiphoton Pro-
cesses (Springer-Verlag, New York,
1984) edited by Peter Lambropoulos
and S. J. Smith; S. L. Chin and Peter
Lambropoulos's Multiphoton Ioniza-
tion of Atoms (Academic, Orlando,
Fla., 1984); and Joseph Berkowitz's
Photoabsorption, Photoionization and
Photoelectron Spectroscopy (Aca-
demic, Orlando, Fla., 1979) cover var-
ious aspects of the field, none intro-
duces the field, provides the funda-
mental physics needed to understand
and appreciate the various processes,
or presents as many of the key devel-
opments, both experimental and theo-
retical, as Letokhov's book does. Of-
ten awkward English, coupled with
some misprints, make reading Laser
Photoionization Spectroscopy slow
and difficult the first time through.
Also, Letokhov seems to have over-
looked such serious problems as how
to vaporize (laser ablate) a sample
while maintaining its chemical integ-
rity. All in all, Letokhov has done an
admirable job, producing a valuable
source of information that is profuse-
ly illustrated and includes a large
number of references.
Following the introduction of tech-
niques by books such as Laser Optoa-
coustic Spectroscopy by Letokhov and
Vladimir P. Zharo v (Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1986), Photoacoustics and
Photoacoustic Spectroscopy by Allan
Rosencwaig (Wiley, New York, 1980)
and Optoacoustic Spectroscopy and
Detection by Yoh-Han Pao (Academic,
New York, 1977), interest in photo-
acoustic techniques has spread over
the past decade to fields ranging from
gas chromatography to semiconduc-
tor characterization. Photoacoustics
provides a useful nondestructive tech-
nique for measuring various proper-
ties of materials.
Photoacoustic and Thermal Wave
Phenomena in Semiconductors, edited
by Andreas Mandelis of the Univer-
sity of Toronto, provides insight into
the use of photoacoustics, specifically
in applications to semiconductors.
The book's five sections consist of
reviews of established and emerging
thermal-wave microscopies; treat-
ments of imaging using thermal-wave
techniques (with concentration on
measurement of parameters), of novel
photothermal-wave techniques, and of
techniques for monitoring phenome-
na at the electronic level; and reviews
of progress in photothermal spectro-
scopic techniques. Among the specific
examples mentioned are Tsuguo
Sawada's measurement of subsurface
defects in GaAs 50 //m below the
surface and Rosencwaig's identifica-
68 PHY5ICS TODAY APRIL 1989tion of differences in the depth of
surface-state annealing in silicon wa-
fers: Wafers with few defects showed
the annealing effect 50-100 fj,m be-
yond the irradiated region, whereas in
wafers with a high level of structural
damage (such as those that were
heavily implanted) the annealing ef-
fect was confined to the irradiated
region.
Each chapter contains many illus-
trations and a bibliography . This book
augments the texts already published
and will find a place on many a pro-
fessional's bookcase. I recommend it.
RICHARD LEE
Amperex
Slatersville, Rhode Island
Lasers, Spectroscopy and
New Ideas: A Tribute to
Arthur L Schawlow
William M. Yen and
Marc D. Levenson
Springer-Verlag, New York,
1987. 337pp.
$45.00 he ISBN 0-387-18296-9
This book allows the reader to enjoy,
at least remotely, the experience of
physics research with Art Schawlow.
Its 19 short articles, whose authors all
have been students of Art's at Stan-
ford University over the past 25 years,
cover the three primary areas to
which Schawlow has richly contribut-
ed—lasers, spectroscopy and "new
ideas." Each article includes reminis-
cences of Art's humor, his excellent
physics intuition and, most important-
ly, the immense joy and enthusiasm
he brings to his research, teaching and
lectures. It is interesting that many
physics concepts can be more clearly
grasped and understood with the in-
formal writing styles used in this book.
As one might expect, the style and
scientific content of the brief articles
in this volume vary widely. Some are
detailed and will serve as excellent
references and reviews. Examples are
the three articles on solid-stat e spec-
troscopy, by Roger M. Macfarlane
("Optical Spectral Linewidths in Sol-
ids"), Satoru Sugano ("Spectroscopy of
Solid-State Laser Materials") and
George F. Imbusch and William M.
Yen ("Ruby Solid-State Spectroscopy:
Serendipitous Servant"). Sugano dis-
cusses the early history of the laser.
This is an ideal time to look back at the
development of the laser, one of the
major advances of this century, but I
was disappointed that Schawlow's ear-
ly laser research and that of his
collaborators is not covered in this
book. There is an interesting anecdote
from the first session at a conferenceImprove your Low Level
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PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 69 |
1.342922.pdf | Diffusive processes in the crossfield flow of intense plasma beams
B. Newberger and N. Rostoker
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 1874 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342922
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342922
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/5?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42Diffusive processes in the cross .. field flow of intense plasma beams
8. Newberger and N. Rostokera)
Institutefor Fusion Studies, The Uniuersity afTexas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
(Received 23 September 1988; accepted for publication 2 November 1988)
We consider magnetic field diffusion in the presence of strongly magnetized electrons
(wceTco> 1) as a mechanism for the rapid penetration observed in cross-field flows ofhigh-,B
plasma beams. The diffusion has been investigated in several cases which are amenable to
analytic solution. The flux penetration times are found to be insensitive to the particular
configuration. Comparison with two experiments is made. Agreement within the limits of the
experiments is found. Both require an anomalous collision rate which is consistent with
observed fluctuations in one case but apparently not the other.
I. INTRODUCTION
Active injections of intense beams of neutral plasmas
(sometimes alternatively called plasmoids or plasma jets)
into the near earth space environment are of interest in the
simulation of phenomena associated with naturally occur
ring events. These events include auroras, magnetospheric
substorms, and comets, and the phenomena include wave
generation and emission, particle precipitations associated
with these! and the interaction ofthe solar wind with come
tary bodies.2 In order to interpret these active injection ex
periments, the dynamics of the flow of the jet across the
geomagnetic field must be understood. To this end, laborato
ry experiments investigating the cross-field flow of plasma
beams are also being conducted.3.4
Of particular interest, both in space and the laboratory,
are jets of sufficient intensity that the ram kinetic energy, plf2
exceeds the magnetic pressure B 2/ 41T of the ambient field;
this is called the high-,B regime. In this case, the convention
al picture holds that the external field wiH be excluded from
the interior of the jet and the jet propagates by plowing the
ambient field aside. A significant finding in both the space
based and laboratory experiments is an anomalously rapid
penetration of the ambient field into the plasma beam. The
penetration rates considerably exceed those based on a clas
sical collision frequency. Some evidence exists for enhanced
levels of turbulence in some of the active injection experi
ments,S and mechanisms for an anomalous collision fre
quency have been suggested." Recent laboratory experi
ments4 also have observed field fluctuations although their
interpretations are not yet complete. An anomalous resistiv
ity could give an enhanced field diffusion. However, it has
been noted by Rostoker and co-workers that even with an
anomalous collision frequency v~ which could be expected
based on observed fluctuations, the electrons arc magne
tized, nc/v~ > 1.
In this paper, we obtain estimates of the diffusion times
to be expected, based on the anomalous resistivity in the
presence of magnetized electrons. These estimates are ob
tained from analytic solutions of the magnetic diffusion
equation in several cases. In general, the electron magnetiza
tion makes the diffusion equation nonlinear. We have ob
tained an approximate solution in the slab limit. By compar-
"' Permanent address: University of California, Irvine, CA. ing the diffusion times from this solution with those obtained
by imposing linearity on the diffusion equation in both the
slab and cylindrical limits, we can independently get some
measure of influence of geometry and nonlinearity. It is
found that both increase the diffusion time over the linear
theory in the slab. The differences are measurable in princi
ple but probably not within experimental uncertainties in
practice, In considering some particular experimental situa
tion, it is likely to be reasonably safe to use the simple linear
slab estimates. The differences are expected to be compara
ble to the factors of 1.5-2.5 found here. We have also evalu
ated the absolute diffusion times for several cases of interest
to space and laboratory experiments. The diffusion times are
consistent with observations. We will now describe the mod
el and present our solutions.
II. DiFfUSION MODEL
The transport in the beam is taken to be standard Bra
ginskii,7 with collision times reduced by turbulence from the
Coulomb value. The transport mode! neglects the effect of
inertia and this imposes a constraint on the solution which,
because we are not considering time-harmonic phenomena,
takes the form ne l'D > 1, where ne is the electron gyrofre
quency and 1'lJ is the diffusion time. Diffusion times based on
Coulomb collisions alone are too fast to satisfy this condi
tion, and the model breaks down. With an anomalous colH
sion rate, the inequality can be satisfied. The jet is taken to be
homogeneous so the V P term does not appear and thermo
electric terms are neglected. In this case, the currents in the
beam are related to the electric fields by
J=(jlE~ +uHE'Xi1,
where
E '= E + 73 X B, fj = v/c'i
is the jet velocity and taken to be along the z axis,
(7i = (Jo/[l + (n,T~)2],
the Pedersen conductivity,S
the Hall conductivity, where
We further define E l = E (\ + E/= and we see J!r = O. (1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
It is observed in the experiments that the motion of the
1874 J. AppL Phys. 65 (5). i March 1989 0021-8979/89/051874-06$02.40 @ i 989 American Institute of Physics 1874
[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42beam particles are essentially force free in the beam frame. ___ A _ _
This implies E,\ = -[3 X B and therefore E, is parallel to
the z axis. Ampere's law in cylindrical geometry gives
aE,. 4rrJr + --= 0, at
. aE!) 4rrJ(J + --= 0, at
4rrJz 1 a 1 oRr --=--(rB o) ----. c r or r ae (5)
(6)
(7)
The z component of displacement current has been ne
glected relative to the conduction current. This constrains
the solution and must be checked a posteriori. In the rand e
component equations, the terms in the spatial derivatives of
B vanish identically by virtue of the symmetry. The current
responsible for the diamagnetism is a Pedersen currentS driv
en by the electric field induced by the penetrating flux. The
self-consistency is obtained from Faraday's law which closes
the system. After some straightforward algebra a pair of cou
pled nonlinear diffusion equations for the r, f) components of
R are obtained:
where dimensionless variables have been introduced by the
definitions
p=rla, T=t IrD, b=BIB o,
Tn =4rra2uolc2, K = 01eor; )",
and
neO = eRolme.
Here Bo is the magnitude of the applies! magnetic field far
from the beam where B = Bx; the initial condition is then
b r = (1 -11 p2) cos e) . (10)
be = -(l-1I/-J2)sin8IP> 1. (11)
The boundary condition at P = 1 is found by matching to a
vacuum solution for p > 1 which satisfies for all time
b,. --cos e } _ . P~ 00. be --. -sm () (2)
(13 )
In the slab limit, Eqs. (g) and (9) reduce to a single equation
for bx•
a ( 2 Jbx) Jb, -l+Kb --=--. ax ax ar . (14)
subject to the boundary condition bx = 1 at x = ± ~ and the
initial condition b x = 0, -i < x < ~.
WewiU now consider the solution of the cylindrical sys
tem in the linear approximation and the solution of the non
linear slab model.
m. LINEAR SOLUTION IN CYLINDRICAL GEOMETRY
The solution of the problem in cylindrical geometry can
be more readily obtained by introducing a scalar function X
1875 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.5, 1 March 1989 through the definition
0=Z·V1·· (15)
(x is essentiaHy the z component of the vector potential,) In
terms of X, Eqs. (8) and (9) become
of [1 a( Jv) 1 J2X]1 -. (l+KVrVx) --p~ +--1 1 Jp t L P ap Jp p 00-
a ax
--ap Br'
1 J { [! a (ax) 1 a 2r 1 } --(l + KVrVx) ---+-_/ J
p ae p Jp Jp p pO 2
_~Jx
pJ() ar (16)
(17)
These equations can each be integrated once. Because the
integrated equations resulting from Eqs. (16) and (17) are
the same and X must satisfy given boundary conditions, the
arbitrary functions, otherwise resulting from the integra
tion, vanish. Thus X satisfies the nonlinear diffusion equa
tion
(18)
The boundary condition at p = 1 is obtained from a solution
in the vacuum region of Laplace's equation,
'i72x = 0,
which satisfies
X...... -P sin e as p -" 00 • (19)
(20)
That is, our boundary condition is imposed by the essentially
Cartesian nature of our magnetic field system. Hence, this
problem is different from the standard mixed problem
solved in the textbooks. Thus the solution is only obtained by
solving simultaneously Eq. (18) for p < 1 and Eq. (19) for
p> 1 and matching the solutions at p = 1. We do not know
how to do this in general but will obtain the solution in the
linear approximation where Eq. (18) is replaced by
av A"? -f; = ;':v-X,
K=l + K::::::K,
since typically
K~ 1. (21)
In the outer region (p> 1), a solution of Laplace's equation
satisfying the condition (20) is
X = --p sin () + I a/ (r')p-I sin Ie, r' = K7. (22)
I
(The cos Ie terms turn out to be unnecessary.)
In the interior (p < 1), the solution is found by taking
the Laplace transform of Eq. (21). The solution is
X(s,p,8) = I c/(s)sin 1011 cJsp) , (23)
I
w here II is the modified Bessel function of the first kind, and
the transform variable is s. Taking the Laplace transform of
Eq. (22) gives for p > 1
X(s,p,O) "-"" p sin e + )' aj(s)p- I sin lB. (24) s ..,
B. Newberger and N. Rostoker 1875
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42Now matching aX/ap, ai/ae from Egs. (23) and (24) at
p = 1 gives I pairs of equations for the a{,c1 which are satis
fied by
al =Ci =0 for I> 1
and
Cj(S) = -2/sjSlu(/s), (25)
ptefs) -{sI; ({s)] al (s) = -....::..-....:-.-------.=:-
~12Io(fs) (26)
where in al the prime denotes differentiation with respect to
the argument of the Besse! function.
These can be substituted back into their respective equa
tions for X and the standard Bromwich inversions of the
Laplace transforms done. The solutions are then, for p < 1,
( ~~~ ) e 0" J (a p) X = -p + 4L 2 I Un sin e,
n aOnJ!a On (27)
X sin 0, (29)
where aOj is the jth zero of Jo and the Bessel function nota
tion is standard.
Forp> 1,
. e-a5'/ sin e
X= -psmO-4 2:-2---'
n aOn P (30)
2 , e -' au"T cos ()
b, = cosO +42:-2---2-'
n ao" p (31)
. e --a5nr' sin ()
bfj = -smB +42:----. (32)
a~n p2
We will use these to obtain numerical estimates of diffusion
times fonowing our discussion of the nonlinear diffusion in
the slab.
IV. NONLINEAR DIFFUSION IN A SLAB
In this case, the evolution of the field inside the beam is
givenbyEq. (14):
~((1+Kb2)~)=!!!!..o (14) ax ax a7
Nonlinear diffusion equations of this kind are known to pro
duce solutions with frontIike behavior. Because typical cases
ofinterest have K). 1, we neglect the constant term relative to
Kb Z in the diffusion coefficient. This is not quite correct just
at the front but the effect is the elimination of a small foot
(~lIiK) right at its leading edge. The finite thickness of the
jet means self-similar solutions do not exist for our problem,
However, until the fronts from the two edges meet, neither
edge can know about the other and the problem is the same
as the semi-infinite one. Thus we use the self-similar form of
the solution b = [1 -x/8( 7') J 112, where 8C 7) will be deter
mined by imposing an integral constraint on the solution; the
method of moments. 9 The resulting constraint equation is an
1876 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.5, 1 March 1989 ordinary differential equation in time for fj ( 1"). It will be
found to be proportional to 71/2 which is consistent with self
similarity. Putting r' = K7and integrating Eq. (14) inxover
(G,li) we have
a4> = b2~lb
a7' ax 0'
where
<1>=: f bdx. (33)
With b(x,r') = ba[1 -x/oCr') J 112, this becomes
d82(r') 3b 6
----;;;;;-= -2-. (34)
The boundary condition at x = O=>bo = 1, at the solution,
IS
o(r') = ,fl-r\12 (35)
and
h(x,r') = (1 -/fT'X) 112, 0 <x < 1/2. (36)
This solution breaks down when the fronts meet in the center
of the slab at x = 1. This occurs at a time r; = i. After this
time, the solution is no longer self-similar. We will again use
the moment method to obtain an approximate solution in the
case 7' > 7p'
It is convenient in this case to shift the coordinate axis by
half a unit and place the origin in the center of the slab. The
solution is symmetric about the origin. It is also convenient
to rescale so that the boundary conditions are again at
x = ± 1. To return to the original system, x ...... 2x -1 in the
solution. We also shift the time origin by r; and scale by a
factor of 4, to have, for 7 = 47> 0,
~=~(b2~). dr ax ax (37)
We look for a solution of the form
b = [lioer) + PI (1')X2]a. (38)
This is the simplest solution with the appropriate symmetry
about x = 0, the required smoothness at x = 0, and which
win let us impose the necessary physical constraints. One
constraint is the moment integral. This will give a differen
tial equation in time for either (30(1') or /3\ (7'). The other is
determined from the boundary condition
b(x = ± 1) = 1,
which implies
/3oFf) + /31 (1') = 1 for all 7';;:>0. (39)
Furthermore, at r = 0, b(x = 0) = O. That is, just as the
diffusion fronts meet, the field at the slab center is zero. This
implies PI (0) = 1. The second constraint is a condition on
3b / ax at the slab edges at 7 = O. This is essentially a con
straint on the "flux" (actually edge current density) which
does not instantly change when the diffusion fronts meet.
This will fix the value of a as we now show. From Eq. (38),
~! = 2a[3rx[{3oCr) + PI (1')x21a-I
= -2ap\ (0) at T = 0, x = -1. (40)
B. Newberger and N. Rostoker 1876
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42From the similarity solution, written in the present coordi- 1.0f'e::':::'-r---r---.....,r----..,r----.,
nate system, for -1 <;x<;O,
b(x,r = 0) = ( -x) 1/2, (41)
Therefore,
-2aPl (0) = -1; :=}a = 1/4. (43)
In fact, with a = ;\, the second derivatives at the edges also
match. Thus we have
b(x,r) = [1-f31Cr)(1-x2)]II4,
The moment integral gives
JL t bdz=b2~11 = {31(r) .
ar Jo Jz 10 2
Now
.c b dz = f [1 + /31 (r)(x2 -1)J !/4dx. (44)
(45)
(46)
This does not have a closed-form expression. However, we
know that for r> 0, PI < 1, and also dearly for XE (0,1 ),
1 -X2 < 1, so we will approximate the integrand by the first
two significant terms in its Taylor expansion. The differen
tial equation which results is
_ 1., df31 _ i!.L!!.L _ [31 = O.
6 dr 10 dr 2 (47)
This can be solved by quadratures and a transcendental
equation for PI (r) results:
PI exp [~(p't -1) ] = exp( -37). (48)
To solve this, we again expand to 0([31)2 and find, on solv
ing the resulting quadratic,
This solution has the following appropriate limiting values:
Forr= 0,
.BI(O} = H -1 + (16)1/21 = 1,
and as r-> 00 ,/31->0. The fun solution is then, in the original
system of units with 0 < x < 1:
ForO<T< lIOK,
b(x,1") = P -OK1") 1/2X] 112, o<x <1 (50a)
t,K<7,
b(x,r) = {I -H -1 + (l + 15e--1ZK(T-1I6K»I12j
(SOc)
These solutions are sketched in Fig. 1 as a function of x
for several values of 1"'. In the next section, we discuss nu
merical estimates of diffusion times from the models consid
ered. We will also compare these with a solution of the slab
model in the linear limit. 10
ia77 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.5, 1 March i989 0.8
0.6
b
0.4
0.2 r-O.25
FIG. 1. Normalized magnetic field as a function of position for several val
ues of r'. The field is symmetric about x = 0.5.
V. NUMERICAL RESULTS
Here we will use our results of the previous sections to
obtain some estimates of the penetration times of the field.
First, we will make some relative estimates simply to have
some measure of the effect of the different physics we have
been considering. We will then use parameter values appro
priate for the laboratory experiments of Ref. 4 and space
experiment of Ref. 5 to obtain some absolute diffusion times.
In the following experiments, the penetration of the field
is determined by the decay of the diamagnetic signal and a
concurrent rise of the polarization field as measured on fioat
ing Langmuir probes.4 The experiments in space generally
observe the field within the jet by means of satellite-borne
instruments.l.; As a basis of comparison, both with experi
ment and the different theoretical solutions, we adopt the
central field 90% return time [the time at which
b(x = D = 0.9) as a measure of the diffusion time. There is
no particular justification for this. Given the experimental
uncertainties (finite beam rise times, approximate geome
tries, etc. ) and the relative insensitivity of the diffusion times
to the central field fractional value if it is sufficiently near to
one, this seems to be as reasonable measure as any. From Eq.
(2) afRef. 10, for example, for the slab in the linear approxi
mation and Eq. (49) in the nonlinear case, we find
1"~.90 = 0.26 (linear),
1"0.90 = 0.30 (nonlinear).
The closeness of these values is striking considering the dif
ference in the diffusion profiles at early times. [Compare
Fig. 1 with Fig. 8 of Ref. 10, for example. This also shows
that the evolution of the linear problem at late times and the
nonlinear solution, Eq. (50), at late times have very similar
profiles.] In the cylindrical case, Eqs. (28) and (29) give
1"0.90 = 0.48.
The diffusion in this case is significantly slower, by about a
factor of 2, than that in the linear case. (This is a conse
quence of the planar geometry in the large p limit. If a dipo
lar field were composed at the edge of a cylindrical plasma
B. Newberger and N. Rostoker 1877
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42jet, the diffusion times would be much closer to the slab
values.) In view of the slab results, it seems reasonable to
expect that, even in the cylindrical case, the nonlinear diffu
sion times will not differ substantially from the linear casco
Numerical solutions of the nonlinear diffusion have proved
to be frustrating and difficult in that parabolic solvers typi
cally are based on an iterative application of elliptic integra
tors. The frontlike solutions of the nonlinear diffusion are a
problem for these methods.
We now return to the dimensional form of the diffusion
times by reintroducing the scaling 1" -> Kt /71) and evaluating
these for the U C Irvine experiments,3,4 and the AMPTE arti
ficial comet experiment. The diffusion model is not applica
ble to the Porcupine experiments in that the Pedersen cur
rent does not dominate the displacement current in that
case, even with an anomalous collision frequency.
In the experiments at the University of California- Irvine
(U C-1) , a neu tralized ion beam of several hund red ke V cner
gy and density n = 3 X 10 11 em -3 was injected across a mag
netic field whose value was varied from several tens to sever
al hundreds of gauss. The details of these experiments have
been reported elsewhere. 4, 11--13 For the plasma parameters
there, the classical collision frequency ~'ei::::: let /s and the
displacement currents are not negligible compared to the
conduction currents in the modeL If diffusive processes are
to be responsible, an anomalous transport must be taking
place and evidence of electrostatic turbulent fluctuations has
been observed in the experiments.l 1,!3 The fluctuations are
higher frequency than would be expected of the lower hy
brid; they are more in the ion acoustic range. The role of
these turbulent fluctuations has not yet been investigated in
detail experimentally. However, turbulence ofthe ion acous
tic type could be expected to produce an anomalous collision
frequency v~ ~(JJpi which is, 14 for the parameters of the UC
I experiments, somewhat larger than the anomalous coni
sion frequency of Ref. 6. If we use this value of v~, with
Bo = 200 G, a = 10 cm, we find
r D = 1. 5 X 10 -7 s,
K=24,
to.90 =3 ns.
This diffusion is very fast but is within the condition imposed
by the neglect of the z component of the displacement cur
rcnt. This result is qualitatively consistent with the expcri
mental observation in which fast diffusion was seen relative
to the 0.5 f-ls duration of the beam.
We now consider the AMPTE artificial comet experi
ment. 2 Here a rapid penetration of the interpianetary mag
netic field was observed as well. If a diffusive process is to be
responsible, some turbulent enhancement of electron-ion
collisions is also required here, too. If we again look to an
ion-acoustic enhanced resistivity, reasonable agreement
with the experimental return time is obtained. The param
eterslS are n c= 1.2X 104 em --3, Eo = 1.3 X 10 -3 G, a = 80
km, and a plasma composed of B u-t (A = 137). If we take
'j/~ -(i}pi' then
1878 K=3.5,
to_90 =30 s,
J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.5, 1 March 1989 compared to an experimental field return time of 17 s. The
value of If only marginally satisfies our requirement K> 1.
But, as the anomalous collision frequency is only an order of
magnitude estimate in any case, the values derived there
must be considered in the same way. Nevertheless, it would
appear on the face of it that diffusive transport of the field
would be a plausible mechanism for the observed rapid field
penetration. Unfortunately the real puzzle (and problem)
for the model lies in the observation of fluctuations in the
ion-acoustic range with amplitUdes too small to be expected
to lead to anomalous resistivity. This has led to the sugges
tion that hydromagnetic mechanisms may be responsible. 15
However, it seems that these should be subject to inter
change instabilities which have been found to be able to grow
even in the case of unmagnetized ions. Indeed, an inter
change instability of this general kind is now believed to be
responsible for the fast field penetration in numerical simu
lationsl6 done by our colleagues of high-;1 plasma beams
crossing a magnetic field in vacuum. In these simulations,
the plasma temperature was sufficiently high (ion masses
were artificially low, a standard technique in simulations)
that ion acoustic instability was not expected and no evi
dence of it was found.
VI. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
In this work, we have considered the diffusive transport
of magnetic fields in the limit in which the electrons are
strongly magnetized and applied the results to the problem
of field penetration into high-;1 plasma beams. Because the
magnetization of electrons makes the diffusion coefficient
nonlinear, the solution of the problem is nontrivial and nu
merical methods can have difficulties even in simple geome
try. 17 We have constructed analytic solutions under different
approximations and have shown that while there are differ
ences in the details of the solutions, the gross measures ob
tained are quite similar. In particular, measures of the diffu
sion times are the same to within any reasonably expected
experimental determination and are about 50% of the values
simple scaling arguments would give. We have applied these
to two experimental cases of plasma beams in a transverse
field. The diffusion times in the laboratory experiment qual
itatively agrees with the observations which essentially es
tablish an upper bound to the field penetration time. There is
reasonably good quantitative agreement with the space ex
periment (AMPTE) penetration time. Both require the ex
istence of an anomalous collision frequency. Given the
strong diamagnetic currents which must flow to shield the
field, it is not unreasonable to expect such. This is consistent
with the laboratory observations but not the experiment in
space. The fluctuations in the laboratory experiments need
to be investigated in more detail in order to come to quantita
tive conclusions. These could be supported with some nu
merical simulations as wen. The space experiment remains a
puzzle. We anticipate that some simulations extending the
work of Ref, 16 will provide some insight i.nto this problem.
In general, the microscopic dynamics in the boundary layer
between the plasma beam and field is likely to be where the
action is, The physics of this region is complex and needs
considerably more work Interestingly, this was an area of
B. Newberger and N, Rostoker 1676
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42interest early in the magnetic confinement fusion program
and is again becoming the focus of increased attention.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We wish to thank Dr. Frank Wessel for many discus
sions of his experimental results, One of us (R.N.) would
like to thank Dr. W. R. Shanahan for several helpful discus
sions and the results of his unpublished research. This work
was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Contract
No. DE-FG05-80ET-53088, the Air Force Office of Scien
tific Research, and NASA Grant No. NASW-846.
'G. Haerendel and R. Z. Sagdeev, Adv. Space Res. 1, 29 (1981).
2A. Valenzuela, G. HaerendeI, H. Poppl, F. Melzner, H. Neuss, E. Rieger,
J. Stocker, O. Bauer, H. Hofner, and J. LQidi, Nature 320,700 (1986).
'F. J. Wessel, R. Hong, J. Song, A. Fisher, and N. Rostoker, Proc. Sl'IE-
Int. Soc. Opt Eng. 828, paper 38 (1988).
4R. Hong, F. J. Wessel, J. Song, A. Fisher, and N. Rostoker, J. Appi. Phys.
64,73 (1988).
5B. Hausler, R. A. Treumann, O. H. Hauer, G. Haerendel, R. Bush, C. W.
Carlson, B. Theile. M. C. Kelley, V. S. Dokukill, Yu. Ya. Ruzhill, J.
Geophys. Res. 91, 287 (1986).
1879 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.5, 1 March 1989 6E. V. Mishin, R. A. Treumann, and V. Ya, Kapitanov, J. Geophys. Res.
91, 10183 (1986).
7S. I. Braginskii, til RelJiews in Plasma Physics, edited by M. A. Leontovich
(Consultants Hureall, New York, 198;), Vol. 1, Chap. 3, pp. 205--311.
8E, Rossi and S. Olbert, Introduction to the Physics a/Space (McGraw-Hili,
New York, 1970), Chap. 13, p. 394.
"W. F. Ames, Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations in Engineering
(Academic, New York, 1965), pp. 249-256.
IOH. S. Carslaw and J. C. Jaeger, Conduction 0/ Heat in Solids (Oxford,
London, 1947}, Chap. 3, p. 83.
If]. Song, F. J. Wessel, A. Fisher, and N. Rostoker. Conference Record,
1988 IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science, Seattle, WA,
1988, (IEEE, New York, 1988), p. 107.
l2F. J. Wessel, R. Hong, 1. Song, A. Fisher, N. Rostoker, R. Li, and R. Y.
Fan, Phys. Fluids 31,3778 (1988).
uF. J. Wessel, A. Fisher, N. Rostoker, and J. Song. Proceedings of the 7th
International Conference on High-Power Particle Beams, Karlsruhe,
1988 (to be published).
14A. A. Ga!eev and R. Z. Sagdeev, in Handbook of Plasma Physics-Basic
Plasma Physics, edited by A. A. Galeev and R. N. Sudan (North-Holland,
Amsterdam, 1984), Vol. 2, Chap. 6.1, pp. 271-303,
"G. Haerendel, G. Paschmann. W. Baumjohann, and C. W. Carlson, Na
ture (Paris) 320, no (1986).
'''T. Tajima, J. Koga, and T. Fujinami, 68, 1400 (1987) Trans. Am.
Geophys. Union; J. Koga, M. A. thesis, University of Texas, Austin, 1984.
11R, D. Richtmyer and K. W. Morton, Difference Methods/or Initial-Value
Problems, 2nd ed. (!nterscience, New York, 1967), pp. 201-206.
B. Newberger and N. Rostoker 1879
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129.120.242.61 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 12:45:42 |
1.101280.pdf | Observation of apparent inelastic tunneling between Landau levels in superlattices
T. K. Higman, M. E. Favaro, L. M. Miller, M. A. Emanuel, and J. J. Coleman
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 54, 1751 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.101280
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.101280
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/54/18?ver=pdfcov
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160.36.178.25 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 14:53:14Observation of apparent inelastic tunneling between Landau ~evels
in superlattices
T. K. Higman, M. E. Favaro, L. M. Miller, M. A. Emanuel, and J. J. Coleman
Coordinated S'cience Laboratory and Compound Semiconductor Microelectronics Laboratory, University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1406 West Green Street, Urbana, Illinois 61801
(Received 14 December 1988; accepted for publication 13 February 1989)
Evidence of the elastic and inelastic components of sequential resonant tunneling in
AIAs/GaAs superlattices is presented. Magnetic field data (B paranel to current flow) show
that as the energy spacing between the Landau levels in the quantum wells is changed, the
corresponding density of states available for tunneling via inelastic scattering paths is changed
and thus the magnetic field influences the inelastic portion of the current.
Resonant tunneling through AIGaAs superlattices
(SLs), observed as early as 1974,1 generally manifests itself
as tunneling via a narrow El miniband with multiple nega
tive differential resistance regions due to an expanding high
field domain breaking the EI miniband coupling, with a re
sulting transition to E, -E2 tunneling followed by a relaxa
tion to l!.\ in the region of the high field domain. 1,2 In this
work we show resonant tunneling results in a GaAsl AlAs
superlattice, grown} by metalorganic chemical vapor depo
sition (MOCVD), which demonstrates only one negative
differential resistance region corresponding to the EI -E2
tunneling path being present over the entire superlattice.
This is due to the combined effects of a high r -point conduc
Hem-band offset in GaAsl AlAs (1.04 e V AlAs barriers) and
the relatively wide (40 A) barriers incorporated in this
structure. This results in an EI miniband with width4 I:.l.EI
= 0.15 meV, which is narrow compared to the t::..EI 's of 5
and 0.4 me V of Refs. 1 and 2. This narrow miniband is essen
tially equivalent to isolated EI states, with no observable E;
to E] tunneling current. Hence resonant tunneling occurs
only when the applied bias is such that EI levels are aligned
with the next E2 level towards the cathode. Current versus
magnetic field data (B parallel to current flow, with the re
sulting Landau levels in the two-dimensional density of
states in the GaAs quantum wells) show that as the magnet
ic field and hence the energy spacing between Landau levels
is changed the corresponding density of states available for
tunneling via inelastic scattering paths involving both small
energy acoustic phonons and larger energy optical phonons
changes with corresponding structure in the I vs B trace.
For this experiment the structure of Fig. l(a) was
grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition. A 1 p-m
GaAs:n + buffer layer was grown on a [100] GaAs:Si
(n = 2x 1018 cm-3) substrate, followed by a 17 period 50
A/40 A GaAsl AlAs undoped superlattice (p < 1014 cm -3),
1300 A of nominally undoped GaAs (p < 1014 cm -:1), and a
0.5 pm Alo.2 Gao.8 As:nl cap layer. The layer thicknesses,
determined from growth rate parameters obtained from
bulk layers, are well controlled and routinely verified by
transmission electron microscopy. Mesa diodes (150-pm
diam dots) were fabricated by standard wet chemical proce
dures and AuGel Agi Au top and substrate ohmic contacts
were employed. A negative potential was applied to the top
contact such that there was a two-dimensional accumulation layer of electrons at the interface of the superlattice and the
undoped region [see Fig. 1 (b) ] . The experimental data were
obtained with the device immersed in liquid helium in a su
perconducting magnet and an data were taken with a Hewlet
Packard 4145B semiconductor parameter analyzer.
Several single quantum well tunneling experiments have
shown that it is the r -point potential which governs the reso
nance levels in AlAs/GaAsl AlAs quantum well resonant
tunneling structures, with some speculation that the X point
may playa role.4-6 The results shown here support the con
tention of r -point profile confinement, as is illustrated in
Fig. 1 (b), which corresponds to the electric field distribu
tion at resonance (peak current) with V = 7.84 V in the J-V
trace of Fig. 2. In this device, the zero bias mini band levels
occur at E1 = 154 meV, width I:.l.EI = 0.15 meV and E2
= 573 meV, llE2 = 2.8 meV, with a center to center separa
tion of 419 me V. Under bias, at resonance, the Stark shift to
E I can be estimated by straightforward means due to the
depth of the E\ subband and the resulting long lifetime of the
state.7 Using the method of Ref. 7, the Stark shift to EI is 32
meV, resulting in El = 112 meV.
A
(a)
(b) n+substrate
1.04
.v
FIG. 1, (a) Conduction band edge diagram ofsllperlattice resonant tunnel
ing diode at zero bias showillg the two minibands defined by the r-point
profile. (b) Detail of (aJ under bias showing the accumulation layer at
point A plus two quantum wells. Note thal the minibands arc 110 longer
defined,
1751 Appl. Phys. Lett 54 (18), 1 May 19S9 0003-6951/89/181751-03$01.00 (c) 1989 American Institute of Physics 1751
~ ••• --.-.-.-•••••••• -•• -•• ~ ••• " .... -.............. H ••.•. ~,T.~.-.;< •• ;O;>;<;--;.; •• ~ ••••• ';" ••• :-• ..-••• :.;.:.:.:.:.:~.:.-:o:.:.;:;~.:.:.~.:.:o:o:.~.:o: ••• -.-•.•.•..• -••. -. --
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160.36.178.25 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 14:53:141.0
0.8
<' ..IS 0.6
0.2
0.0 T=4.2k
6.5 7.5
Voltage (V) 8.5
PIG. 2. Current vs voltage trace of device pictured in Fig. I with no magnet
ic field applied. The oscillations in the NDR region are an artifact of the
digitizing measurement system. The true vaHey current is at 0.55 rnA.
At resonance ( V = 7.84 V in the trace of Fig. 2) there is
a 460 m V drop per superlattice period, which corresponds to
a 460 meV separation between E, and E2• Since the Stark
shifted E\ = 1 12 meV at resonance, this implies El = 572
meV, essentially equal to the zero bias miniband. Thus, this
device shows almost no energy lowering to E2 due to Stark
shift in this sample. Since E2 at resonance is strongly coupled
to propagating states, the Stark shift cannot be calculated by
the usual perturbation methods, and a good correlation to
theory cannot be presented. It is also important to note that
the sample to sample variation of total applied voltage at
peak resonance is a few hundred m V, making the E2-EJ sepa
ration somewhat imprecise. In estimating tunneling time out
of the E2 level at resonance, the WKB approximation along
with a classical attempt frequency yields tunneling times
(out of E2 and into propagating statcs) on the order of20 ps,
which is long compared to the various intra-and interband
processes.
In addition to the superlattice states, the electrons inci
dent on the first barrier form a two-dimensional accumula
tion layer of sheet carrier concentration ns, which forms two
subbands, designated E ; and E ~, where the energies E; and
E; are proportional to n;/3." At resonance, this sheet con
centration is ns = 4.3 X 1012/cm2 in our sample. The tunnel
ing rate for this large number of two-dimensional carriers is
self-limited by the charge accumulation in the first well, and
thus, it is the Ej -E2 process in the SL which limits the cur
rent in the device.
Under the influence of a magnetic field parallel to the
current flow (perpendicular to the plane of the SL layers)
the E II (energy due to propagating states parallel to the plane
of the SL layers) is quantized into Landau levels such that
the total energy of the electron is of the form
ElI,m = En + (m + U2)hOJ c' n = 1,2; m = 0,1,2, ... ,
(1)
where n is the subband, In is the Landau level, and ()Jc = en /
In is the cyclotron resonance frequency. Since the effective
mass in the We term refers to the k Ii' the parabolic effective
mass from the bottom of the GaAs r conduction band (m"
= 0.067 mo) can be used in the calculation of all of the
Landau levels. In this case of We = 1.732 me V IT, and peak
resonance, the (m + 1I2)1Uvc Landau levels also line up for
each m (see Fig. 3). This means that for purely elastic tun-
1752 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No. 18, 1 May 1989 E2•2
E2,1
":2,0
~
E1,2
FIG. 3. Detail of Fig. 1 (a) showing the effects of a magnetic field applied
perpendicular to the interfaces (parallel to the current) with the resulting
Landau levels in the quantum wells. Also shown is one possible elastic and
one possible inelastic tunneling path for 11 r electron.
neling in the bulk of superlattice the tunneling would pro
ceed from an arbitrary Landau level E l.m to E2,m of the next
well. Using this simple model, a device biased at resonance
undergoing purely elastic tunneling processes should show
no magnetic field dependence for the tunneling current. If
inelastic processes are involved, however, several interesting
possibilities arise. As magnetic field is increased above a few
TesIa, the energy separation between Landau levels (1.732
me V IT) begins to preclude acoustic phonon emission by the
tunneling electrons, effectively limiting the tunneling to the
elastic components and thereby reducing the total tunneling
current as seen in the low magnetic field portion of Fig. 4.
As can be seen in Fig. 4, eventually the current recovers
and then increases slightly with two peaks in the data, one at
8 T and the other at 12 T, or, in terms of Landau level separa
tion h())" = 13.9 and 20.8 meV, respectively. These peaks can
be interpreted in the fonowing way: as the magnetic field,
and therefore, the Landau level energy separation, is in
creased, after the initial current reduction, the energy sepa
ration between the levels becomes so large that a small in
teger number of Landau levels can equal the energy of an
optical phonon involved in an inelastic r -r scattering. The
more complex intervalley scatterings would not be account
ed for in this way due to the change to three dimensionality
which the electrons undergo when scattering into theX or L
valleys. The X and L valleys have lower conduction-band
offsets than r and an associated lack of quantum confine
ment at high electric field. In the situation of r -r inelastic
tunneling involving emission of optical phonons (of energy
Eph)' however, the density of states available to tunnel into
would effectively be increased by including both elastic and
inelastic paths. If one interprets the 8 T (hw, = 13.9 meV)
Higman et at. 1752
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160.36.178.25 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 14:53:140.955
« 0.945
g
"E 0.935
~ :l () 0.925
0.915
20 40 60 80 100 120
B(kG)
FIG. 4. Current vs magnetic field (the magnetic fieid is parallel to current
flow) for the resonant tunneling dcvice of Fig. 1 Cal at resonance, V C~ 7.84
V, 1'=4.2 K.
peak as 3h(uc = Eph and the 12 T (h(j)c = 20.9 meV) as
2hwc = Epll' the resulting optical phonon would have an en~
ergy of Eph ~42 meV or wave number of 339 cm--l. This
energy corresponds quite well to the theoretically predicted
and experimentally observed "AlAs like" transverse optical
(TO) phonon modes in GaAsl AlAs superlattices9~l2 (for a
review of the general properties of phonons in superlattices
see Ref. 12). The energies at these modes are predicted and
observed to be smaller than the bulk AlAs values (ETo for
bulk AlAs = 360 cm-1 or 44.6meV). In this typeoftunnel~
ing process, inelastic scattering paths such as E1,rn to E2,,,, _ 3
at 8 T or EJ,rn to E2,m 2 at 12 T would be allowed, thereby
realizing a net increase in tunneling current. When the de
vice is biased slightly below resonance (V = 7.70 V), the
peaks in the current versus magnetic field are suppressed. It
should be noted that the entire span of current observed in
Fig. 4 is only about 5% of the total current, indicating that
the total inelastic contribution is very small. This result is
consistent with other experimental results 13 which show that
the elastic portion of the tunneling current is dominant. This
experiment can be contrasted with the results of Bockenhoff
et al.14 in which the effects of a magnetic field on tunneling
from an accumulation layer through a single barrier are
studied. In this experiment with a very thin single tunneling
barrier the change in the density of states and energy separa
tion of the Landau levels in the accumulation layer causes a
change in the potential f-l between the bottom of the lowest
subband and the bulk Fermi level. This in turn causes a
1753 AppL Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No. 18, 1 May 1989 change in the potential across the barrier and a correspond~
ing change in the device current. This results in an oscma~
tory behavior in the magnetoresistance with a periodicity
corresponding to the Landau levels passing through the Fer
mi level (analogous to Shubnikov--de Haas oscillations).
With the comparatively wide barrier region of the device in
this experiment this effect should be greatly diminished due
to the small net change in electric field. In addition, the ex
perimental current versus magnetic field trace of Fig. 4 does
not show enough oscillations to correspond to this effect.
We have shown that the dominant sequential resonant
tunneling process in AIAs/GaAs superlattices is ela..~tic tun
neling by r valley electrons in subbands defined by the large
r -point conduction-band offset in AIAs/GaAs heterostruc~
tures. Magnetic field data have shown that the inelastic tun
neling current component can be affected by quantizing and
in effect limiting the number of allowed energy transitions of
inelastic scattering paths involved in tunneling.
The authors gratefully acknowledge K. Hess, J, M. Hig
man, and J. P. Leburton for technical discussions. This work
was supported by the Joint Services Electronics Program
(NOOO14-84-C~0149) and the National Science Foundation
(CDR 85-22666).
'L. Esaki and L. L. Chang, Phys. Rev. Lett. 33, 495 (1974).
2K. K. Choi, B. F. Levine, R. J. Malik, J. Walker, and e. G. Bethea, Phys.
Rev. B35, 4172 (1987).
'L M. Miller and J. J Coleman, CRC Crit. Rev. Solid State Mater. Sci. 15, 1
(1988).
4T. K. Higman, M. E. Favaro, L. M. Miller, and J. J. Coleman, 15th Inter
national Symposium on GOlAs and Related Compounds, September 11-
14, Atlanta, GA, Inst. Phys. Conf. Scries (in press).
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AppL l'hys. Lett. 50,1263 (1987).
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Ponce, Appl. Phys. Lett. 46, 285 (1985).
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"S.·K. Yip and Y.-C. Chang, Phys. Rev. B 30,7037 (1984).
10K. Kubota, M. Nakayama, H. Katoh, and N. Sallo, Solid State Commun.
49,157 (1984).
lie. Colvard, T. A. Grant, M. V. Klein, R. Merlin, R. Fischer, H. Morko<;,
and A. C. Gossard, Phys. Rev. B 31,2080 (1985).
12M. V. Klein, IEEE]. Quantum Electron. QE-22, 1760 (1986).
IJE. E. Mendez, E. Calleja, and W. I. Wang, Appl. Phys. Lett. 53, 977
(1988).
'4E. Biickenholf, K. v. Klitzing, and K. Ploog, Phys. Rev. B 38, 10120
(1988).
Higmanetal. 1753
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1.338782.pdf | Coherence in heavy fermion compounds: Effect of impurities
M. Cyrot
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 61, 3391 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.338782
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.338782
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/61/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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69.166.47.134 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 05:22:26Coherence in heavy fermion compounds: Effect of impurities
M. Cyrot
Laboratoire Louis Nee!, CN.R.S., 166X. 38042 Grenoble Cedex, France
We present a model for heavy fermion compounds where the active atoms (U or Ce} create
virtual bound states at the Fermi level. We describe the appearance of coherence between these
virtual bound states at low temperatures by the formation of a band whose width is strongly
reduced by correlations. We study the effect of normal impurities on the coherence and show
that a small concentration can destroy it. This explains the different behaviors of the resistivity.
The coupling ofthis heavy fermion band to the conduction band is responsible for both
magnetic and superconducting properties. Impurities affect drastically the magnetic and
superconducting states. This is a direct explanation of the welloknown experimental effects of
normal impurities in these compounds,
It is well known that single impurity models or, more
correctly, models with active sites behaving incoherently are
adequate to explain the high-temperature properties of
heavy fermion compounds. 1.2 This type of model works even
at rather low temperatures. At still lower temperatures, the
rapid decrease of resistivity is interpreted as an effect due to
coherence between active sites. This behavior has been exo
plained by a Kondo lattice modeL The mathematical aspece
is to transform to a renormalized hybridization model where
the df hybridization ~atrix elements are all reduced by a
common factor Vkf -+ Vkf = Vkf ( 1 -5), where 5 is the frac
tional occupation of the magnetic configuration. Transport
properties4 and coherence effect5 have been studied by intro
ducing fluctuations in this df hybridization. However, some
points remain unclear in this model. First the room-tem
perature resistivity is very large, much larger than in many
magnetic Kondo lattices, Second, the effect of impurities,
which is very important in these compounds, is not well un
derstood. Third, the interplay between magnetism and su
perconductivity is not understood, as a phonon mechanism
has to be invoked i.n that case. Recently we put forward a
new approach where the high density of states is due to a
virtual bound state band narrowed by correlation. These vir
tual bound states explain the high resistivity at room tem
perature and they behave coherently at low temperature in
order to make a narrow band. This narrow band interacts
with a conduction band by a Kondo-like interaction J s S.
We show that at low temperature, this interaction was reo
sponsible both for magnetism or singlet superconductivity,
In this paper we describe the effect of normal impurities
on the coherence between the virtual bound states. We show
that impurities destroy the coherent scattering. Even at zero
temperature, the lattice of active sites gives a contribution to
the resistivity greater than the contribution of the impurities
themselves. This explains the puzzling problem of a resistiv
ity greater than the unitary limit. The mean free path of the
electrons at the Fermi level is strongly reduced. As in the
proposed model, magnetic and superconducting properties
are strongly dependent on the mean free path; this is also an
explanation of the drastic effect of a small amount of normal
impurities on magnetism and superconductivity.
We start from our model of active atoms (Ce or U)
which are on a lattice whose spacing is N times that of the conduction electrons. This avoids direct overlap between d
or f states of the active atoms and permits the hybridization
parameter to hybridize not with a single k vector but with Nk
vectors and thus to describe virtual bound states on each Ce
or U atoms. This will describe the high-temperature region
which is known to be wen explained by a collection ofimpur
ities creating a virtual bound state. At low temperatures,
since they are on a lattice, they behave coherently and form a
band.
In a first part we consider the residual resistivity at zero
temperature. The key point is that a very small amount of
impurities creates a large residual resistivity whose value is
much larger than the maximum value that one can calculate
in the unitary limit for these impurities. Our point will be
that these impurities cannot create by themselves such a re
sistivity but will make the lattice of active atoms contribute
to the resistivity at zero temperature, These atoms will not
only diffuse coherently but also incoherently and give an
additional resistivity which will be important because the
active atoms are strong scatterers since they create virtual
bound state at the Fermi leveL
In order to show that point, we consider the Green func
tion of the conduction electrons G(k,k ') and expand it as a
function of the hybridization parameter V. Let Gu(k) be the
Green function of the conduction electrons before hybridi
zation. We have
G = Go + GoWGo + GoWGoWG o + ''''
where W is an effective potential defined by
V2 Wkk, = I /tk-.k')R;.
iE-Ed
For a perfect lattice, this series sums up to the usual result for
the hybridized band. There is no umklapp term except near
the Brillouin zone of the active atoms.
If now we introduce a finite lifetime for the conduction
electrons and write
Go= l/[E-Ek +i(hlr)),
this will give an uncertainty in the conversion of momentum
as one can see using the following transfomlation:
3391 J. AppL Phys. 61 (8),15 Aprii 1987 0021-8979/87/083391 -02$02.40 @ 1987 American Institute of Physics 3391
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69.166.47.134 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 05:22:26where I = v F1"' is the mean free path of the conduction elec
trons before hybridization. Now the sum over the active sites
does not give a strict conservation of the momentum. The
active sites can scatter in another part of the reduced Bril
louin zone exactly as the umklapp processes of the phonon
do. This new scattering is incoherent. Thus part of the scat
tering of the active atoms contributes to the resistivity. This
additional scattering, which in principle always exists in a
hybridized system, is large only when the active atoms are
strong scatterers and lead to a resonant scattering. Each ac
tive atom behaves as a scatterer of order:
(k;.d31IH V21E -Ed)'
The additional resistivity is thus, if C is the concentration of
active atoms:
Ap~(k}d31l)CApA'
where ApA is the resistivity created by 1 at. % of active
atoms in the matrix. When the coefficient in front of CAp A is
of order unity, it means that the lattice of active atoms be
haves completely incoherently. The criterion for such a total
incoherence is thus
k~d311_1.
This gives a rather small value for I except for d). k J.'-]. How
ever, since Ap A can be rather large, Ce in CeAl:, will give a
contribution of the order7 of7.5 flU cm %; this contribution
is important.
Now if we consider the behavior as a fUllction of tem
perature, we introduce the coupling between the two bands
that we derived in our model Hamiltonian:
H= IJ;s;'S;,
i
Ifwe consider a nonmagnetic ground state, such a coupling
is well known to give a ]'2 dependence for resistivity. The
characteristic temperature Td, Le., R (T) -( T lTd) 2, being
related to the width of the narrow bandwidth, is of order Tic
in heavy fermion compounds.
We ask the question at what temperature the lattice of
active atoms can behave as a collection of impurities? An
electron with a k vector must diffuse on the reciprocal lattice
of the active atom. Let d = Na, the distance between active
atoms; we must have
4nk 2dk( lid 3) ~ 1,
where k~kp ~ (1la) and dk is the uncertainty on the k
vector which is due to thermal diffusion dk=kT Ihvp. We
will lose coherence between active atoms at temperature T cO
with
1~=(~rhvF ~ -(~rTd'
Thus the temperature at which coherence disappears is
1!5th-1I1Oth of the bandwidth which is often taken as the
Kondo temperature.
3392 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 61, No.8, 15 April 1987 For temperature of order (ald)3Td• coherence between
active atoms begins to be destroyed. The resistivity is no
longer determined by the relaxation rate of the coherent
state, but by the relaxation rate of the conduction electron
state scattered into the virtual bound states of the active
atoms. The resistivity increases rapidly. We can have either a
maximum or a slower increase depending on the possibility
to the Kondo effect on one impurity to manifest. lfthe coher~
ence is very rapidly destroyed, for instance, helped by impur
ities or defects in the materials,s the one impurity Kondo
effect can manifest itself and we have a maximum of resistiv
ity of order C t:J.PA' If not, no maximum can be observed.
We now consider the effect of impurities on the magnet
ic and superconducting ground state. In our model both are
due to the RKK Y interaction, The effect of a mean free path
I on this interaction is well known. Indeed, the coupling
between nearest neighbors at distance d is reduced by
J = Joe-dI1•
Thus the value of TN is exponentially reduced by normal
impurities. As we have shown tnat, due to the resonance at
the Fermi level, a small concentration c of impurities reduces
drastically the mean free, path we must have
TN = T7ve --ac.
A rapid decrease has been observed in U2Zn17•9
Superconductivity is also strongly reduced as the inter~
action responsible for it depends on the impurities contrary
to the usual one. We must also obtain an exponential de
crease of superconductivity with the concentration of nOf
mal impurities. This is in contrast with the BCS case, where
thermodynamics is not affected by them. This is also a much
more severe reduction than in the anisotropic BCS case
where normal impurities have an effect on To. Such a strong
effect has been observed in UBeI3.!O
We have benefitted from discussions with Professor P.
Noziere and Professor T. M. Rice.
'Por an experimental review, see G. R. Stewart, Rev. Mod. Phys. 56, 755
(1984).
LFor a theoretical review, see P. A. Lee, T. M. Rice, J. W. Serene, L. J.
Sham, and J. W. Wilkins, Comm. Solid State Phys. 12, 99 (1986).
'c. Lacroix and M. Cyrot, Phys. Rev. B 20, 1969 (1979); T. M. Rice and
K. Veda, Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 995 (1985).
4M. Lavagna, C. Lacroix, and M. Cyrot, J. Appl. Phys. 53, 2055 (1982).
'C. Lacroix, J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 60,145 (1986).
OM. Cyrot, Solid State Comrnun. (1986).
7K. Andres,J. E. Grabner, andH. R. Ott, Phys. Rev. Lett. 35,1779 (1975).
SA. de Visser, J. C. P. Klaase, M. Van Sprang, J. J. M. Franse, A. Mer
ovsky, and T. T. M. Palstra, J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 54-51, 375 (1986).
9J. O. Willis, Z. Fisk, G. R. Stewart, and H. R. Ott, J. Magn. Magn. Mater.
54-51,395 (1986).
lOA. L. Giorgi, Z. Fisk, J. O. Willis, G. R. Stewart,and J. 1. Smith, Proceed
ings of the i 7th international Conference on Low Temperature Physics
(North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1984). p. 229.
M. Cyrot 3392
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69.166.47.134 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 05:22:26 |
1.344041.pdf | On the correlation between highorder bands and some photoluminescence lines in
neutronirradiated FZ silicon
Lei Zhong, Zhanguo Wang, Shouke Wan, and Lanying Lin
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 66, 3787 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.344041
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.344041
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/66/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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141.209.100.60 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:21:20On the correlation between hlgh~order bands and some photoluminescence
lines in neutron .. irradiated FZ SmCon
lei Zhong, Zhanguo Wang, Shouke Wan, and Lanying Lin
Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People's Republic of China
(Received 20 March 1989; accepted for publication 5 July 1989)
The defects in float-zone silicon irradiated by fast neutron with fluences up to 4.0 X 1018 n/
cmz, followed by various heat treatments, have been studied by low-temperature
photoluminescence (PL) and infrared absorption measurement with emphasis upon the high
order band (HOB) and its relationship with the commonly observed PL-lines such as II
(1.018 eV) and 13( 1.039 eV). It has been shown that band 1124 em-I, unlike the other higher
order bands, is considerably broader for the sample annealed at low temperature (for example,
385 ·C) with FWHM as large as 3 meV and is apparently narrowed as the anneal temperature
was increased. We have obtained the 13 line and its phonon replicas in the near-infrared
absorption measurement, further proving the transition involved in the 13 defect center to be
electronic in nature. The combination of luminescence and absorption experiment results
demonstrated that the HOB could be wel! developed after PL lines such as II and Ii
disappeared completely, or vice versa. PL lines could be observed before the HOB emerged,
therefore ruling out the possibility proposed by earlier authors that the HOB could be
correlated with some PL lines.
INTRODUCTION
High-order bands (HOBs) are a series of26 bands in the
wavelength region 6-15 pm which arise from defects intro
duced by 40-50-MeV electron irradiation or reactor neutron
bombardment rangi.ng in fluence from 5 X 1016 to 1019 11/
cm2 (E> 1 MeV) after annealing for about 15 min between
about 350 and 600 0c.1-12 In order to observe the entire spec
trum of bands, the sample must be cooled down to tempera
tures less than 100 K, and the full energy spectrum of light is
required to be incident on the sample. HOBs are indepen
dent of initial oxygen content, but are strongly dependent
upon the boron or phosphorus impurity concentration, since
they are not observed in silicon which is chemically doped
before irradiation to give a resistivity less than] n em (n
type) or 0.1 n em (p type).9 The transitions involved in the
HOBs have been proved to be electronic in nature mainly by
the so-called dual-beam method, II All the bands could he
characterized by applying uniaxial compressive stress with
polarized light into eight types, each exhibiting a different
response to stress and hence a different symmetry.~ The de
fects giving rise to the bands were supposed to be clusters of
vacancies andlor interstitials, formed only after the disap
pearance of the defects like, for example, divacancies, inter
stitials, vacancy-impurity pairs, etc. However, there is much
left to do for its identification. <)
On the other hand, radiation-induced defects in silicon
have been studied using low-temperature photolumines
cence (PL) as the probe since the mid-1960s. 13 A large body
of line systems have been brought to light roughly spread
over a spectral range from near-band gap to almost 2 pm.
Sharp peaks have been investigated at 0.97 eV (G), 0.79 eV
(C), 1.108 eV (J), 1.018 eV (11)' 1.080 eV ([2)' 1.039 eV
(11), and 1.034 eV ([4)' which are the lines reported until
now for the silicon subjected to ion-implantation, electron
irradiation, or fast neutron bombardment, and then to an annealing at room temperature to about 500 "C. 11-27
Tkachev and Mudryi23 also reported four lines located at
1.0037,0.988,0.7667, and 0.761 eV for the samples irradiat
ed by fast neutrons and annealed at about 400 "c. Although
both the infrared absorption and photoluminescence study
of neutron-irradiation-induced defects have been highly de
veloped for about a quarter of this century, little correlation
has been made between the two fields. Only recently, Vi
dinski, SteckI, and Corelli 12 have selected of all the lines
mentioned above, I]> 13, 1.0037,0.988,0.7667. and 0.7610
eV, as the candidates in an attempt to correlate the PL peaks
with HOB state. They have abandoned the G-line because
the incorporation of carbon in this center has directly been
demonstrated in high-resolution PL reexamination ofthe G
line by isotope effect of its vibrational sidebands, and anneal
ing experiments have indicated that this defect center an
neals completely in the range 250-300 "C. In this work, we
are going experimentally to examine the hypothesis pro
posed by Vidinski and co-workers. 12
EXPERIMENTAL METHOD
The samples used here were float-zone silicon with resis
tivity of 1000 n em (base boron and base phosphorus) irra
diated with 4.0X lOIS n/cm2 fast neutrons. During the irra
diation, the sample temperature was held at about 40°C.
They were then isochronally annealed in a pure argon-ft.ow
ing furnace at temperatures from 100 to 600°C in various
steps for 45 min.
Photoluminescence was excited with the 5145-A line of
an argon-ion laser (Spectra Physics model 263, 40 mW)
chopped at 273 Hz. Samples were immersed in liquid heli
um. The luminescence was analyzed by a O.25-m grating
monochromator (Jobin YVON H25), detected by a liquid
nitrogen-cooled germanium detector (North Coast) and
3787 J. Appl. Phys. 66 (8), i 5 October 1989 0021-8979/891203787-05$02.40 (i',) 1989 American Institute of Physics 3787
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141.209.100.60 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:21:20amplified in a conventional lock-in technique. The samples
for infrared absorption measurement were cut to dimensions
lOX20X2 mm3 and double-side polished. They were
mounted with clips onto a copper block attached to a heli
tran cold finger. An Air Product cryostat was used to attain
sample temperature in the range 10 K to room temperature.
While near-infrared absorption measurements were per
formed on the Perkin Elmer NIR/UV Lambda 9, the medi
um infrared absorption were measured on the Nicolet FTIR
170SX.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
In Fig. 1 are shown the photoluminescence spectra re
corded at 4.2 K with a Ge detector of the fast-neutron-irra
diated samples annealed at different temperature. Curve (a)
is the spectrum for the sample as-irradiated without further
heat treatment. The spectrum consists of the well-known G
(0.970 e V) and II (1.018 e V) lines and their phonon replicas
together with intrinsic luminescence. In this work, intrinsic
luminescence lines and PL lines due to acceptor- or donor
bound excitons and bound multiexciton complexes are not
individually identified.2x After the sample was annealed at
280 "C, the I( line grew stronger and the 13 line appeared, as
seen in Fig. 1 (b). While the I, line was enhanced with its
transverse acoustic phonon replicas overlapping upon the
I(line, the G-line was totany eliminated for the sample an·
nealed at 300°C, as shown in Fig. 1 by curve (c). We could
see from curve (d) that the I( line was completely sup
pressed when the annealing temperature was increased to
385°C. Nothing but intrinsic luminescence could be ob·
served when the annealing temperature was elevated above
470°C.
The dependence of the intensity of the I( and 13 lines
with annealing temperature is given in Fig. 2. There exists a
reverse effect for the I( line between 240 and 280°C which
was first reported by Kirkpatrick, Noonan, and Street·
11
:0 ..
a
...J « z
C> b
(f)
...J
a..
C
d
132 1.28 L24 1.20 1.16 LI2
WAVELENGTH (OJ "')
FIG. 1. PL spectra recorded at 4.2 K for samples Ca) as-irmdiated followed
by heat treatment at (b) 280 'C, (e) 300 'C, and Cd) 385 'C, respectively.
3788 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.8, i 5 October 1989 man.14 The mechanism for this reverse effect is still un
known. The I, line decreased with temperature in the range
from 280 to 385°C. We have measured the anneal deactiva
tion energy of the 1\ line. The result is 1.34 eV, which could
be compared with that of divacancy, 1.2-1.5 eV,2''J although
it is currently considered that the II line arises from a five
vacancy cluster, (5,20 The I, line decreased but more slowly in
the temperature range 300--470°C. Lacking sufficient data,
we cannot give the anneal deactivation energy for the I\ line.
We see from Fig. 1, in contrast to the near-band-gap PL
due to bound excitons at shallow donors or acceptors where
coupling of momentum-conserving transverse acoustic
(TA) phonons leads to sharp replicas of the principl.e non
phonon (NP) line, that the spectra for the deep I, and 13
lines defects are of phonon density-of-state features indica
tive of coupling of phonon from the whole phonon spectrum
to the defects. The transverse acoustic phonon replicas II
(TA) and Ii (2TA) resemble a Poisson distribution with a
small Huang-Rhys factor indicating the weaker electron
phonon coupling. In comparison of spectrum 13 with II' it
can be clearly seen that Huang-Rhys factor is larger for the
13 than for the 1, line. It is the moderate Huang-Rhys factor
together with the large stress parameters that led the authors
of Ref. 27 to the suggestion that 13 (1.039 eV) center is va
cancy cluster. We have measured the near-infrared absorp
tion spectra about peak 13' The results are shown in Fig. 3.
The phonon replicas 13 (TA) and 13 (2TA) appear on the
higher-energy side ofthe zero-phonon line, whereas in emis
sion they are on the low-energy side, which further supports
the fact that the transition associated with the I, line is elec
tronic in nature. Shown in Fig. 4 are spectra recorded at
temperatures 10, 80, and 110 K, respectively. It is clearly
TEMPERATURE (c)
2 500 400 300 200 100
10 , X
X
101 II
IIX Xx -X X
::0
~ X II
!III
II! !III >-f-100
(f) z: II! X w ....
Z
--' 10-1
a.. X II
102 I
2.0 3.0
lOOOtT ( K-1,
FIG. 2. Dependence of PL lines I, (X) and I, (III) IIpon the isochronal
annealing temperature, recorded at 4.2 K.
Lei etal. 3788
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141.209.100.60 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:21:201.0 1.2 1.4 1.6
WAVELENGTH (PM)
FIG. 3. AbsorptiOil spectra about the 1, line recorded at 10 K of NTD-Si
samples isochronally annealed at (a) 385 'C, (b) 470 'C, and (c) 550 'C,
respectively. Cd) is the spectrum of as-grown sample.
demonstrated that the zero-phonon line position has been
shifted to 1.036 eV when the sample temperature was in
creased to 80 K, which could be caused by the temperature
induced band-gap shrinkage. Here the absorption data are
again in agreement with photoluminescence, which were re
ported by Thewalt, Steiner, and Pankove21 for silicon im
planted with In and/or Tl. 13 luminescence was almost
quenched at about 110 K.
'" ~
<Ii{
III
II: 0 !II
ID <
I!:I w
'" ::; c
Ii! II: 0 Z Shown in Fig. 5 are the medium infrared spectra reeord-
1.10 1.15
WAVELENGTH a
1.20
(jJ III!)
FIG. 4. Absorption spectra of samples neutron irradiated and then an
nealed at 385 'C, recorded at (a) 10K, (b) 80K, and (c) 110 K, respective
ly.
3789 ed at 10 K for as-grown sample and fast-neutron-irradiated
samples annealed at temperatures 385, 470, and 550"c'
Only observed in the as-grown sample between the wave
number 700-1300 em -I is the peak 1136 cm-I, the wen
known interstitial oxygen local vibration absorption. Be
cause the oxygen content is very low (about 6X lOIS cm-3
estimated from the absorption coefficient measured at liq
uid-nitrogen temperature), the other weaker oxygen vibra
tion absorption peaks 3(),ll such as at 1134, 1132, 1130, 1129,
1128, and 1205 em -I have not been distinguished. The as
irradiated sample for which the spectrum has not been given
exhibited no new absorption peak in the wave-number re
gion mentioned above. After being annealed at 385 DC for 45
min, HOB peaks 1124,776,741, and 709 em-1 began to step
up. All the high-order bands, a series of 26 bands in total,
have been observed apparently in the sample annealed at
550 DC, although the initially appearing bands 1124 and 741
cm -I had tended to decrease in comparison with spectrum
for the sample treated at 470 ·C.
lt is interesting to note that band 1124 cm-I is consider
ably broader for the samples treated at low temperature. The
FWHM for the 385 ·C sample was as large as 24 cm I as
measured from curve (b) in Fig. 5, so that the preexisting
1136-cm -I peak and the emerging I! 0 I-em -I band appear
just like two narrow shoulders on the both sides. However,
there is no fine structure in the 1124-cm .. I band. A sample
damaged by fast neutron and subsequently annealed at high
er temperatures gave rise to narrower FWHM, as seen from
UJ
U z «
III
0::
0 f/) ro
<{
Cl
UJ
~ -' <{
;!; oc
0 z
1205
WAVENUMBER 'CM~'
FIG. 5. Infrared absorption spectra recorded at 10 K of (a) as-grown crys
tal and NTD-Si samples isochronally annealed at (b) 385 'C, (c) 470 'C,
alld (d) 550 'C, respectively.
3789
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141.209.100.60 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:21:20the spectra for samples treated, respectively, at 470 and
550°C. It is well known that the sharpness of the absorption
lines increases as the measurement temperature is lowered
from 100 to 45 K,9 But to our knowledge, this is the first
report about the dependence of FWHM of HOB upon the
anneal temperature. Random lattice strains may be respon
sible for this broadening. This kind of strain would he re
leased as the annealing temperature was increased. But this
explanation is not satisfying as it seems implausi.ble that ran
dom lattice strains could give rise to FWHM as large as 3
meV without significantly changing the electronic proper
ties of the center. Besides random strain, this broadening
occurs perhaps even from the defects having the same core
but different surroundings. It needs further work to eluci
date the mechanism fo, the broadening. Since such broaden
ing has never been observed for the other HOBs, for exam
ple, the initially appearing bands 776, 741, and 709 cm -I of
curve (b) in Fig. 5; the reported phenomenon has given band
1124 cm -1 a feature to distinguish from the others.
Now we are going to examine the correlation between
the HOB and the photoluminescence lines. It is currently
considered that the defect giving rise to the HOB has three
different charge states within the band gap of silicon. These
charge states are T(E" + 0.17 eV), T*(E u + O.42eV), and
T**. Here Trepresents the empty defect state, T* the inter
mediate defect state after capture of one electron, and T**
the defect state (energy location < 0.72 e V below conduc
tion band) after capture of two electrons from which the
optical transitions of the HOBs take place. Vidinski and co
workers 12 have proposed that the state T could be the final
state to which the electrons decay and emits PL of one of the
four peaks II (1.018 eV), r" (1.039 eV), 1.0037 eV, and
0,988 eV, and that the T* may be the final state to which the
electrons decay hence giving rise to PL lines 0,7667 and
0.7610 eV. Photoluminescence peaks 1,0037, 0.988, and
0.7610 e V have never been detected or reported in float-zone
silicon, indicating that these radiative recombination centers
must involve oxygen which may exist in large quantities in
CZ-silicon crystals.2,\ Peak 0.767 e V, currently called as "P"
line, has been proven to originate from radiative recombina
tion of an exciton bound at an isoelectronic center which
comprises thermal donors or oxygen donors.32-,\4 As it is
generally accepted that oxygen does not participate in the
defect center responsible for HOB,9 it seems impossible to
correlate the HOBs and PL lines 1.0037,0,988,0.7610, and
0.767 eV. In fact, we have never observed these PL peaks in
our float-zone samples used in this work. Now we are going
to focus our attention on the PL lines II (1,018 eV) and 13
(1.039 e V). In comparison of Fig. 2 with Fig. 5, it can be
dearly seen that I) has almost disappeared for the sample
annealed at 385 "C, while HOB just emerged. So, we could
rule out the possibility that II could be identified with HOB
center. 13 seems to be the most promising candidate for the
correlation with HOB state. 13 (1.039 eV) coexists with
HOB in samples annealed at 385 or 470°C, as shown by
comparing Fig. 2 or 3 with Fig. 5. But, unfortunately, the
harmony was interrupted by the annealing at 550°C. Al
though HOB have been observed apparently in the sample
annealed at 550·C as shown in Fig, 5, the 13 (1.039 eV) line
3790 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 66, No.8, 15 October 19B9 disappeared as demonstrated by both PL and NIR absorp
tion measurement. It should be pointed out that the NIR
spectrum curve (c) in Fig. 3 and the MIR spectrum curve
(d) in Fig. 5 were measured on the same sample. As it is
unlikely that there are other processes such as Auger nonra
diative recombination to come out suddenly and dominate
the radiative recombination process when the sample an
nealed at 550 DC, it is implausible to consider the state T
(Ec + 0.17 eV) as the final state to which the electron de
cays and emits PL [3' On the other hand, from curves (a)
and (b) in Fig. 1, we could see that PL line II existed in as
irradiated sample and I; could also be observed for the sam
ple treated at 260°C. However, HOB could be detected only
when the annealing temperature was above 300 °C.
In short, the analysis of impurity (oxygen) dependence
and anneal behavior lead us to object to the suggestion to
correlate HOB and PL peaks II' /3' 1.0037,0.988,0.7667,
and 0.7610 eV, although the relative energy position permits
it. As It (l.018 eV) and 13 (1.039 eV) are generally consid
ered to arise from five-vacancy or vacancy cluster, our find
ings may be helpful to the identification of HOB. Our con
clusion was also supported by the results of uniaxial stress on
the II and 13 lines obtained by Minaev, Mudryi, and Tka
chev20 and Ciechanowska, Gordon, and Lightowlers,27 re
spectiVely. According to Corelli et al.'s work,8,9 the stress
data of HOB can be fit in terms of treating the observed
pattern as belonging to two defect symmetry groups, (1)
tetragonal and (2) rhombic, However, the luminescence
centers responsible for the II zero-phonon line have a tri
gonal symmetry. 20 On the other hand, although the 13 center
is a defect with tetragonal symmetry,27 band 1171 cm -I, the
only one HOB having the Td symmetry,8.') did not emerge in
sample annealed at 470°C as seen clearly in Fig. 5, when 13
has already disappeared, as shown in Fig. 2,
'M. E. Rolli and], C. Carelli, J. AppL Phys. 47, 37 (1976).
2R. C. Newman and D. H. J. Totterdell, J. Phys. C 8,3944 (1975).
'V. N. Mordkovich, S. P. Solovev, E. M. Temper, and V. A. Kharchenko,
SOy. Phys. Semicond. 8, 666 (1974).
·Y. I'. Koval, V. N. Mordkovich, E. M. Temper, and V. A. Kharchenko,
Sov. Phys. Semicond. 6, 1152 (1973).
'c. S. Chen, R. V. Lowell, and J. C. Corelli, Radiation Damage Defects in
Semiconductors (Institute of Physics, London, 1973), p. 210
OM. T. Lappo and V. D. Tkachev, SOy. Phys. Semicond. 5, 1141 (1972).
7J. C. Corelli. R. C. Young, and C. S. Chen, IEEE Trans. Nne!. Sci. NS-17,
126 (1970).
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bett, in Radiation Effects ill Semiconductors, 1976, edited by N. B. Urli
and J. W. Corbett (Institute of .Physics, London, 1977), p. 215.
oJ. C. Corelli and J. W. Corbett, in Neutran Transmutation Doped Silicon,
edited by J. Guldberg (Plenum, New York, 1981), p. 35.
10K. Sahu Abha, T. R. Reddy, and A. V. R. Warrier, J. App!. Phys. 54, 706
(1983).
1'M. T. Mitchel!, J. C. Corelli, and J. W. Corbett, in Defects and Radiation
Effects in Semiconductors, edited by J. H. Albany (Institute of Physics,
Bristol, 1979), p. 317.
I2W. J. Vidinski, A. J. Steckl, and J. C. Corelli, J. AppL Phys. 54, 4097
(1983).
13R. Sauer and J. Weber, Physica 1168, 195 (1983).
Lei etal. 3790
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(1977).
16c. E. Jones, E. S. Johnson, W. D. Compton, 1. R. Noonan, and B. G.
StreetmanJ AppL Phys. 44, 5402 (1973).
I?E. S. Johnson, W. D. Compton, J. R. Noonan, and B. G. Streetman, J.
App!. Phys. 44, 5411 (1973).
181. R. Noollan, C. G. Kirkpatrick, and B. G. Streetman, RadiaL Elf. 21,
225 (1974).
19 A. V. Mudryi and Y. Khnevich, SOy. Phys. Semicond. 8, 875 (1975).
2°N. S. Mineav, A. V. Mudryi, and V. D. Thachev, Phys. Status Solidi B
108, K89 (1981).
21M. L W. Thewalt, T. Steiner, and J. I.Pankovc, J. Appl. l'hys. 57, 498
(1985).
220. F. Swenson, T. E. Luke, and R. L Hellghold, 1. App!. Phys. 54, 6329
(l9tB).
21V. D. Thachev and A. V. Mudryi, in Radiation Effects in Semiconductors,
edited by N. B. Urli and J. W. Corbett Cillstitute of Physics, London,
3791 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.8, 15 October 19139 1977), p. 231.
24M. S. Skolnick, A. G. Cullis, and H. C. Webber, J. Lumin. 24/25, 39
(1981).
2'K. P. O'Donnell, K. M. Lee, and G. D. Watkins, Physica 116B, 258
(1983).
2"J. Weber and M. Singh, App!. Phys. Lett. 49,1617 (1986).
27Z. Ciechanowska, D, Gordon, and E. C. Lightowlers, Solid State Com
mun, 49, 427 (1984).
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(North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1982), Vol. 2, p. 393,
29L, S. Smimov, A Survey afSemiconductor Radiation Technology (MIR,
Moscow, 1983), p. 23 .
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don, 1973), p. 91.
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34J. Weber and R. Saller, Defects in Semiconductors 11, Vol. 14 of Materials
Research Symposia (North-Holland, New Y ork,1983), p. 165.
Lei etal. 3791
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141.209.100.60 On: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:21:20 |
1.341728.pdf | Spacecharge behavior near implanted contacts on infrared detectors
Nancy M. Haegel
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 64, 2153 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.341728
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.341728
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/64/4?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15Space .. charge behavior near implanted contacts on infrared detectors
Nancy M. Haegei
Department 0/ Materials Science and Engineering, University a/California. Los Angeles. Los Angeles,
California 90024
(Received 12 October 1987; accepted for publication 26 April 1988)
A phenomenological model for the steady-state distribution of electric field and potential near
an implanted contact on a low-temperature infrared detector is presented. The model assumes
a linear distribution of trapped space charge and calculates the resulting electric field gradient
and potential barrier that are established. The change in these distributions for changes in
incident photon flux, applied electric field, or compensating donor concentration is
determined. An increase in photon flux under constant applied electric field results in no
change in the space-charge distribution for low-field situations. A change in field for constant
flux conditions, by contrast, results in a change in potential barrier width and height. These
results indicate that transient phenomena should be strongly dependent on operating
conditions and may explain why a wide range of apparently unrelated transient phenomena are
observed in practice.
INTRODUCTION
Infrared detectors that are based on extrinsic semicon
ductor materials and operate at low temperatures are used in
both astronomical and spectroscopic investigations."] The
understanding of transient effects as a result of abrupt
changes in either incident photon flux or applied bias in these
devices has traditionally been one of the most challenging
and frustrating tasks in the field. A large number and wide
variety of effects are observed, although rarely fully explored
or documented. This is not surprising, when Olle considers
that infrared (IR) detector operation encompasses a wide
parameter space including photon flux, electric field or cur
rent bias, temperature, materials parameters, and device
configuration. Contact design and fabrication techniques
have also been suspected as playing an important role in
determining transient behavior.
Anomalous behaviors that have been reported in IR de
tectors include very slow transient response to changes in
photon flux levels, l-3 complex instabilities at high applied
electric fields,4.5 and an overshoot behavior of the current,
which is commonly known as the "hook effect." Haegel and
Haller3 have documented a transient response on the time
scale of seconds in Ge:Be and Ge:Zn photoconductors. Be
cause this response time is orders of magnitude longer than
would be expected from transport behavior in the bulk, there
have been attempts to explain such phenomena by consider
ing the dynamics of trapped space charge near the injecting
contact.6 This requires a good model for the contact and
near-contact region.
The modeling of IR-detector behavior must take into
account several factors that differentiate the behavior of im
planted contacts on high-resistivity semiconductors at low
temperature from that of metal-semiconductor contacts or
implanted contacts on low-resistivity semiconductors at
room temperature. Infrared detectors, particularly those de
signed for detection of far-IR wavelengths (20-200 pm),
must be operated at low temperatures to reduce the noise
associated with thermal generation of carriers and, in the
case of extrinsic detectors, to assure that a large fraction of the dopant atoms are in the neutral, and therefore, optically
active state. Applied electric fields must be kept low to pre
vent impact ionization of dopant atoms, and the devices of
ten operate under very low photon fluxes, resulting in low
free-carrier concentrations and resistivities often in excess of
1010 n cm. This means that much of the modeling of room
temperature devices is not applicable to IR detectors.
Modeling of transient response offar-infrared detectors
has proceeded through several stages. A simple model based
on a space-charge neutral device and considering only bulk
phenomena leads to the conclusion that the transient re
sponse under low photon background should be determined
by the free-carrier lifetime, which is usually a function ofthe
compensating impurity concentration.2 Perturbations in
this case for varying levels of photon excitation and various
degrees of trapping states in the material have also been ex
plored.7 At low temperatures, the dielectric relaxation time
(the time required to neutralize trapped space charge and
maintain charge neutrality in the bulk) can become longer
than the free-carrier lifetime and can therefore playa role in
transient behavior. The dielectric relaxation phenomena and
model was identified by Williams in Ge:Hg detectors~-10 and
is observed in cases where the electric field is high enough
that the drift length of free carriers is comparable to the
detector length.
There is a growing consensus that transient behavior in
photoconductors cannot be fully understood without an im
proved model for the near-contact region, which is a region
in which space-charge neutrality is not maintained. The
space-charge distribution that is set up is due to the diffusion
of holes or electrons from a heavily doped (usually implant
ed) contact region. This space charge results in field gradi
ents and a potential barrier to free-carrier flow, which is self
consistent with the current passing through the device. A
recent model that includes this space-charge region6 shows
that slow transient response may be associated with space
charge rearrangement near the contact. This model, how
ever, also uses a simplified contact picture which eliminates
consideration of the region in which diffusion current, nega
tive field gradients, and the potential maximum of the energy
2153 J. Appl. Phys. 64 (4), 15 August 1988 0021-S979 fSS 1162153-07$02.40 © 1988 American Institute of Physics 2153
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15barrier for free carriers exist.
The purpose of this paper is to present an analytical
model of the near-contact region that includes the complete
contact barrier. The model allows for the calculation of the
steady-state field and potential barrier distribution, assum
ing a linear distribution with variable spatial extent for the
space charge. This model can then be used to determine the
change in near-contact field and potential for changes of
photon flux or bias under conditions that simulate the actual
use of these devices. The model contributes a phenomeno
logical picture of the contact which allows for a clearer phys
ical understanding of the important processes occurring in
this region for low-temperature implanted contacts on oh
mic devices.
BACKGROUND
A schematic diagram of a p-type photoconductor with
implanted contacts is shown in Fig. 1. It is common to depo
sit a metal layer on top of the implanted layer to facilitate the
making of electrical contact to the rest of the circuit, al
though this is not done in the case of arrays where planar
detectors are illuminated from the top through the implant
ed layer. The goal is to produce an ohmic contact, generally
defined as a contact that does not itself affect device perfor
mance and can supply whatever current is required with an
associated voltage drop that is small with respect to the vol
tage drop across the rest of the device. One way to achieve
this is to form a heavily doped surface layer in the semicon
ductor. This bends the bands (Fig. 2) so that carriers can
tunnel through the metal-semiconductor barrier. As a re
sult, the ability of the contact to supply current is indepen
dent of the barrier height and independent of temperature.
Most of the data on ohmic contacts have been obtained
for room-temperature contact to Si and HI-V and II-VI de
vices, where either a low barrier height or a tunneling con
tact can lead to ohmic characteristics. For cooled IR detec
tors, however, the available thermal energy is very small
(0.36 meV at 4.2 K), so the contact must be a tunneling
contact. Thermionic emission over a metal-semiconductor
barrier could never supply sufficient current at such low
temperatures and is not the type of process that will concern
us here. Instead, the heavily doped layer allows carriers to
--PHOTON
FLUX METALLIZATION
• .1
!lllllilllll~ T'50o-aoooA
\ B implanted 0";0,,
Ge:Ga
I B Implanted ae:Ga 1..
iiiiiiliiiiiiii Tl000A
i
I\'IETALL!ZATiON
FIG. l. Schematic diagram of a far-IR photoconductor fabricated from
bulk p-type Ge,
2154 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.4, 15 August 1988 \...------EC
METAL iMPLANTED SULK
REGiON MATERIAL
FIG. 2. Effect of a heavily doped near-surface layer on band bending at a
metal-semiconductor interface.
move from the metal to the semiconductor by passing
through rather than over the metal-semiconductor barrier.
The impurity concentration in the implanted layer must be
high enough to exceed the Mott transition, i.e., the Fermi
level must lie within the valence (conduction) band at aU
temperatures for an ohmic contact to a p-type (n-type) de
vice. This will lead to an athermal tunneling process that
produces a reservoir of free holes in the semiconductor,
which can be replenished from the external circuit_
Photoconductors may be operated in either a constant
current or constant-voltage mode. Although both modes of
operation are feasible and, at least to first order, analogous, it
is most common to operate the devices at a constant bias
voltage and measure the change of current or the integrated
current with time. The detector is operated at sufficiently
low temperature that bulk resistivity is dominated in large
part by the photon flux incident upon the device. Variations
in the intensity of incident radiation result in changes of re
sistivity, measured as a resulting change of either current or
field. We will concern ourselves here with detectors operated
under low background conditions, Le., conditions in which
the incident photon flux is not sufficient to deplete any sig
nificant number of the neutral dopant species. If one consid
ers a typical doping concentration of 10 15 cm -3 in a Si or Ge
extrinsic detector and an average free-carrier lifetime of
10-6-10-9 s, then afiux ratdn excess of 102°_1023 photons/
s would be required to ionize 10% of the dopants. At an
arbitrarily chosen wavelength of 20 pm, this corresponds to
a power of more than 1 W on the device. Astronomy-related
applications and most all laboratory and detection opera
tions fall wen below this limit. In the case of detectors for
astronomy applications, it is more common to fall in the
other limit of attempting to detect the smallest signals possi
ble.
A phenomenological model for the near-contact region
of a metal-semiconductor contact was published in 1958 by
Lampert and Rose, II and extensive modeling of both ther
mionic and diffusion models has been done since that time. 12
Often attempts are made to apply this analysis to the tran
sient behavior of implanted contacts at low temperatures as
well. However, there are basic differences in the two cases.
For the low-temperature implanted contact, one assumes
that the tunneling contact from the metal to the semiconduc
tor is adequate at an temperatures and provides no barrier,
Nancy M. Haegsl 2154
..................... ; ........ -..
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15The space-charge region and the barrier that must be consid
ered are between the p + -implanted layer and the non-degen
erately doped bulk p-type material. This is in contrast to the
metal-semiconductor case where one considers the bound
ary between two different materials, and the effect of differ
ences in work function and electron affinity playa role. The
result is that, in the metal-semiconductor case, a depletion
region of free carriers establishes itselfin the semiconductor.
For the implanted contact, as we shall see, diffusion of free
carriers from the implanted region leads to an enhancement
of the majority-carrier type in the bulk material near the
contact. This basic difference between the two cases can lead
to very different contact properties.
PHYSICS OF THE NEAR~CONT ACT REGION
We will consider the physics of the near-contact region
near the interface between the implanted layer and the bulk
material. For a typical detector application (B implant to p
type Ge) this process leads to the production of a O.l-pm
region with a concentration of substitutional B of approxi
mately 1019_1020 cm-3• Because this exceeds the Mott tran
sition concentration for Ge, this region is metallic in nature
and the Fermi level lies in the valence band. Consider now
the effect of the holes that diffuse from the heavily doped
region into the bulk region, which has very few holes at low
temperature. They bring a positive charge into a previously
neutral region, regardless of whether they remain as free
carriers or are trapped by an ionized impurity. In this case,
because of the low temperature, they will be trapped by the
negatively charged acceptors and establish a positive space
charge. This space charge causes an electric field to exist,
which then produces a drift component for free holes back
toward the heavily doped region, exactly counteracting the
diffusion component at equilibrium and at zero current
through the photoconductor.
Figure 3 shows a schematic representation of the field
and potential that are produced, assuming a linear distribu
tion for the space charge. This simplifying assumption will
be used throughout this paper. Exact calculation of the
shape of the space-charge distribution requires the solution
of the complete set of differential equations governing trans
port, including the diffusion terms. This is a very difficult
time-consuming calculation. Since the goal here is to deter
mine the change in steady-state distributions for changing
flux and field, rather than the exact shape of the distribu
tions, this assumption seems acceptable, In addition, the
modeling results of Westervelt and Teitsworth,6 which
yielded the steady-state distributions by neglecting the diffu
sion term in the current equation and then matching a diffu
sion solution near the boundary, can be well approximated
by a linear distribution.
The diagrams in Fig. 3 show the transition from the
implanted material to the bulk material. The space charge
sets up a field gradient and a potential barrier. With the
application of a bias field, one sees that the electric field
distribution contains a negative and a positive region, and a
point exists where E = 0 and purely diffusive current flow
exists. The potential step becomes a potential maximum,
which occurs at the point whereE = O. The goal of the mod-
2155 J. AppL Phys" Vol, 64, No.4, 15 August 1988 ---t----=:.~- "
----'-t-'~--- "
(a) (b)
FIG. 3. Space charge, electric field, potential, and band diagram as a func
tion of distance ill the near-contact region (a) without applied external bias;
(b) with applied external bias.
eling is to calculate these distributions and determine the
barrier height, the width of the space-charge region and the
barrier, and finally the effect of changing photon flux or ap
plied field. It should be noted that the model used by Wester
velt and Teitsworth6 has neglected the negative-drift compo
nent region and has considered the space-charge effects
beginning only from the point where E = O. This may be
justified, both physically and in terms of computational sim
plification, but it leaves out a very important aspect of the
near-contact transport, namely the point of purely diffusive
current flow and the existence of a maximum in the potential
distribution. It is this aspect of the contact behavior that will
be clarified and included here.
MODELING OF THE NEAR-CONTACT FIELD AND
POTENTIAL
As a prototype system, we will consider the ca..<;e of a p
type semiconductor which contains an intentionally intro
duced shallow level dopant (such as Ga in Ge or Si) and a
much smaller concentration of residual donor impurities,
N D' To calculate the distribution offield and potential in the
near-contact region, we assume a linear distribution of space
charge that has a value of N D at the point x = 0 and de
creases linearly to 0 at some value Xmax' which is allowed to
vary. Physically this means that the holes which diffuse from
the implanted region will be trapped by the negatively
charged ionized acceptors. These exist as a result of compen
sation, the process in which the donors, the minority impuri
ty species in this case, give up their electrons to the acceptors
and are therefore funy ionized without contributing free
electrons to the conduction band. The space charge exists
because the holes neutralize the ionized acceptors, upsetting
the space-charge balance between ionized acceptors and do-
Nancy M. Haegel 2155
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15nors. Because of the lqw temperature of device operation, we
can assume that these holes are trapped and therefore repre
sent a localized space charge.
Making the assumption of the linear distribution, the
space-charge density, often indicated as p(x), is given by
p(x) =ND(1-x!xmax)' (1)
where x is the distance from the implanted-region-bulk-re
glon interface and Xmax is the point in the bulk where the
space charge goes to zero (i.e., the end of the distribution of
trapped charge). From the work of Westervelt and Teits
worth6 one sees that this distance is on the order of 10-4_
10-5 cm for typical operating parameters of Ge:Ga photo
conductors. Using Poisson's equation,
dE e -=-[p(x)], (2)
dX €€o
where e is the electron charge and €€o is the dielectric con
stant, one can calculate the electric field E(x),
E(x) = -e!uoND(x-x2!2xmax) +Emax + Ebias'
(3)
The quantity Emax + Ebias is the constant of integration;
Emax is the field that results from diffusion at the implanted
region-bulk-region interface, and Ebias is the externally ap
plied field. This must meet two criteria: (1) E(O) = Emsx
+ Ebias and (2) E(xmax) = Ebias• This means that Emax can
be evaluated and the final expression written as
E(x) = --ND x---+ Ebias +----. e ( X2) eND (Xmax )
€€o 2xmax €Eo 2
(4)
Integration of the field distribution leads to the expression
for the potentia];
Vex) = _~ND(X2 _~)
€Eo 2 6xmax
[eND (Xmax)] + Ebias +----x + Vc'
EEl) 2 (5)
The boundary condition here is V(O) = 0, and the expres
sion for V(x) can be written simply as
[eND (Xmax)] + Ebia• + ---- X.
EEo 2 (6)
Of the three variables in the expression (ND, Ebias, and
Xmax ), two, N D and Ebias, are determined by the detector
material and the operating bias condition. Therefore, we
must find a self-consistent way to determine Xmax' i.e., to
determine the degree to which the space-charge region ex
tends into the device.
Additional constraints on the system can be obtained by
considering the requirement that the current flow, under
steady-state operation, must be constant throughout the en
tire device. The current density consists of three components
J(x,!) = e!1P(x,t)E(x,t)
aE(x,t) D ap(x,t) + €E() at -p e -'-":'a-x'--'-- (7)
2155 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 54, No.4, 15 August 1988 which simplifies in the steady state
J(x) = e!1P(x)E(x,t) -Dpe a~~) (8)
to include only the drift and diffusion terms. J(x,t) is the
current density as a function of position and time, p is the
hole mobility, and Dp is the diffusion constant for holes.
At the point in the near-contact region where the elec
tric field is equal to zero, the current must be a pure diffusion
current. This means that a value for dp! dx can be calculated
at this point. Also, an expression for x(E = 0) can be
uniquely determined as a function of Xmax by solving Eq. (4)
for the case of E = O. Finally, a general expression for the
value of P. the free-hole concentration, can be written in
terms of the optical generation rate y, recombination coeffi
cient r, and the concentration of neutral (A) and ionized
(A *) acceptors. These three equations are given below:
dp = -J = -J at E = 0, (9)
dx Dpe pkT
x = Xmax -~ -2Ebi •• Et:r,xmax leND at E = 0, (10)
p=y(A-A*)= yA (A>A"').
rA!Ie rA '" (11 )
Consider the physical meaning of Eq. (11). It simply
states that the steady-state hole concentration is a balance
between the optical generation process and the recombina
tion into ionized acceptor states. We neglect any thermal
generation contribution because of the low temperature.
Also, the equation is simplified by the fact that concentra
tion of ionized acceptors, A "', is usually less than 1 % of the
neutral acceptor concentration A. In the bulk, p is a constant
as a function of distance for a uniformly doped detector. In
the near-contact region, however, p is strongly dependent on
position because the concentration of ionized acceptors de
creases as one approaches the contact, due to the effect of the
trapped holes, which has already been discussed. The hole
concentration then is a function ofxbecauseA '" is a function
of x, i.e.,
p{x) = yA IrND (x!xmo.x) = yAxmaJrNDx. (12)
Using this as an estimate for p(x), the slope function dp!dx
can also be determined by simply taking the derivative
dp yAxmax
dx = -rNDx2' (13)
Now the final approach can be outlined. We wish to
solve for Xmax • Equation ( 13) gives an expression for dp/ dx
as a function of x and Xmax' Since at the point E = 0 we also
have an expression for Xmax as a function of x, these can be
combined to give dp! dx, which is determined by the current,
as a fuction of x. We solve for the appropriate x that satisfies
both E = 0 and dp!dx = J !(;.tkT) and then solve for Xmax
from the relationship between x and Xmax at E = O. This
value of Xmax is then used to calculate the field and potential
distributions of Eqs. (4) and (6).
RESULTS
A series offield and potential distributions as (i) a func
tion of bias for a fixed detector doping and incident flux rate
Nancy M. Hasgel 2156
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15(accomplished in practice by an increase of the applied vol
tage on the same detector) and (ii) a function of minority
donor concentration for a fixed bias and incident fiux rate
(accomplished in practice by considering different detector
materials under the same operating conditions) are shown in
Figs, 4 and 5, The fixed parameter values used are typical of
Ge:Ga bulk detectors under a relatively low photon back
ground and are summarized in Table I. The current (J),
generation coefficient (r), electric field bias (E b ), and do
nor concentration (Nn) are the variables of interest. The
parameters selected, however, must satisfy the foHowing
expression:
(14)
to assure self-consistent agreement for bulk behavior,
The results show that an increase in bias across the de
tector results in a change in the space-charge region and a
displacement of the point of pure diffusion current (E = 0,
-E
~ -Q
...I
W u:
0 a: b
W
...! W
:;
E -25
20
15
10
5
(a)
0
-5
0 2 3 4 5
3.-----------------------~
(b)
2 3 4 5
FIG, 4, (a) Electric field and (b) potential distribution as a function of
applied electric field, Y= 5x 10-5 a-' and ND = LOX 10.2 cm-,3, 0 Bias
1: -LO V/ern, J=4,8XIO--1O A/em2,. Bias 2: -1.5 V/cm,
J = 7,2X 10-,10 A/em2, III Bias 3: -2,0 V/em,J = 9,6X 10--.0 A/cm2, 0
Bias 4: -2,5V/cm,J= L2XlO-9 A/cm',
2157 J, Appl. Phys .• Vol. 64. No.4. 15 August 1988 16
13 -E
(.) >; 10 -Q 7 ....I
W
ii:
(.) 4
a: I-(a)
(J
W
...!
W
2 4 6 8 10
DISTANCE (em x 10·4)
2.-----------------------~
-1+---~r_~_r--~,_~--r_~~
o 2 4 6 8 10
DISTANCE (em x 10.4)
FIG. 5, (a) Electric field and (b) potential distribution as a function of
compensating donor concentration, Eb = -2,0 V /crn and y = 5 X 10-5
S -t, DDonod: 1 X IOncm··3,] = 9.6X 10-' lO A/cm2• tDonor2:7X 10"
em}, J = lAX 10-9 A/cm2, III Donor 3: 4X 10" cm-'. J = 2AX 10-9
A/cm', 0 Donor 4: I X 10" em-3• J = 9,6x 10-.9 A/cm2,
v = V,nax) toward the implanted region, This means that
the requirement for a larger diffusion current at this point is
satisfied by moving into a region of higher hole concentra
tion where the value of dp/dx is also higher. In a similar
fashion, increasing donor concentration reduces the pene
tration of the space-charge region by increasing the number
of trapping centers for the positive space charge. The poten
tial maximum moves toward the implanted region and be
comes larger, reflecting the fact that more compensating do-
TABLE 1. Modeling parameters.
Temperature
Acceptor concentration
Dielectric constant
Hole mobility
Recombination coefficient T=3K
A = 2x 10'" ern
E = 16
;. = 3x 10' cm1/V s
f= 1 X 10-" cm"/s
Nancy M, Haegel 2157
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15nors results in a smaller current flow for a fixed bias and flux
due to the shortened free-hole lifetime.
If we consider now the case of increasing the incident
photon flux on a detector at fixed bias, a different situation
arises. Increasing the flux increases the hole concentration
throughout the entire sample, assuming uniform illumina
tion of the entire sample including the contact region. This
results in an increase of both the diffusion and drift compo
nents of the current. This is illustrated in Fig. 6, where the
flux is increased by a factor of 10. One sees by considering
Eq. (8) that the increased hole concentration leads to the
increase of current and that, to first order, no change in the
space charge or field distribution occurs. This is independent
of the magnitude of the flux change, as long as the absolute
photon flux is low enough to remain in the low background
regime, i.e., it does not cause any significant ionization of the
dopant levels.
In considering this last case it is important to point out
that the increase of free holes near the contact is a result of
the increased lifetime in this region due to the decrease in the
number of ionized acceptors which act as recombination
centers. If the detector is operated at sufficiently low tem
perature, then the excess holes which enter the bulk are
trapped at the ionized shallow acceptor levels. In the absence
of a photon flux, this prevents further diffusion and sets up
the steady-state situation. Now, when photons are absorbed
in the contact region as wen as in the bulk, the hole concen
tration distribution reflects the distribution ofionized accep
tors. Therefore. there is an increase in free-hole concentra
tion that is proportional to the increase flux in the
space-charge region as wen as in the bulk. This conclusion is
no longer valid only at a point very dose to the implanted
layer where the model breaks down because the hole concen
tration cannot be infinite, but is in fact limited by the concen
tration of the implanted region. Therefore the two curves
must actually coincide in the limit of the contact. This occurs
so very close to the interface however, that it does not affect
results if they are calculated at equidistant points over the
space-charge region.
DISCUSSION
The results presented give a self-consistent picture of the
physical situation in the near-contact region and provide es
timates of the width of the space-charge region and the field
and potential distributions which result. In applying these
results to the issue of transient behavior in far-IR detectors,
one can see that the transient behavior due to a change in
photon flux should be fundamentally different than to a
change in electric field bias. These results are in agreement
with constant-current modeling, which does show space
charge rearrangement and resulting long transient behavior
as a result of changing electric field due to changing incident
flux. Standard operating procedure for detectors, however,
is more often a constant electric field condition, in which
case the model would predict that the same transient phe
nomena due to near-contact space-charge rearrangement
should not exist.
These results may explain why the characterization of
transient phenomena has been difficult. It is difficult in any
2156 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.4, 15 August 1988 -"'l
E
U -Z 0
~ a: I-:z w
(,) z 0
0
W
....J 0 x:
-E u -. :> '-"
Q
-1
W
Ii:
0
iX I-(.)
W
...I w
>' E -103
(a)
102
101
10°
10-1
0 2 3 4 5
DISTANCE (em x 10.4)
25
15
(b)
5
-5
0 2 3 4 5
DISTANCE (em x 10-4)
3~-----------------------'
(c)
3 4 5
DISTANCE (em x 10-4)
FIG. 6. (a) Hole distribution (X 10-4) (b) electric field and (c) potentia!
distribution as a function afflux rate. Eb = -1.0 V /crn and N D = 1 X 10'2
cm-3_XFlux 1: y=5XlO-s S·-I, J=4.8XlO- w A/cm2• 0 Flux 2:
Y= 5x 10-4 s' " J = 4.8X 10--9 A/em2
•
Nancy M. Haegel 2158
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15case to prove that transient phenomena are due to space~
charge readjustment, and these results would indicate that
the same detector operated at constant bias or at constant
current may have different transient responses if space
charge rearrangement was playing an evident role in the lat~
ter case. Experimentally it is observed that not aU photocon
ductors display long transients on the time scale predicted by
the space-charge rearrangement model, and this would be
consistent with this result which says that, for an ideal con
tact, no major space-charge rearrangement occurs under
constant field bias. For constant~current bias, or, perhaps
even more commonly, for constant~field bias with a poor
contact (i.e., nonuniform, not sufficiently doped, not suffi
ciently illuminated), contact-related transient phenomena
may be observed. This would be consistent with the fact that
many anamolous transient phenomena have disappeared as
contact fabrication procedures have improved.
CONCLUSION
The electric field and potential distribution near an im
planted contact to a low-temperature photoconductor have
been calculated, using an analytical model which assumes a
linear distribution of space charge. The results show that a
change in space-charge distribution occurs when the applied
field is changed. but that no space-charge adjustment occurs
when the hole concentration is changed by increasing pho
ton flux at a constant electric field bias. The potential goes
through a maximum at the point where the electric field goes
through zero (i.e., changes from a negative to a positive drift
component for hole flow), but the height of this maximum
reflects the balance between hoie concentration distribution
and electric field and does not directly reflect the amount of
2159 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.4, 15 August j 988 current flow. In this sense the model for the low-temperature
implanted contact is different than the thermionic diffusion
model for a metal~semiconductor contact because the poten~
tial barrier results from the diffusion process rather than
from a material-dependent difference in work functions. The
model calculates only the steady-state distributions. It
shows. however, that the path from one state to another is
different for the operating conditions of constant current or
constant field, suggesting that transient phenomena in the
two cases may not be fully analogous if and when space
charge readjustment plays a role.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author gratefully acknowledges helpful discussions
on this topic with E. E. Haller, R. M. Westervelt. and S. W.
Teitsworth. This work was supported in part by the Califor
nia Space Institute under Contract No. CS-64-87.
Ip. L. Richards and L. T. Greenberg, in Infrared and Millimeter Waves,
edited by K. J. Button (Academic, New York, 1982), Vol. 6, p. 150.
1p. R. Bratt, in Semiconductors and Semimetais, edited by R. K. Willard
SOil and A. C. Beer (Academic, New York, 1977), Vol. 12, p. 54.
3N. M. Haegel and E. E. HaUer, Infrared Phys. 26,247 (1986).
4S. W. Teitsworth, R. M. Westervelt, and E. E. Haller, Phys. Rev. Lett. 51,
825 (1983).
5K. Aoki, K. Miyame, T. Kobayashi, and K. Yamamoto, Physica
(Utrecht) 117&118, 570 (1983).
6R. M. Westervelt and S. W. Teitsworth, J. Appl. Phys. 51, 5451 (1985).
'See, for example, A. Rose, Concepts in Photoconductivity and Related
Problems (Krieger, Melbourne, FL, 1978).
~R. L. Williams, 1. Appl. Phys. 40, 184 ( 1969).
9A. F. Milton, Appl. Phys. Lett. 16, 285 (1970).
lOA. F. Milton and M. M. Blouke, Phys. Rev. B 3, 4312 (1971).
"M. A. Lampert and A. Rose, Phys. Rev. 113,1236 (1959).
12C. R. Croweli and S. M. Sze, Solid State Electron. 9,1035 (1966).
Nancy M. Haegel 2159
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169.234.114.177 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 05:06:15 |
1.343240.pdf | Effect of thermal history on oxygen precipitates in Czochralski silicon
annealed at 1050°C
Chung Yuan Kung
Citation: J. Appl. Phys. 65, 4654 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343240
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343240
View Table of Contents: http://jap.aip.org/resource/1/JAPIAU/v65/i12
Published by the American Institute of Physics.
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Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsEffect of thermai history on oxygen precipitates in Czochralski silicon
annealed at 1050 °C
Chung Yuan Kung
Electronics Research and Service Organization, Clw-Tung, Hsinchu, Taiwan, Republic oj China
(Received 30 September 1987; accepted for publication 22 February 1989)
The precipitation of oxygen in bulk Czochralski silicon wafers subjected to single-step
isothermal, two-step (low-high), two-step (high-high), and three-step (high-law-high)
annealing is studied by means of infrared spectroscopy and by preferential etching.
Comparisons are made with transmission electron micrographs obtained on similar wafers.
With the same amount of precipitated oxygen, the IR spectra near 1230 cm -1 and the
precipitate morphology are different for samples that undergo different thermal cycles. For the
single-step and three-step annealed samples, platelet precipitates are the dominant defect type
and a peak is observed at 1230-cm-l• For the two-step annealed samples, the majority defects
are polyhedral precipitates and stacking faults, no platelet precipitates are found and the 1230-
cm -I peak is absent. It is believed that the stacking faults generated during two-step annealing
have a strong effect in converting the oxygen precipitate morphology from platelets to
polyhedra. A model is proposed to explain this phenomenon according to the coarsening
concept.
I. iNTRODUCTION
The two primary, electrically neutral impurities found
in Czochralski (CZ) silicon are oxygen and carbon. Their
roles in oxygen precipitation and other oxygen-related de
fects, such as thermal donors, have been intensively studied
during the last decade. 1-5 Besides carbon and oxygen, micro
defects (including point defects and their clusters) formed
during crystal growth have also been suspected of playing an
important role as nucleation centers for oxygen precipi
tates.6--12 These grown-in microdefects are too sman in size
to detect; even high-resolution electron microscopy cannot
detect the existence of these microdefects, not to mention
their chemical nature. Whether they are interstitial or va
cancy types is still unknown. The question of micro defect
formation is extremely complex, and one must consider the
interactions between oxygen, carbon, silicon intcrstitials,
and vacancies. Although there is little information as to the
chemical nature of these grown-in defects, their character
and their effect on oxygen precipitation have been tentative
ly depicted through various experimental observa
tions.6,8,12.13 HU,6 Schaake, Baber, and Pinizzotto,14 and
Oehrelein, Lindstrom, and Corbett13 found that oxidation
reduces oxygen precipitation in the silicon bulk compared to
the same heat treatment in a nitrogen atmosphere. Hu6 be
lieved that vacancy clusters were nucleation centers for oxy
gen precipitation, and these types of nuclei were annihilated
or shrunk by silicon interstitials generated during oxidation,
so that the precipitation rates were reduced.
Several experiments have shown that thermal history
can affect the character of "grown-in defects" and therefore
affect the oxygen precipitation behavior. A short, high-tem
perature preanneal in nitrogen (1-2 h at 1000 °C or higher)
was found to retard the precipitation rate during subsequent
lower-temperature anneals. 11.15 This kind of retardation has
been attributed to the breakup of vacancy dustersl5 or the
dissolving of the silicon-interstitial-enriched swirl defects II that would otherwise act as nuclei for oxygen precipitation.
In contrast to a high-temperature preanneal, a short,
low-temperature (2-10 h at approximately 750°C) cycle
can increase the density and size of nuclei and thereby acce
lerate the oxygen precipitation rate.IO-12 It should be noted
that the short preannealing cycle mentioned above does not
measurably change the initial oxygen concentration in the
matrix, but sometimes causes more than an order of magni
tude variation in the precipitation rate. This clearly demon
strated that thermal history has great influence on the oxy
gen precipitation rate. Recently, high-resolution
transmission electron microscopy (TEM) studies have
shown that the morphology of the oxygen precipitates is
quite dependent on the anneal temperaturel6 as well as ther
mal history. 17.18 With the same amount of oxygen precipitat
ed, the high-temperature isothermal anneal generated plate
let precipitates while the low-high two-step anneal generated
the polyhedral precipitates. It is also found that the appear
ance of an IR spectra! peak around 1230 em -1 varies with
thermal history. After 1050·C isothermal annealing, sam
ples showed a clear peak around 1230 em -I . However, in
samples with about the same amount of oxygen reduction,
which were preannealed at 750·C for 8 h or longer, no 1230-
cm -I band was detected following a subsequent 1050 °C an
neal. 19 The samples that went through a short, wet oxidation
before the 750 and 1050°C anneals, on the other hand,
showed a very strong 1230-cm-1 peak. Although many
studies of oxygen precipitation have been made, no satisfac
tory explanation has yet been given regarding the mecha
nisms that cause these differences in precipitate morphology
and IR absorption at 1230 em .. I. In this research, the oxy
gen precipitation behavior for both low carbon and carbon
enriched silicon was studied. Extensive data from oxygen
concentration variation and from IR spectral analysis for
samples given four different thermal treatments are present
ed. The effect of carbon atoms and the influence of a wet
oxidation cycle on the oxygen precipitation behavior are dis-
4654 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (12), 15 June 1989 0021-8979/89/124654-12$02.40 @ 1969 American Institute of Physics 4654
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionscussed. An attempt is made to correlate the IR spectra with
electron microscopic results. From the analysis, conclusions
are drawn as to the nature of precipitation kinetics occurring
during annealing at 1050 °C after different prior thermal
treatments.
I!. EXPERIMENT
A boron-doped, 1-3-0 em, 75-mm-diam, I5-in.-long,
< HI) silicon crystal was grown by the flat-shoulder CZ
growth process, with counterclockwise seed rotation of 30
rpm and clockwise crucible rotation of 10 rpm. The total
growth period from seeding to power-off was about 5 h. Wa
fers were laser marked in numerical order to maintain wafer
location identity. Wafers used i.n this experiment were taken
from four different locations in the ingot, designated as sec
tions A, B, C, and D. Grouping of the wafers allowed us to
use those in each group with almost identical oxygen and
carbon content as wen as thermal history. The oxygen and
carbon concentrations, resistivity, and locations of wafers in
the crystal (in terms of g, the melt fraction solidified) are
shown in Table I for aU wafers used. To conduct the experi
ments, nine or more nearly adjacent wafers from each sec
tion were selected and each wafer was cleaved into 2 to 3
pieces. For this research, six similar pieces from each section
of ingot were used. One piece from each wafer group was
given an isothermal anneal in dry nitrogen at 1050"C. This
anneal was stopped at 4, 8, 16, 24, and 40 h; after each inter
val the oxygen and carbon concentrations were determined
from Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) measurement us
ing the calibration constants in ASTM F121-79 and, F123-
74, respectively. A second piece from each section was given
a low-high two-step anneal cycle. This cycle consisted of a
lOO-h anneal in dry nitrogen at 750"C foHowed by the iso
thermal anneal described above. A third piece from each
wafer was given a 165-min wet oxidation at 1000·C before
passing through the low-high two-step anneal described
above. A fourth piece from each wafer was given the 165-min
wet oxidation at lO00"C before passing through the inter
rupted 4O-h isothermal anneal in dry nitrogen at 1050 "C.
For the 1000·C wet oxidations and 1050·C dry nitro
gen anneals, temperatures were ramped up from 850 ·C with
a heating rate of about 17 °C/min and ramped down to
TABLE I. Position within ingot, initial oxygen, and carbon concentrations
for wafers.
0, C , P g
(ppma)" (ppma)' (ohmcm)
A 33.2 ~O.2 2.1 -0.15
High-I! 31.5 -·0.5 1.9 ~(J.3
carbon C 30.0 1.0--1.5 1.7 -0.6
ingot D 30.2 1.6-2.2 1.6 ~O.9
Low-A 32.2 < (J.OS 2.1 -0.2 carbon D 30.0 ~O.15 1.7 -0.7 ingot
a 1 ppma = 5X 1016/cm3.
4655 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.12,15 June 1989 TABLE H. Thermal cycles.
Isothermal anneal
Two-step anneal
(low-high)
Three-step anneal
Two-step anneal
(high-high)
Dissolution
anneal Wet Oxidation 750 'C
at 1000 'C annealing
(min) (h)
100
165 100
165
100
&200 4. 8,
0, 4, 1050'C
annealing
16, 24, 40 h
8, 16, 24, 40 h
0, 4, 8, 16, 24, 40 h
4, 8, 16, 24, 40 h
lO S, 1 min, 5 min
(}.5 h, 1 h, 2 h, 4 h
850 ·C with a cooling rate of about 12 ·CI min. The total
ramping time is very short and does not have substantial
effect on the precipitation nuclei. The thermal cycles used in
this research are summarized in Table II. A fifth piece from
each section was not heat treated; this piece was used as a
reference for measurement of differential IR (DIR) absorp
tion spectra of samples annealed for 16 and 40 h at 1050 "C.
Following the heat treatments and IR measurements, the
samples were cleaved and etched in Wright etchantl° for 1
min to reveal the defects. Selected samples were also studied
by TEM; these results have been published elsewhere by
Tsai, Carpenter, and Pengo [8
One group of wafers was also annealed at 750 fiC for
times up to 200 h to allow the interstitial oxygen concentra
tion to drop to close to the solid solubility at this tempera
ture. These samples were then subsequently annealed at
1050 °C for short times; 10 s, 1 min, 5 min, etc., up to 4 h, to
observe precipitate dissolution. Samples were pushed in and
pulled out manually, with the total operation time less than
30 s. (Note: the data presented for the very short annealing
times are not good for quantitative analysis, since the sam
ples may not reach thermal equilibrium in such a short
time.) The oxygen concentration and changes in the IR
spectra were recorded after each intervaL
A similar series of tests was also performed on a crystal
with carbon concentration less than 0.2 ppma throughout
the whole ingot for the purpose of comparison. The initial
condition of the low carbon crystal is also shown in Table 1.
III, eXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The experimental results and discussion are presented
in two parts. First, the effect of thermal history on the oxy
gen precipitation rates is considered; and second, the effect
of thermal history on the precipitate morphology and IR
spectra around 1230 cm -1 is discussed.
A. Effect of thermal history on oxygen precipitation rate
1. Wafer /ocationmdependent precipitation rate
Fig. 1 shows the oxygen concentration (Oi) after each
heat treatment step for samples from the different sections of
the ingot. The left-hand side of Fig. 1 shows the variations of
oxygen concentration after the different heat treatments pri
or to the 1050·C annealing, and the right-hand side shows
Chung Yuan Kung 4655
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ANNEALING TIME (H) AT 10500C
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Icl ANNEALING TIME (H) AT 10500e
J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, i 5 June 1989 FIG.!. Oxygen concentration
after various anneals for (a)
section A, (b) section B, (e)
section C, and (d) section D.
The left side of each figure
shows the results prior to the
1050 'C anneal, the right side
ofthe figure shows oxygen con
centrations after various an
nealing times at 1050 'C.
Chung Yuan Kung 4656
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsz o
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750°C
100 h
Dry N2 o ISOTHERMAL
II
o TWO-STEP (LO-Hl)
TWO-STEP (HI-Ht)
THREE-STEP
FIG. l. (continlled).
(dl ANNEALING TIME (H) AT I0500C
the concentrations in the matrix versus different 1050 ·C an
nealing time. Oxygen reduction ~Oi can be evaluated by
subtracting the measured concentration after every step
from the original concentration; this reduction represents
the amount of interstitial oxygen lost as a function of time.
The oxygen lost due to out-diffusion under the thermal cycle
described in this research is negligible, therefore, the AOi
measured roughly represents the amount of oxygen precipi
tated. Figure 2 shows oxygen reduction for single-step and
high-high two-step annealing. The precipitation rate for dif
ferent sections of both high carbon and low carbon concen
tration wafers can be easily compared in same figure. Table
III shows that oxygen reductions after annealing at 750·C
for 100 h with and without a prior wet oxidation at 1000 0c.
With about the same initial impurity level (carbon and oxy
gen), the A section wafers showed higher oxygen reduction
rates than the B section wafers, which in tum had higher
reduction rates than C and D section wafers for all four heat
treatments schemes. (With the exception of two and three
step cases, in which D section wafers showed a slightly high
er precipitation than the C section wafers.) This slightly re
versed trend may be attributed to the higher carbon
concentration in D section wafers. In the early precipitation
stage of both 1050 and 750°C anneals, the precipitation rates
of the seed-end wafers were at least twice as fast as that of the
tail-end wafers. See Fig. 2 for the 1050 °C and Table III for
the 750°C anneaL
It is noted that the faster precipitation rate may be due
to the 10% higher oxygen concentration in the seed-end wa
fers. However, according to the classical nucleation ap
proach (theory) described by Inoue, Wada, and Osaka,21
assuming the oxygen concentration dominates the nuclea
tion rate, this 10% difference in initial oxygen concentration
should only generate about 20% difference in nuclei density
and therefore cannot account for the doubled precipitation
rate observed. It is therefore believed that seed-end wafers
have much more grown-in nuclei to start with than the tail-
4657 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 end wafers. This is not surprising, since seed-end wafers have
gone through a longer low-temperature cooling period than
the tail-end wafers during the ingot pulling process. Thus
more nuclei in the seed-end wafers can grow to reach critical
size and survive at subsequent high-temperature heat treat
ments. The fact that a higher density of swirl defects is ob
served in seed-end wafers also seems to support this line of
reasoningo (Such swirl defects have long been suspected22•Z3
to act as nucleation centers for oxygen precipitates.)
ZEffectofheatueat;nentcycle
Table III shows the impact of a short 1000 °C cycle on
the subsequent 750 °CI IOO-h anneal. The short 1000 °c wet
oxidation cycle does not measurably change the carbon and
oxygen concentrations, but substantially retards the oxygen
precipitation rate during the subsequent low-temperature
750 DC cycle. It is very likely that some grown-in defects that
are smaner than the critical size at 1000 DC but larger than
that at 750·C are dissolved during the WOO °c oxidationo In
the absence of the 1000 DC oxidation, these defects would
grow at 750°C.
The 1000 ·C anneal also reduces the differences between
seed-and tail-end wafers on the precipitation rate during the
subsequent 750·C anneal (see Table III), indicating that in
the seed-end wafers more grown-in nuclei are dissolved. The
short oxidation may also dissolve the nucleation centers of
the rodlike defects, or change the point defect concentration
such that rodlike defects do not grow during the 750°C an
neaL This would be responsible for part of the retardation, if
a large portion of oxygen precipitates (crystalline coesite)
grow on the rodlike defects as has been reported. 24
3. Role of carbon In oxygen precipitation
The role of carbon in oxygen precipitation, both nuclea
tion and growth, has been a highly interesting topic. Some
groups have reported that carbon enhances oxygen prccipi.
Chung Yuan Kung 4657
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HIGH
CARBON
10 / A-SECTION 0
".11/ B-SECTION <>
C-SECTION A
D-SECTION 0
0
8 16 24 32 40
ANNEAL TIME (H) AT lC500C
HIGH lOW
CARBON CARBON
A-SECTION 0 •
30 B-SECTION <>
C-SECTION A
D-SECTION 0 II
20
10
TWO-STEP (HI-HI)
8 16 24 32 40
ANNEAL TIME (H) AT le50Ge LOW
CARBON •
FIG. 2. Oxygen reduction (L\.Oj) during
1050·C annealing for (al as-received
wafers, and (b) samples after an initial
lO00'C wet oxidation.
tation,9,12,14,25,26 especially when the carbon concentration is
very high. Other groups have asserted that the correlation
between carbon concentration and oxygen precipitation is
very weak, especially when the annealing temperature is
above 1000 "c.ll Some27,28 observed a strong dependence of
oxygen precipitation on carbon concentration for low oxy-gen content samples (Oi -25 ppma) but less or no depend
ence for the medium oxygen samples (28 to 30 ppma). It is
generally true that the presence of a third element would
make the phase boundary stable no matter whether it is re
jected or absorbed by the growing phase. This is the ternary
effect.29 The carbon atoms are believed to act as a ternary
4658 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 Chung Yuan Kung 4658
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsTABLE HI. The change of oxygen and carbon concentrations after an anneal at 750 'C for lOOh. (II: 750 'C/l00 h; HI: 1000 'C/165 min + 750 'C/lOOh.)
Initial
concentration
Section Thermal 0, C,
cycle (ppma)" (ppma)
II A HI 33.2 0.2
II 31.5 0.5 B III 30.9 0.8
high-carbon
ingot
II 30.0 0.9
C III 29.9 1.1
II 30.3 1.7 D III 30.1 1.6
low-carbon
ingot
II 32.1 <0.05 A III 32.5 <0.05
n 30.2 0.3
D III 30.4 0.2
a 1 ppma = 5x 10M/ern'.
element that decreases the interfacial energy18 and, hence,
stabilizes the nuclei and thus increases the precipitation rate.
Besides, the supersaturated carbon atoms (or even the sili
con interstitials) in solid solution increase the instability of
the matrix and therefore facilitate the precipitation of the
other supersaturated element (oxygen) from the matrix,
For the carbon-rich wafers, especially those from the D sec
tion, the carbon concentration ( ~ 2 ppma) is about 20 times
higher than the solubility limit of carbon at 1050°C (Ref.
30); and the oxygen concentration, 30 ppma, is about 4 times
higher than the solid solubility limit of oxygen at the same
temperature.2() In such a highly supersaturated ternary sys
tem, the impact of the ternary element, carbon, on the oxy
gen precipitation should be very strong. However, compar~
ing the results between high-carbon and low-carbon ingots
in this experiment, a carbon concentration of 2.2 ppma did
not produce a significant effect in high~temperature heat
treatments. It is possible that some other factors, for exam
ple grown-in defects as described previously, may have a
more pronounced effect, overshadowing whatever impact
carbon has on the oxygen precipitation. The effect of carbon
at low temperatures is not very dear as shown in Tab!e Ill,
the wafers from the A section of high-carbon ingots show a
slower oxygen reduction rate than that of the low-carbon
ingot. However, a wafer from the D section shows an oppo
site effect. Table III also shows the carbon concentrations
after annealing at 750°C for 100 h. The carbon concentra
tions dearly dropped to below the detection limit on the
wafers as received (without preannealing at high tempera
ture); however, the carbon reduction is not very pronounced
when the wafers are preannealed at high temperature.
4659 J. Appl. Phys" Vol. 65. No. 12, 15 June 1985
.-.-.'.~.' •.. -.-.•.... ; •...........•.•.•.•.• ; •.•.•.•.•. ' .•........... ;.:·;o;·;·;·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.v.~.'.~.:.".·.-.- .. -.•.....• ;...... . ..• ;-.y ... ' ....... " ....... :.;.; ..•....••.•...•.•.•.•• : .•. ~.:.:.:.:.:<.:.;" .•.•.•.• '.' .• > ~ •••• Final Concentration
concentration change
0, C, AO, ACs
(ppma) (ppma) (ppma) (ppma)
31.3 0.2 -1.9 -0
IS.2 <0.05 -16.3 -0.5
28.2 0.6 -2.1 ~O.2
22.5 0.1 -7.5 -0.8
28.5 1.0 -1.4 -0.1
20.9 0.2 -9.4 -1.5
26.5 l.5 -3.6 -0.1
25.8 <0.05 -6.3 -0
28.9 0.1 -3.6 +0.1
25.1 0.2 -5.1 -0.1
29.3 0.4 -1.1 +0.1
Some researchers"·12 believe that carbon atoms directly
form the nucleation centers for oxygen precipitates, which
results in the observation of carbon reduction during heat
treatment. In this experiment, and in similar parallel experi
ments, 1l.3! we have also shown that carbon atoms (in the
matrix) can only be reduced by a low-temperature anneal of
the wafers as received, but not on the wafers preannealed at
high temperatures no matter how much oxygen is precipitat
ed. This kind of carbon reduction behavior can be explained
by a gettering model,31.32 in which the reduction of carbon is
the consequence of defect (rodlike defect) formation but not
a direct result of the formation of nucleation centers. The
carbon reduction as well as a resistivity shift, can be used as
an index for checking whether the rodlike defects grow or
not if the proposed gettering mechanism is correct.
B. Effect or thermal history on precipitate morphology
and IF! spectra
Before proceeding with the discussion, it should be not~
cd that the results obtaiI~ed on the microdefects features and
DrR spectra at the 1230~cm-1 band are consistent for all the
groups of wafers used in this research, [consistent results are
also obtained on N-type (-6.5 n em), phosphors~doped,
medium and high oxygen concentration (0; > 30 ppma)
materials]. The following results are reported on a typical
group of wafers from a high-carbon ingot.
1. Correlation between microdefects and etch pits
Etching is the easiest and fastest way to reveal silicon
defects and to provide data on defed density. On the other
Chung Yuan Kung 4659
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions4660 (a)
(b)
20pm
I.---.-.t
(a) fsothermal
(c) Two-step (low-high) FIG. 3. SEM pictures for
(a) single-step and (b)
low-high two-step an
nealed samples. Samples
were etched in Wright etch
for about 1 min. hand, TEM results provide the microstructure in detail, but
only for limited volume. Etching results and TEM observa
tions can complement each other to obtain a more complete
picture of oxygen precipitation.
As shown in theSEM picture in Fig. 3(a), three types of
etch pits are observed on single-step annealed samples. The
majority ofthem are dimplelike and triangular etch pits. The
density of the linear etch pits is less than 5%. TEM observa
tions on a similar sample showed that the majority defects
are (100) platelets of amorphous 8i02 and precipitate-dislo
cation complexes. J8 It is reasonable to assign the triangular
pits to dislocations and therefore the dimplelike pits to the
platelet precipitates. Similar results are observed in the
three-step annealed samples. The high-high two-step an
nealed samples showed the same precipitate features as the
isothermal annealed samples, but the defect densities were
lower. For the low~high two-step annealed samples, only a
high density of linear etch pits is observed, as shown in the
SEM picture in Fig. 3 (b). Since they are all on (111) planes
and their size is quite uniform, these pits are associated with
stacking faults. However, TEM results on this sample show
that the predominant defects are high-density tiny polyhe
dral particles with diameters of about 0.05 pm and a high
density of stacking faults. It; There arises a question why etch
pits other than those associated with stacking faults are not
developed by the etching. Ponce, Yamashita, and Hahn, 17
using high-resolution TEM, also observed both stacking
(b) Two-step (high-high) FIG. 4. An optical photomicrograph of a
wafer cross section following (a) single-step
isothermal anneal, (bl high-high two-step
anneal, (el low-high two-step anneal, and
( d) three-step-annealed samples. Samples
were cleaved and etched in Wright etch for
about 1 min. :".". ..·.u .. · ..... ./'.· ...•.. " . . ." .......
SOpm (d) Three-step
J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 Chung Yuan Kung 4660
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsfaults and polyhedral precipitates in similarly two-step an·
nealed samples. Moreover, they found these tiny polyhedral
particles are essentially strain-free. It is very likely that tiny
strain-free particles are not revealed by the preferential etch
ing technique and therefore only the linear pits are observed.
Figure 4 shows optical photomicrographs of etch fig
ures associated with bulk defects generated during typical
isothermal, (low-high) two-step, (high-high) t\VO-stcp, and
three-step anneal cycles. Although the scanning electron mi
crographs reveal a better view of detail, the optical picture
provides a quantitative measure of the density of defects.
These optical pictures in Fig. 4 show roughly the densities of
defects which are larger than a certain size and reflect the
oxygen precipitation rates, except in the two-step annealed
cases, since the two-step 8.nnealed samples only reveal the
density of stacking faults. As can be seen, the three-step an
nealed sample shows a higher density than the single-step
annealed samples, and in turn higher than the high~high
two-step annealed samples, The etch pit density observa
tions are consistent with the precipitation rates estimated
from the oxygen reduction,
2< Correlation between IR spectra and microoefects
The IR spectra near the 1230-cm --, band also varied
when different thermal cycles were applied, This 1230-cm-l
band indicates the precipitate morphology. Fig. 5 (a) shows
the differential IR absorption spectra for three different
samples in the 1000-1300 cm -1 range. All three curves are
on the same scale. The DIR spectra are obtained using an as
received wafer (w hieh only reveals the 1107 -em -1 peak in
this range) as reference. The spectra obta.ined are the differ
entiations before and after heat treatments. Therefore the
amplitude of the l107-cm -I (vaHey) in Fig. 5(a) approxi
mately represents the amount of interstitial oxygen precipi
tated. As can be seen an three samples lost the same amount
of interstitial oxygen to precipitation after three different
thermal cycles. However, the appearance of the spectra near
1230 em-l is not the same,
The single-step annealed samples showed a moderate,
broad peak near 1230 em-I, and the three-step annealed
samples showed a very strong peak near 1230 em -I, but the
low-high, two-step annealed samples showed no peak in that
range. The spectrum of the high-high two-step annealed
samples is very similar to that of single-step annealed sam
ples, but the amplitUde of 1230-cm -! peak is consistently
loweL
The relationship between the IR spectrum around 1230
em --l and oxygen precipitate morphology has been theoreti
cally studied by HU.33 The 1230-cm -J band ofSi02 arising
from its longitudinal optical phonon is normally infrared
inactive, but can become infra-;ed active for particles in the
platelet (disk) shape and with size smaller than 0.36 ,urn,
Therefore, the appearance of the 1230-cm -J peak is depen~
dent on both the size and the shape of pa-;ticles in the silicon
matrix but has nothing to do with the chemical bonding of
the Si02• Based on Hu's theory, the observed variations on
the amplitUde of the 1 230-cm -I band and the corresponding
changes in the morphology of the precipitates in this re
search can be consistently explained.
4661 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989
'.-.-.-.~ ••••••••••.• ; •.•••••••• ""7. •• -.;." ••••• -••••• " ••••••• --.. '~ •.•••.•••• ~ •• ; •• • ••••• ·.v.·."'":".:.;.; •• -•••• .-•••• ;> ••• ' ••••• :.:.:.:.:.:.:.; •••••••• ' ••••••••• .-; •••• :.:.:;:.:.;.:.:.:o;.:.;.~ •...•.•.•.• ;".o; ••••••••• " •• 1480
'" o -' (b)
1400 THREE-STEP
ISOTHERMAL
TWO-STEP
(LO-HI)
1200 1000
WAVE NUMBERS (CM-1) clOC
1200 1000 800
rIG. 5. (a) DFTIR absorption spectnull in 800--1400 em -I range for sam
pIes after single-step isothermal anncal, low-high two-step anneal, and
three-~tep anneal. All three curves refer to the same scale. {b) DFTIR ab
sorption spectra t()[ three-step annealed sample showing a clear peak at
JI25 cm--I.
The appearance of a sharp 1230-cm -I peak in the three
step annealed samples indicates the majority of defects in
these samples are tiny platelet precipitates. It is noted that a
I12S-em -I band in the three-step annealed samples is also
quite clear, as shown in Fig. 5 (b), This is because some pla
telets grow to become thicker. Such thick platelets resemble
Chung Yuan Kung 4661
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsoblate-shaped particles and have strong absorption near
1125 cm-i as in Hu's calculation.33
In the single-step annealed samples, platelet particles
are also observed, but, their density is lower in comparison
with that of the three-step annealed wafers. Also, many of
the precipitates are tangled with dislocations and are not in
the shape of platelets. Therefore, the 1230-cm -1 peak is not
as sharp as it is in the three-step annealed case, In the two
step annealed samples, no platelet particles are observed and
therefore no 1230-cm -i band occurs. Thus, correlation
between IR spectra and observed precipitate morphology
observed can be consistently explained by Hu's theory, and
the IR spectra therefore provide a fast means for checking
precipitate morphology.
3. Two different precipitation behavior patterns
From the observations described above, one can deduce
two different behavior patterns for oxygen precipitation at
1050 °e with different prior thermal cycles.
(1) The single-step isothermal anneal, high-high two
step anneal, and three-step anneal reveal a pattern in which
platelet precipitates are the dominant type of defect and a
clear 1230-cm -I peak is observed. Some stacking faults are
observed, but their density is very low. No apparent reduc
tion in carbon concentration can be detected during anneal
ing.
(2) The low-high two-step annealed samples reveal a
pattern in which stacking faults and polyhedral particles are
the dominant types of defects; no 1230-cm -1 peak is ob
served. Carbon concentration always drops to the detection
limit ( -0.05 ppma or below) after a lOO-h anneal at 750 ·C.
The occurrence of these two different precipitation patterns
is believed to be intimately related to the development of two
different types of grown-in nuclei with different thermal his
tories. Previously, Kung, Forbes, and Pengll and Kung~H
have proposed a dual nucleation mechanism and an interac
tion model to explain how the precipitation pattern convert
ed from one type to the other. Two types of defects included
in this model have been observed by high-resolution TEM
after prolonged annealing at low temperatures, 650-
850 "C.24,34 They are platelet precipitates and rodlike defects
with crystalline silica (oxygen precipitates) in them. High
density dislocation dipoles or loops are also observed in this
temperature range.24 When the annealing temperature is
higher than 850"C , only platelet precipitates and disloca
tion dipoles are observed, indicating that rodIike defects can
not grow at high temperatures31•32 because the nucleation
centers of the rodlike defects in the as-received wafers are
smaller than the critical size. KungJ1,32 has pointed out that
a short, high-temperature anneal would suppress the growth
of rod like defects at a subsequent low temperature. This has
been recently proven with high-resolution TEM observa
tions.35 However, if the high temperature is applied after a
prolonged low-temperature anneal, the defects observed are
stacking faults and polyhedral particles. 17,18 Ponce, Yama
shita, and Hahn 17 believed that small platelet precipitates
seen after the low-temperature first stage evolved into poly
hedra at the high-temperature second stage. This would ex
plain the disappearance of the 1230-cm -I peak at the second
4662 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 stage. Further discussion will be presented in the dissolution
test result,
Comparing the result of the two-step and single-step an
neals, it is reasonable to believe that stacking faults observed
in the two-step annealed samples are introduced during low
temperature annealing. Kung, Forbes, and Peng" have as
serted that the high density of bulk stacking faults observed
at the second stage evolved from silicon-interstitial-rich de
fects (a-type defects), which can only grow at temperatures
below a certain critical temperature Tc. These defects are
now believed to be rodlike defects or stacking faults with
oxygen precipitated in them. These defects can grow at low
temperature to a larger size and then are able to survive at a
higher temperature, but become stacking faults. This argu
ment is supported by in situ TEM observations36 which show
a conversion of rod-shaped defects (formed at 800 "C) into
stacking faults during a subsequent higher-temperature an
nealing ( 10 17°C), In the two-step annealing case, no plate
let precipitates (dimplelike etch pits) were observed when
the high-density stacking faults were present. Kung31,37 has
further argued that the growth of rod like defects at low tem
perature suppresses the growth of platelets, leading to pre
cipitation retardation.
Two problems remain: (1) Why are the morphology
and types of precipitates influenced by the pre-heat-treat
ment thermal cycles, but not by the 40-h anneal at 1050 °C in
which most of the oxygen precipitation activity takes place?
(2) Why does prolonged annealing at 750°C influence the
two-step and the three-step annealed samples differently? To
answer these two questions, let us consider the dissolution
results and examine the approaches proposed previous
ly.l],3l,37
IV. DISSOLUTION TEST RESULTS AND THE
COARSENING MODEL
Figure 6 shows interstitial oxygen concentration for two
identical samples, annealed at 750°C for 100 and 200 h, re
spectively, followed by annealing at 1050 °C for various per
iods up to 4 h. Figure 7 shows differential IR spectra between
samples annealed after 750 °CI200 h and after 750°C/200
h + 1050 °C 12 h. (The DIR spectra results are identical for
the counterpart of the 750 °e /lOO-h cases,) Figure 8 shows
the microdefect features (a) after 750 °C/200h and (b) after
750 °e/ 200 h + 1050 °C / 4 h. Figure 8 (c) is an enlarged
picture of Fig. 8 (b) < The etch pits examined after 4 h at
1050 de are linear pits (stacking faults) with drastically re
duced density as compared to the 750"C annealed samples.
The results of the lOO-h case, in terms ofDIR spectra and the
microdefect features, are identical to the 200-h case. For the
750 °C/lOO-h sample, the oxygen concentration dropped to
14 ppma which is still above the solid solubility limit at
1050 0c, For the 750 °C/200-h annealed sample, oxygen
dropped to about 5.5 ppma, which is below the solid solubil
ity at 1050°C, These two samples showed about the same
density of etch pits, and both show a 1230-cm -1 band after
the 750°C anneal. During the first 5 min of the 1050 °C an
neal, both samples shew an increase in oxygen concentra
tion, the 750 ·C/200-h sample increasing about 5 ppma.
However, no noticeable change of the 1230-cm-1 peak is
Chung Yuan Kung 4662
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions'< 30 :E
0..
0..
z o
!
<t et: r z w u z o u
z
UJ
(,!J
>x o 20
10
lmin O.SH
o ,
AS
RECEIVED 100 200 (H) lOs 5min
ANNEALING TIME
observed during this period, and no detectable change of the
etch pit density was noticed. After a ~-h anneal at 1050 °C,
the oxygen concentrations start to drop, and the 1230-cm-'
peak gradually disappears, vanishing after 2 h at 1050 °C
As described above, the precipitate density (in terms of
etch pits) decreased during the ~-4-h anneal at 1050 "C,
while in this same period the oxygen concentration also con
stantly decreased (Fig. 6), indicating that more oxygen
atoms precipitated. Ponce, and co-workers 17 using high-res
olution TEM have also observed a drastic reduction in den
sity from 5 X 1012 /crn3 at 750°C to lOl2/em" after a second
stage anneal at 1175°C; while the oxygen concentration
dropped from 26 ppma (after 7500e) to 12 ppm a (after
1175 ·C ). This observation indicated again that oxygen pre
cipitation activity is very strong during the second stage, but
the oxygen precipitate density is less 0 The results described
W
-.-l
~ 1230 0,:-1 (j)
L~ o
-..l
1400 1200 7500C/200h
+1050oC/2h
1000
WAVE NUMBERS (0\-1)
FIG. 7. DIRspectrum after 750 'C!200h and 750 'C/200h + 1050 'C/2h.
4663 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 2 3 4 (H) FIG. 6. Oxygen concentration after pro
longed annealing at 750 'C and then short
annealing at 1050 'c, showing that p1'ecip
itatc dissolution has occurred.
above indicate that a very strong coarsening phenomenon
takes place in the two-step annealed samples. The coarsen
ing3S is driven by the difference of interfacial chemical poten
tial (energy) between two precipitates (of different size,
shapes, or types). The nonequilibrium in microstructure
would drive the coarsening, even if the concentration of so!
ute has already reached equilibrium (solid solubility). Since
the rodlike defects (with. an oxygen predpit<lte inside it) and
(a) ZOpm
(b)
<.c) 4011m
FIG. 8. Bulk defect features induced after (a) 750°C!200·11 anneal, (b)
750 'C/200 h + 1050 T/2 h, and (c) enlarged picture of (b). Samples were
cleaved and etched in Wright etch for about 3 min.
Chung Yuan Kung 4663
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsplatelet precipitates are extremely different in shape and
chemical composition, they have a great difference in surface
energy. The interaction (coarsening) between these two dif
ferent types of defects should be very strong. The energeti
cally unfavorable type may be suppressed or may be forced
to change shape to gain stability. With the same volume, the
polyhedral shape has a lower surface area than the platelet
and is more stable than the platelet. Hi Thus the polyhedral
precipitate becomes the final product after a second-stage
anneal. From the dissolution test results and precipitation
patterns described in the previous section, it is logical to
believe that the growth of stacking faults during the second
stage causes the platelets to convert into polyhedra. It is not
clear how the interaction proceeds. The growth of stacki.ng
faults may generate two effects on the nearby platelet precip
itates. First, it assists strain to relaxation around the precipi
tate and helps the emission of silicon atoms at the interface of
precipitates and silicon matrix into the silicon lattice (in the
matrix) as silicon interstitials. 39 Second, the crystalline silica
in the rodIike defect may be transformed to low-energy poly
morphs and commence the coarsening, forcing the nearby
platelets to change shape. All the mechanisms described
above may help the dissolution (or retrogression) of the cor
ner section of a platelet where the surface/volume ratio is
largest. The dissolved oxygen may be redeposited at the oth
er facet of the platelet forming the energetically favored po
lyhedron. The dissolved oxygen may also reprecipitate het
erogeneously on the edge of stacking faults, as observed by
Ponce, and co-workers. 17 In situ TEM studies are needed to
verify the detailed evolution process. In the three-step an
nealed samples, very few stacking faults are observed, even
though the samples are annealed at the same low-high, two
step anneal after the 165-min, 1000 °C cycle. This is because
the first-step, high-temperature anneal suppresses the
growth of rod like defects. 31,35 Hence the conversion of plate
lets to polyhedra induced by rodlike defects observed in two
step annealed samples, is not seen in the three-step-annealed
samples.
VoSUMMARY
In this study, the effects of thermal history on oxygen
precipitation behavior, both during crystal growth and sub
sequent heat treatment cycles, are demonstrated. Seed-end
wafers, which have gone through a longer low-temperature
history, showed a much faster precipitation rate than the
tail-end wafers. The two to three ppma higher carbon con
centration in the tail-end wafers does not have any detectable
impact on the oxygen precipitation rate nor on the oxygen
morphology and IR spectrum near 1230 em--I. However, a
short, 1000 °C preannealing cycle reduces the oxygen precip
itation rate and changes the microdefect features. For isoth
ermally annealed wafers, platelets and precipitates with dis
location tangles are the major defects, and an IR peak at
1230 cm -1 is observed. The results of the high-high two-step
anneal and three-step anneal are very similar to that of the
single-step anneal. For the low-high two-step anneal, high
density polyhedral particles were observed together with a
high density of stacking faults. No 1230-cm -I peak is ob
served. The 1230-cm-1 peak, generated by platelets at pro-
4664 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 65. No. 12, 15 June 1969 longed low-temperature annealing, fades away gradually
during the second-stage high-temperature anneal, indicating
that platelet precipitates are converted into polyhedra. A
model is proposed to explain how platelets convert to poly
hedra. However, the details of this model must await in situ
TEMstudy.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author is grateful to Dr. Murray Bullis for his criti
cal review and suggestions on this work. Also to Fairchild,
Materials Division, for their support on the investigation of
this study. Preliminary reports of the results of this work
have been presented in the May, 1983 and May, 1984 Elec
trochemical Society meetings.
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Chung Yuan Kung 4664
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Chung Yuan Kung 4665
Downloaded 17 Dec 2012 to 139.184.30.132. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions |
1.342590.pdf | Shallow melting of thin heavily doped silicon layers by pulsed CO2 laser irradiation
R. B. James and W. H. Christie
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 3655 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342590
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342590
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12Shallow melting of thin heavily doped silicon layers by pulsed CO2 laser
irradiation
R. 8. James
Theoretical Diuision, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, California 94550
W. H. Christie
Analytical Chemistry Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831
(Received 9 September 1988; accepted for publication 3 January 1989)
We show that an extremely shallow ( S 800 A.) melt depth can be easily obtained by irradiating
a thin (-200 A.) heavily doped silicon layer with a COzlaser pulse. Since the absorption of
the CO2 laser pulse is dominated by free~carrier transitions, the beam heating occurs primarily
in the thin degenerately doped film at the sample surface, and there is little energy deposited in
the underlying lightly doped substrate. For CO2 pulse-energy densities exceeding a threshold
value of about 5 J/cm2, surface melting occurs and the reflectivity ofthe incident laser pulse
increases abruptly to about 90%. This large increase in the reflectivity acts like a switch to
reflect almost aU of the energy in the remainder of the CO2 laser pulse, thereby greatly
reducing the amount of energy available to drive the melt front to deeper depths in the
material. This is in contrast to the energy deposition of a laser pulse that has a photon energy
exceeding the band gap, in which case the penetration depth of the incident radiation is only
weakly affected by the free-carrier density. Transmission electron microscopy shows no
extended defects in the near-surface region after CO2 laser irradiation, and van def Pauw
electrical measurements verify that 100% of the implanted arsenic dopant is electrically active.
Calculated values for the melt depth versus incident pulse-energy density (EL) indicate that
there exists a window where the maximum melt-front penetration increases slowly with
increasing EL and has a value ofless than a few hundred angstroms. For smcon specimens
having a thin degenerately doped film at the surface and a lightly doped substrate, the two
primary reasons for using a CO2 laser pulse to achieve very shallow melt depths are (1) the
pulse energy is deposited only in the thin surface layer and (2) the melting of this layer causes
the reflectivity to jump abruptly to a value of almost unity.
INTRODUCTION beam reproducibility and spadal inhomogeneities.
Pulsed laser processing of ion-implanted silicon has
been applied extensively to the fabrication of high-efficiency
solar cells. I It has been demonstrated that pulsed laser an
nealing is superior to thermal annealing for the removal of
lattice damage caused by ion implantation, electrical activa
tion of implanted dopants, and preservation of the minority
carrier diffusion length in the base region of the solar cell 2
Most of the advantages oflaser annealing over conventional
thermal processing result from the localization of thermal
effects associated with the laser pulse and the increased con~
trol of several critical solar cell parameters (e.g., junction
depth and free~carrier concentration). Several investigators have used a pulsed CO2 laser pulse
to anneal ion-implantation damage in heavily doped silicon
crystals (see, for example, Refs. 4 and 5). These studies COD
firmed that absorption by free carriers can be used to melt
degenerately doped samples, Furthermore, the measure~
ments showed that deep melt depths (;(; 1 pm) could be
achieved by irradiating the heavily doped samples with CO2
laser pulses.4,5 Similar attempts to anneal large areas oflight
ly doped silicon without substrate heating were found to be
unsuccessful. 6, 7
There exist numerous reports on the use of pulsed lasers
to melt ion-implanted silicon layers? Almost all of these in
vestigations have been conducted with a laser that has a pho
ton energy greater than the band gap, such as a ruby or ex
cimer laser. Unfortunately, the energy deposited from a ruby
or excimer laser always occurs in the near-surface region of
the specimen, and one has little control over the penetration
depth for a fixed photon energy, In order to melt extremely
thin (S 800 A.) layers with a ruby or excimer laser, one has
to precisely control the pulse~energy density at a value close
to the melt threshold, which i.s generally difficult due to In this paper we show that a pulsed CO2 laser is also
particularly suitable for forming very shallow ( S 800 A.)
melt depths, which is a new application of C021aser process
ing of silicon. These shallow melt depths are possible by con
trolled heating of only a thin ( S 200 A) degenerately doped
layer at the sample surface. The particular specimens used in
our measurements were lightly doped silicon that had been
implanted with low-energy (5-ke V) arsenic. The arsenic im
plantation produced an extremely thin heavily doped film,
which has a large absorption coefficient for CO2 laser radi
ation. Comparable results are expected for other specimens
which have a thin dopant film of sufficiently high free-car
rier density on top of a lightly doped substrate. (Note that
much different results for the melt depth versus incident
3655 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (9),1 May 1989 0021-8979/89 (093655-07$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 3655
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12pulse-energy density are predicted for samples which have a
large absorption coefficient throughout the near-surface re
gion. For example, there would be considerable difficulty in
obtaining reproducible melt depths of less than 800 A using
the ion-implanted specimens studied in Refs. 4 and 5.)
For COzlaser radiation (A-lO ,urn), the absorption of
the pulse energy in the shallow arsenic-implanted Si layer is
dominated by free-electron transitions within the conduc
tion band. Since the free-electron concentration in the thin
surface film is several orders of magnitude greater than the
underlying substrate, the energy ofthe laser pulse is prefer
entially deposited in the thin film at the surface, If the dura
tion of the pulse is short compared to the time required to
conduct the heat out of the shallow surface layer, then the
CO2 laser-induced heating occurs only in the thin arsenic
implanted layer where the free-carrier density is large. The
onset of surface melting causes the reflectivity of the sample
to increase abruptly to about 90%, which is much larger
than the reflectivity increase of a ruby or excimer laser pulse.
This large increase ofthe reflectivity upon melting acts like a
switch to reject most of the energy in the remainder of the
CO2 laser pulse, thereby reducing the amount of energy
available to further heat the surface and drive the melt front
to considerably deeper depths in the materiaL Furthermore,
for applications where one has both heavily doped and un
doped areas in the near-surface region, one can spatially se
lect the heavily doped regions for beam heating, without
causing significant heating of the adjacent undoped materi
al.s,s Thus, one can use a relatively large CO2 laser pulse to
simultaneously process many smaller heavily doped regions
on the same or on different silicon wafers.
EXPERIMENT
A gain-switched, transversely excited atmospheric
(TEA) C02iaser was used to generate the pulses at a wave
length of 10.6 pm. The laser was operated with low nitrogen
content in the gas mix, so that the amplitude of the long tail
on the pulses could be greatly suppressed. About 80% of the
energy in each pulse was contained in the form of a nearly
Gaussian peak of 60-ns duration (FWHM). The remaining
20% of the pulse energy was in a second pulse that was de
layed by about 300 ns from the first pulse and had a duration
of250 ns (FWHM). For the energy densities considered in
this report, our theoretical results show that this second
pulse makes a negligible contribution to the calculated melt
depths and durations of surface melting. As a result, the
pulse-energy densities quoted in this paper are for the energy
in the 60-ns primary pulse only.
The output pulse was diverged by a spherical convex
mirror with a I-m radius of curvature. The diverging beam
was later collimated by a spherical concave mirror with a 2-
m radius of curvature. The collimated beam then impinged
on a CO2 laser beam integrator which spatially homogenized
the beam to within ± 10%, The dimensions of the laser
pulses were 12 X 12 mm2 in the target plane of the integrator.
The energy density at the sample surface was adjusted by
using additional lenses to change the pulse size and linear
3656 J. Appl, Phys" Vol. 65, NO.9, 1 May i 989 attenuators to change the total energy in each pulse, A pho
ton-drag detector and volume absorbing calorimeter ,,,ere
used to measure the intensity and energy of the laser pulses,
respectively.
The samples used in the experiment were 340-,um-thick,
boron-doped silicon (100) wafers which, prior to implanta
tion, had an electrical resistivity of 2-3 n cm at room tem
perature. This resistivity corresponds to a free-hole concen
tration of approximately 6 X 1015 em -3 and hole mobility of
about 350 cmz /V s. The samples were implanted on one side
with 75 As·j ions at an energy of 5 ke V to a dose of 2 X 1015
cm -2, resulting in an arsenic profile that is peaked at about
70 A from the surface with a standard deviation of about 25
A. The samples were next thermally annealed at 873 K for 12
min to increase the fraction of electrically active arsenic and
thereby increase the coupling of the CO2 laser radiation to
the near-surface region. The concentration of arsenic near
the peak of the implanted profile exceeds the solid solubility
limit, <) resulting in the formation of arsenic-rich precipitates
in part of the implanted layer. van der Pauw measurements
on the thermally annealed samples showed a carrier density
of6.2X 1014 cm 2, carrier mobility ono cm2/V s, and sheet
resistivity of 335 010.
The free-electron concentration in the first 200 A is
greater than 1020 em 3, so that the absorption coefficient
(a) of the CO2 laser radiation is large (~2 X 104 em -I)
near the surface. 10,1 1 The lightly doped substrate is relatively
transparent to lO.6-pm radiation and has a value ofless than
10 em -I at room temperature. Thus, the pulse-energy depo
sition is primarily in the thin film at the surface.
The samples were irradiated in air by CO2 laser pulses at
different energy densities. van cler Pauw measurements were
used to determine the changes in the carrier concentration,
carrier mobility, and sheet resi.stivity. A Fourier transform
infrared spectrometer was utilized to study the laser-induced
modifications in the optical properties of the near-surface
region. The microstructure of the near-surface region was
investigated by cross-section transmission electron micros
copy. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) was uti
lized to measure the redistribution of the implanted arsenic
and to investigate the possibility of controlling the dopant
profiles by varying the energy density of the laser pulses.
EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
van der Pauw measurements were performed on the la
ser-irradiated samples, and the results showed that for pulse
energy densities (EL) greater than about 5 J/cm2, signifi
cant changes in the electrical properties of the ion-implanted
layer occurred (see Table O. For values of E[" between 5.0
and 7.5 J/cm2, there was an increase in the carrier concen
tration (Ns) and a decrease in the sheet resistivity (p) with
increasing E L' The increase in N, results from the partial
melting of the arsenic-implanted layer and subsequent elec
trical activation of the arsenic upon solidification of the mol
ten layer. At pulse-energy densities greater than about 7,5 J/
cm2, the melt front penetrated to a depth exceeding the im
plantation-damaged surface layer, and 100% activation of
the implanted arsenic was observed. At these higher values
R. 8. James and W, H. Christie 3656
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12TABLE I. Elecerical properties of the arsenic-implanted silicon samples as
a function of the incident pulse-energy density. Here, EL is the energy den
sity, N, is the carrier concentration, p is the sheet resistivity, and fJ, is the
carrier mobility.
EE, N, P f.L
Olcml) (1015 em .2) (fi/D) (cml;V s)
0.0 0.62 335 30
4.4 0.65 318 30
5.3 0.96 233 28
6.1 1.62 135 29
6,8 1,81 104 33
7.5 2.00 92 34
8.4 2.01 76 41
9.2 2.00 51 59
9,9 1.99 48 65
of EL, the implanted arsenic redistributes to deeper depths,
and the electron mobility begins to increase monotonically
with E L due to the reduced rate of carrier scattering by the
ionized arsenic dopants.
The CO2 laser-induced melting of the near-surface re
gion also causes significant changes in the infrared optical
properties of the silicon samples. A Fourier transform in
frared spectrometer was used to obtain transmittance and
reflectance spectra before and after laser irradiation. Figure
1 shows the total reflectance and transmittance spectra in
the 400-2400 cm -I range for an unirradiated sample and a
sample irradiated at EL = 8.1 J/cm2• The presence ofinter~
stitial oxygen in the unirradiated and laser-treated samples
causes the infrared absorption at 1106 cm -1 as a result of the
antisymmetric vibration of the Si20 complex. The narrow
transmittance dip at about 610 cm -1 is due to phonon exci
tations in the samples, although the local vibration mode of
substitutional carbon (at 607 cm -1) may also playa role.
The most significant changes in the optical properties in the
WAVELENGTH (,.m)
6 B
~--El ~ 0.0 Jlcm2
-El ~ 8.1 J!cm2
40 i---:R:l..-. __ 25
4(J
;::: z
30 ~ a: w
!!:o
I-
w '-' :z 20;:::
t::
::IE
"" "" c a: 0-
lD
FIG, 1. Reflectance and transmittance spectra for an unirradiated sample
and a sample after irradiation at EL = 8.1 J/cm2•
3657 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No, 9, 1 May 1969 FIG. 2. The top photograph shows a cross-section TEM micrograph of a
sample after irradiation by a CO2 laser pulse having an energy density of 8.!
Jlcm2• The bottom photograph shows a different sample that was heated in
a furnace at 973 K for 10 min after being irradiated by a laser pulse at
El. ,= 8.1 J/cm2• The location of the surface is shown by an arrow in each
photo.
2400-400 cm-' I range are caused by the large increase
( > 200%) in the free-electron concentration within the ar
senic-implanted layer (see Table 1). For example, after irra
diation at E L = 8.1 J / cm2, the total reflectance was found to
change from 45% to 38%, and the total transmittance
changed from 22% to 14% for light having a wavelength of
1O.6,um.
We llsed cross-section transmission electron micros~
copy (TEM) to investigate the presence of extended defects
in the ion-implanted-damaged layer, Figure 2(a) is a micro
graph of a specimen that has been irradiated by a pulse hav
ing an energy density afS.! J/cm2• At this pulse-energy den-
I I I
2 ARSENIC ATOMS IN SILICON AFTER CO2
LASER ANNEALING
1021
El iJlcm21
5 A-0,0
'7 @-7,6
~ Ii! ~-9,1
<I) x-10,2 ::IE
"" l-«
U
'" I.U
'" '" 5 «
1019
0 2 4 10 12
DEPTH (10-2 I'm!
FIG. 3. SIMS measurements of arsenic atoms as a fUllction of depth for
samples irradiated at different energy densities, The four curves show the
arsenic profiles for the following samples: A..; an unirradiated sample; 8; a
sample irradiated atE[, = 7.6 J/cm1; III; a sample irradiated at EL = 9.1 J/
cmz; X; II sample irradiated at El. ,= 10,2 J/cmJ•
R. B. James and W, H, Christie 3657
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12sity, the surface layer contained no extended defects with a
size larger than 20 A. which is the smallest size that can be
clearly resolved in the micrograph. In addition, the van der
Pauw measurements on the sample showed that all of the
implanted arsenic was electrically active. The TEM micro
graph, together with the electrical measurements, indicates
that the entire implantation-damaged layer was melted by
the laser pulse and that liquid~phase-epitaxial regrowth of
the molten layer occurred.
Another sample was also irradiated at 8.1 J/cm2 and
then heated in a furnace to 973 K for 10 min to study the
precipitation of the implanted arsenic. Figure 2(b) shows a
cross-section TEM micrograph of the specimen after fur
nace treatment. Arsenic-rich precipitates are observed to
depths of about 250 A throughout the near-surface region.
SIMS was used to measure the arsenic profiles before
and after laser irradiation. The results are shown in Fig. 3 for
several different energy densities. For EL less than 5 J/cm2,
no redistribution of the implanted arsenic was observed. For higher pulse~energy densities, the arsenic was found to dif
fuse to deeper depths due to the penetration of the melt front
and subsequent liquid-phase diffusion in the near-surface re
gion. For values of EL between 5.0 and 7.6 J/cm2, the maxi
mum depth of arsenic diffusion is in the range of 500-800 A,
indicating the existence of a window in the incident pulse
energy density whereby one can easily obtain junction
depths ofless than 1000 A. For EL > 8 J/cm2, the maximum
depth of As diffusion begins to increase much more rapidly
with increasing ELand reaches depths of wen over 1000 A
for pulse-energy densities greater than 10 J/cm2• No surface
segregation behavior was observed in any of the laser-irra
diated arsenic-implanted specimens.
THEORETICAL RESULTS
We now present results of calculations using a finite dif
ference (FD) method for solving nonlinear heat conduction
equations. This FD method emphasizes the fundamental
TABLE II. Input data for the melting model calculations. In the table N, is the concentration of ionized arsenic dopants, OJ is the angular frequency associated
with the incident laser radiation, Pm is the magnetic permeability, c is the speed oflight, and Tis the lattice temperature. Here, Tis in units of Kelvin.
Quantity
Thicknesses of finite
difference cells
Density
Thermal conductivity
Solid
Liquid
Specific heat
Solid
Liquid
Electrical conductivity
ofliquid (u L )
Intrinsic free·carrier
concentration
Absorption (10.6I"m)
Free-electron cross-section
Free-hole cross section
Extrinsic absorption
coefficient at 293 K
Absorption in liquid
Reftectivity 00.6 ~m)
Solid
Liquid
Latent heat of melting
Melting temperature
Substrate temperature
Laser pulse
First triangular pulse
Second triangular pulse
Total energy density
3658 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 65, No.9, 1 May 1989 Value used
and comments
25 A for first cell; 50 A for remaining cells
2.33 gm/cm3 (-10% change on melting ignored)
Temperature dependent; see Refs. 13 and 14
Temperature dependent; see Refs. 13 and 14
Temperature dependent; see Refs. 13 and 14
Temperature independent; see Ref. 13
Temperature dependent; value obtained using
Wiedemann-Franz law with coefficient L equal
to 2.612x 10-8 W H/K2; see Ref. 15
3.87X 10°(1)15 exp( -7020/1) (cm-3);
see Refs. 6 and 7
See Refs. 10 and II
5X 10-17 (T/300K) + 3XlO-37 N/
1.3 X lO~ 16 (T /300 K) + 3 X 10-37 NI
See Fig. 4
0.45
1-[3.6X 1O-"/(ULA)'/2}; see Ref. 17
1799.1 J/gm
1683 K
293 K
Two triangular pulses separated by 300 ns
60 ns (FWHM) with 80% of total energy
250 ns (FWHM) with 20% of total energy
Varied
R. B. James and W. H. Christie 3658
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12role of enthalpy in a phase change process and uses tempera
tures only to determine the heat fluxes in the sample. The
sample is modeled as a slab extending in the positive x direc
tion and composed of silicon layers with different free-car
rier densities. The laser pulse is assumed to have a large radi
us as compared to the penetration depth into the sample, so
that melting occurs homogeneously i.n the y-z plane for a
fixed pulse-energy density. While the original program, de
scribed in more detail in Refs. 12 and 13, allows for most
parameters to be dependent on the temperature, phase, and
state of the material, it does not account fully for the depen
dence of temperature and free-carrier concentration on the
physical parameters relevant to this study. Therefore, the
program was modified and the values we used for the various
thermal and optical parameters are shown in Table n.6,7-17
A further discussion of the role of the temperature- and
phase-dependent parameters is presented in Refs. 12-14.
In order to accurately account for the free-carrier ab
sorption, we must provide as input a depth profile of the free
electrons resulting from the arsenic implantation and ther
mal annealing. From the van der Pauw measurements, we
found that approximately 31 % of the implanted As atoms
were electrically active after the furnace annealing. Taking
the solubility limit to be 3.6X 1020 cm-3 at a temperature of
873 K,9 we use the results of the SIMS measurements for the
depth profile of total arsenic to obtain an approximate depth
profile of the electrically active As dopants. These electrical
ly active dopants donate free electrons to the conduction
band, which can absorb the COzlaser radi.ation by intracon
duction-band transitions. The electrons concentrated in the
arsenic-implanted layer and the holes in the p-type substrate
would like to diffuse to fill the crystal uniformly. As soon as a
small charge transfer takes place, there is left behind an ex
cess of positively charged arsenic atoms in the epiIayer and
an excess of negatively charged acceptor atoms in the sub
strate. This charge transfer by diffusion creates an electric
field that inhibits further diffusion and attempts to maintain
the separation of electrons in the heavily doped implanted
layer and holes in the substrate. Because the built-in electric
field only allows for a relatively small diffusion of the major
ity carriers, we assume that the free-electron profile is given
by the depth profile of electrically active arsenic. Using this
approximation together with the measured values for the
absorption cross sections, 10,11 the room-temperature absorp
tion coefficient (ao) was calculated, and the results are
shown by the solid curve in Fig. 4.
At higher temperatures there is an increase in the intra
conduction-band absorption cross section and an increase in
the intrinsic, temperature-dependent free-carrier concentra
tion. This causes the total absorption coefficient to increase
with lattice temperature, where the relative amount of in
crease at a particular depth depends on the extrinsic, free
carrier density at that depth. Figure 4 shows the calculated
absorption coefficient at a wavelength of 10.6 f.tm for lattice
temperatures of750, 1000, and 1250 K. The rapid increase of
ao with temperature at depths greater than about 600 A is
primarily due to the thermal generation of electron-hole
pairs, and the increase at depths less than about 500 A is
primarily due to the increase in the intraconduction-band
3659 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 65, No.9, i May 1989 ,
E
.!.! ABSORPTION COEFFICIENT VS DEPTH
'\ ,~
II l~ Ii \ ~
II \\\ , \' \
i \~
I \~
I \" TEMPERATURE IKI -- 293 ---- 750
--~1000
---1250
\~"
\ ........... I \\ ------------
i,' \~ ,\ \\
\ \
\ '---------\
\
\
\
\
\
\
\
102 o!J--.J----'--...J....~-l.B-~~-1J..2---'-----I16
DEPTH 1100 A )
FIG. 4. The solid curve shows the extrinsic absorption coefficient that was
used as initial values (To = 293 K) in the melting model calculations. The
other curves show the calculated absorption coefficient for lattice tempera
tures of 750, 1000, and 1250 K.
absorption cross section.
Because of the temperature dependence of the absorp
tion coefficient and the large increase in the surface reflectiv
ity upon melting, the tpelt depths and the kinetics of melt
front penetration and solidification depend on both the
pulse-energy density and the shape of the incident CO2 laser
pulse envelope. The calculated results presented in this pa
per assume a triangular laser pulse, because this pulse enve
lope closely resembles the pulses used in our measurements,
In Fig. 5 the calculated results for the melt depth are
shown as a function of the laser-energy density. The thresh
old energy density ET for surface melting is computed to be
5.3 J/cm2, which is in good agreement with the melt-thresh
old value of about 5 J/cm2 inferred from the van der Pauw
electrical measurements (see Table I). Bel.ow the calculated
threshold energy density, the enthalpy of the first finite dif
ference cell (25 A thick) at the surface is too low for melting
to occur,
The calculated results show that for pulse-energy densi
ties between 5.9 and 8.4 J/cm2, the maximum melt-front
penetration (x m ) increases slowly with increasing E L' Upon
melting of the first few finite difference cells at the surface,
the surface reflectivity increases to about 90%, and almost
all of the energy in the remainder of the laser pulse is reflect
ed from the surface. For example, an effect of increasing El,
from 6 to 8 1/ em 2 is to cause the onset of surface melting to
decrease from 69 to 55 ns; however, once the hi.gh-reflectiv
ity (molten) state of the surface occurs, there is little energy
available in either pulse to drive the melt front to a much
deeper depth in the material. For each pulse the rate of ener-
R. B. James and W, H, Christie 3659
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12MELT DEPTH VS PUlSEH,jERGY [)ENSITY
A ~ 10,6 "m Tp~6ans
4
.<
<:>
~
i= 3
::b
0
::. w ::;;
2
l
05-1 6 9 10
E[ IJ;cm2)
FIG. 5. Calculated values for the maximum penetration of the melt front as
a function of the incident pulse-energy density fo!' a 60-ns (FWHM) trian
gular pulse,
gy delivered during the high-reflectivity phase is comparable
to the rate of energy removed from the molten cells by way of
heat conduction, and the value of Xm remains almost con
stant for a substantial portion of the laser pulse. During this
portion of the pulse when Xm is varying slowly with time, the
solidification velocity is small « 0.2 m/s) and much less
than the calculated solidification velocities obtained for a
ruby or excimer laser pulse. 14 The smaller solidification ve
locity allows for more time for the arsenic to diffuse within
the molten layer and may reduce the concentration of de
fects observed after rapid liquid-melt quenching. 18
For pulse-energy densities exceeding 8.5 J/cm2, the on
set of surface melting occurs at a time that significantly pre
cedes the maximum intensity of the 60-ns (FWHM) trian
gular pulse envelope. Although the high reflectivity of the
molten surface rejects most of the pulse intensity, there is
stilI enough energy absorbed in the first few FD cells to drive
the maximum melt front (xm) to considerably deeper
depths in the near-surface region, and x'" begins to increase
much more rapidly with EL•
The calculated threshold for surface melting of 5.3 JI
cm2 is much larger than the melt threshold of 1.0 J/cm2 for a
70-ns (FWHM) triangular XeCl excimer laser pulse. IX
Most ofthe difference in the melt thresholds results from the
non-negligible temperature-dependent transmission of the
CO2 laser pulses through the ion-implanted layeL In order
for laser processing techniques to be commercially viable, it
is important that the process be optimized for energy effi
ciency. One way to significantly decrease the threshold for
surface melting is to decrease the duration of the CO2 laser
pulse, which can be easily achieved by using mode-locked
laser pulses. 19,20 For the shorter CO2 laser pulses, the surface
heating is much more rapid because there is less transport of
heat out of the ion-implanted layer during the time the pulse
3660 J, Appl. Phys" Vol. 65, No.9, 1 May 1989 is incident on the sample. Since much less of the heat is con
ducted into the underlying substrate ~uring the shorter
pulses, the coupling of the laser energy is also more efficient
due to the increased absorption coefficient of the CO2 laser
radiation at the elevated lattice temperatures (see Fig. 4).
Figure 6 shows the calculated results for the maximum
melt depth (xm) as a function of the incident pulse-energy
density for a I-ns (FWHM) triangular pulse. The melt
threshold is calculated to be 0.62 J/cm2, which is more than
eight times smaller than the threshold for a 60-ns pulse.
Between about 0.74 and 0.90 J/cm2, the maximum melt
front penetration is almost constant at a value of about 150
A. The window in the incident pulse-energy density for ob
taining extremely shallow melt depths is narrower for the I
ns pulse; however, the window is stm wide enough for spatial
inhomogeneities of ± 15% without causing significant var
iations in Xm over the laser-irradiated region. For E[. greater
than 0.90 J/cm2, Xm begins to increase much more rapidly
with E1, in a similar way as the results shown in Fig. 4 for a
60-ns pulse. The calculations also show that the velocity of
solidification depends on the pulse duration and is generally
much larger for the i-ns pulse than the 60-ns pulse. The
larger regrowth velocities result primarily from the higher
rate of pulse-energy deposition and larger temperature gra
dients associated with the shorter pUlses.
CONCLUSIONS
We have shown that extremely shallow melt depths can
be obtained by CO2 laser annealing anow-energy ( < 5-ke V)
arsenic-implanted silicon layers. Similar results are expected
for other silicon samples having a thin degenerately doped
surface layer and an underlying lightly doped substrate. The
primary advantages of using a COzlaser to achieve very shal
low melt depths, as compared to a ruby or excimer laser, are
5 - MELT DEPTH VS PULSE,ENERGY DENSITY
A ~ 10,6 "m T p -1 n8
4
1,3
FIG. 6, Calculated values for the maximum penetration ofthe melt front as
a function of the pulse-energy density for a I-ns (FWHM) triangular pulse.
R. B. James and W. H, Christie 3660
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12that the pulse energy is deposited only in the thin heavily
doped layer at the surface and the CO2 laser-induced melting
of the surface layer causes the reflectivity to jump abruptly to
a value of about 90%. The large and sudden increase in the
reflectivity upon melting acts like a switch to reflect most of
the energy in the remainder of the laser pulse and thereby
greatly reduce the amount of pulse energy available for driv
ing the melt front to deeper depths. For a 60-ns pulse and
pulse-energy densities (EL) greater than about 7 J/cm2, we
find that aU of the ion-implanted arsenic is electrically active
and the near-surface region is free of any extended defects.
The calculated melt depths versus incident pulse-energy
density show that there exists a range in E L where the maxi
mum melt-front penetration is less than a few hundred ang
stroms and increases slowly with increasing Ev which is
consistent with our measurements.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank R F. Wood, J. Narayan, G. A.
Geist, D. H. Lowndes, P. H. Fleming, H. L. Burcham, Jr.,
D. C. Lind, J. R Adams, W. G. Wolfer, and M. 1. Baskes for
many useful discussions. We would also like to acknowledge
su.pport from the U. S. Department of Energy, Office ofBa
sic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences.
ISee,forexamplc, R. T. Young, G. A. van derLeeden, R. L. Sandstrom, R.
F. Wood, and R. D. Westbrook, App!. Phys. Lett. 43, 666 (1983).
366i J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.9, i May 4989 2R. T. Young and R. F. Wood, Ann. Rev. Mater. Sci. 12, 323 (1982).
'See, for example, Pulsed Laser Processing a/Semiconductors, edited by R.
F. Wood, C. W. White, and R. T. Young (Academic, New York, 1984),
Vol. 23.
JR. B. James,J. Narayan, W. H. Christie,R. E. Eby, O. W. Holland,lIndR.
F. Wood, in Energy Beam-Solid Interactions and Transient Thermal Pro
cessing, edited by D. K. Biegelsen, G. A. Rozgonyi, and C. V. Shank (Ma
terials Research Society, Pittsburgh, FA, 1985), p. 413.
'R. B. James, J. Narayan, R. F. Wood, D. K. Ottesen, and K. F. Siegfriedt,
J. App!. Phys. 57, 4727 (1985).
OM. Blomberg, K. Naukkarinen, T. Tuomi, V. M. Airaksinen, M. Luoma
jarvi, and E. Rauhala, J. Appl. Phys. 54, 2327 (1983).
7R. B. James, ill Pulsed La.~er Processing a/Semiconductors, edited by R. F.
Wood, C. W. White, andR. T. Young (Academic, New York, 1984), VoL
23. pp. 555-625.
"R. B. James, G. A. Geist, R. T. Young, W. H. Christie, and F. A. Greulich,
J. Appt. Phys. 62, 298l (1987).
"F. A. Trumoore, Bell Syst. Tech. J. 39, 205 (1960).
lOW. G. Spitzer and H. Y. Fan, Phys. Rev. 106, 882 (1957).
llW. G. Spitzer and H. Y. Fan, Phys. Rev. 108, 268 (1957).
12R. F. Wood and G. E. Giles, Phys. Rev.S 23, 2923 (1981).
!JR. F. Wood and G. E. Geist, Phys. Rev. B 34, 2606 (1986).
t4R. Po Wood, in Pulsed Laser Processing a/Semiconductors, edited by R. F.
Wood, C. W. White, and R. T. Young (Academic, New York, 1984), Vol.
23, pp. 164-251.
"C. Kittel, in Introduction to Solid State Physics, 4th ed. (Wiley, New York,
1971). pp. 263-264.
16J. D. Jackson, in Classical Electrodynamics, 2nd ed. (Wiley, New York,
1975), pp. 29(j....298.
171. M. Poate andJ. W. Mayer, in Laser Anl!ealillgo/Semicol!ductors (Aca
demic, New York, 1982), pp. 47--48.
'S}. Narayan, in Defects in Semiconductors ll, edited by S. Mahajan and J.
W. Corbett (Elsevier, New York, 1983), p. 491.
19 A. J. Alcock and A. C. Walker, Appl. Phys. Lett. 24, 306 (1974).
20e. R. Phipps, Jr. and S. J. Thomas, Opt. Lett. 1, 93 (1977).
R. B. James and W. H. Christie 3661
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130.64.175.185 On: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 16:38:12 |
1.2811535.pdf | New Products
Citation: Physics Today 41, 8, 91 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.2811535
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2811535
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/41/8
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1.584174.pdf | Thermal stability of polyimidesiloxane (SIM2000)
S. P. Sun, S. P. Murarka, and C. J. Lee
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B 6, 1763 (1988); doi: 10.1116/1.584174
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.584174
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvstb/6/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:39Thermal stability of polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000)S)
s. P. Sun and S. P. Murarka
Center for Integrated Electronics/Materials Engineering Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy,
New York 12180
C.J. Lee
Occidental Chemical Corporation, Technology Center, Grand Island, New York 14072
(Received 27 May 1988; accepted 26 July 1988)
Polyimides are finding increased use in integrated circuits as a dielectric and protective layer. Its
low dielectric constant, ease of application, and ability to planarize the surfaces, permit their
incorporation into very large scale integrated and ultra-large scale integrated circuit processing.
However, there is no single polyimide available which possesses high-temperature stability at
temperature > 300°C. A newer class of polymers called polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000),
resulting from the modification of polyimides by special equilibrated silicone blocks, has been
found superior to commercial polyimides especially with respect to their high-temperature
stability. In this paper, we present the results of our investigation of the high-temperature stability
of a few polyimidesiloxane materials spun on various substrates including Si, Si02• and AI.
I. INTRODUCTION
The increases in the packing density and the resulting
shrinkage of the device dimensions have required reduction
in the interconnection resistance in the integrated circuits.
Multilevel metallization schemes of a thin-film conductor
and dielectrics (such as polyimide) can meet these needs to
achieve high-density interconnections. 1,2 Polyimide is
uniquely used as an interIevel dielectric because of its excel
lent planarizing effect,3 its low thermal cures,4 and its good
dielectric performance and ease of patterning vias.5 These
properties have made it an attractive material in microelec
tronics applications,6- 12 At present, only a limited number of
polyimides are available for these applications. Momma et
al.13 investigated modified polyimide-isoindaloquinazoline
dione (PIQ-LlOO) because of its good planarization, and
lower plasma and sputtering damage, Gildenblat et al. 14 sug
gested silicone containing polyimide (SiPI) because of its
good adhesion and resistance to water, and showed that it
provided a higher dielectric strength. However, there is no
single polyimide available which possesses aU the desired
properties, particularly high-temperature resistance, A
polyimide with thermal stability at 450 "C will be extremely
useful in silicon integrated circuits. In this paper, a novel
polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000) used as spun-on dielectric
has been found to provide good high-temperature stability.
It is a block copolymer made from reaction products of a
proprietary dianhydride with an organic diamine and an a,
w-diamino siloxane. It is then fully imidized and is soluble in
a polyether solvent (diglyme). Figure 1 shows the basic
structure of this polyimidesiloxane.
II. EXPERIMENTAL
SIM films are deposited by spinning a solution of poly
imidesiloxane onto different substrates. The films were then
softbaked in air up to a temperature of 220·C for ! h to
evaporate the solvent. Film thickness was measured by using
Dektak profilometer. Film thicknesses up to 2 pm have been
achieved by employing multiple spin coating and softbaking steps. Annealing (commonly called curing) was carried out
in a cQnventional furnace as well as a rapid thermal anneal
(RT A) unit over a range of temperatures in nitrogen am
bient for short durations to investigate its thermal stability.
A microbalance was used to monitor the progress of the film
decomposition by measuring weight loss. Both thermogravi
metric analysis (TG A) and R T A and fumance anneals were
carried out during high-temperature cures. Infrared trans
mission spectroscopy was then used to follow the changes in
the functional chemical groups resulting due to high-tem
perature treatments.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
SIM-2000 dissolved in diglyme (9% solids content) was
spun on various substrate surfaces, namely, Si, Si02, AI,
doped polysilicon, and previously prepared polyimidesilox
ane. For as spun-on films very small «5%) variation in
film thickness across the substrates was observed. As expect
ed film thickness was a function of spin rate as shown in Fig.
2. For films softbaked at various baking temperatures, the
film thickness stabilized at 180·C as shown in Fig. 3. The
films heat-treated at 180 ·C are, henceforth, called softbaked
films. Both spun-on and softbaked films adhered extremely
wen with all types of substrates as determined by the qualita~
tive Scotch-tape-peel tests.
To determine the high-temperature stability of the soft
baked films, weight loss was measured as a function of time
and/or temperature using a microbalance. Films annealed at
150 or 260·C for 24 h did not show any weight loss indicat
ing the thermal stability up to a temperature of 260 ·C. Sub
sequent to this observation, films were annealed at 450 ·C in
a conventional furnace and weight change measured. Figure
FIG. 1. General structure of the polyimidesHoxane.
1763 J. Vac. Sci, Technol. B 6 (6), Nov/Dec 1988 0734-211X/88/061763-0SS01.00 © 1988 American Vacuum Society 1763
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:391764 Sun, Murarka, and Lee: Thermal stability of polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000) 1764
6000 ~------------------;
o~
en en
~ 5000
-'"
.~ .r: f-
~ 4000
a! x
.2
'0;
~ 3000
'E
>-
"0 160°C
CL
2000L--~--L--~-~-~--~50~0~O-~~6000 2000 3000 4000
Spin Rate (rpm)
FIG. 2. Polyimidesiloxane thickness as a function of spin rates at various
softbaked temperatures.
4 shows the weight loss as a function of time at 450·C in this
furnace. For comparison the weight loss after a 60 s rapid
thermal anneal at the same temperature is also shown. It is
apparent that at 450°C there is practically an initial weight
loss. After this initial loss, the film is stable and no further
measurable loss with time is seen. The desired thermal treat
ment to stabilize the film ofthis material will be a short time
offurnace anneal or a short (1-2 min) RTA at 450 ·C.
To compare these results obtained in the anneal-and
weigh sequence with in situ weight change measurements,
TGA of the SIM-2000 powder was carried out. Figure 5
shows the weight loss as a function of temperature. The re
sults were obtained using dynamic TGA, with a heating rate
of 10 'C/min. This figure clearly shows the stability of the
material to about 300 'c in the nitrogen ambient supporting
the early results of anneal for 24 h at 260°C. As the tempera
ture increased above 300 ·C, the weight loss occurs first at a
rapid rate, then at a slower rate, and finally again at a rapid
rate which is followed by stabilizing at -600"C. The rela
tively slower rate appears to prevail approximately between
400 and 480 ·C. The results of Fig. 5 indicate the possibility
of more than one process that may be responsible for the
weight loss in this material.
Figure 6 shows the result ofthe isothermal TGA at 450 'c
5000
0$ 4800
(fj
II) 4600 Q) c -" 4400 .2
.s:: f-4200
Q)
C 4000
«I x 3800 E.
'iii 3600 Q)
"0
'E 3400
>-
"0 3200
0..
3000120 140 160 180 200 220 240
Softbaking Temperature (O C)
FIG. 3. Polyimidesiloxane thickness as a function of softbaked temperature
at a fixed spin rate of 3000 rpm. Softbaking time: 30 min.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B, Vol. 6, No.6, Nov/Dec 1988 100
Q)
~ 90
>< E. 80
'iii
Q) 70 "0
'E 60
>-"0 500 RTA Unit Conventional Furnace
~ 4~ / /' ~O-~ :g 30
..J 20 g
10
of.
Annealing Time (min)
FIG. 4. Percent weight loss of polyimidesiloxane as a function of annealing
time at 450°C in nitrogen ambient for rapid thermal annealed (60 s) and
furnace annealed films.
after sample has attained 450°C. The initial loss occurred
during heating to this temperature. Thus the weight loss of
nearly 30% at a time very close to time = 0 in this plot corre
sponds to the weight loss that is associated with a tempera
ture rise from 300 to 450 °C in a time of 15 min. The rate of
loss then decreases very rapidly and only a 38% weight loss
is recorded after a 30 min anneal. TGA results seem to cor
roborate the results in Fig. 4 obtained using a microbalance.
They also indicate that the weight losses are similar in the
softbaked films and the starting powder material.
Rapid thermal anneal of the films deposited on silicon or
oxidized silicon substrates was carried out at various tem
peratures in the range of 350 to 550°C and weight loss was
measured as a function of time. Figure 7 shows the results for
films on silicon substrates. Similar results were obtained on
SiO lSi substrates. At 350 ·C, a weight loss of nearly 5% is
me:sured after 1 min of anneal and then the film stabilizes
with no further loss. At 400, 430, and 450°C a gradual in
crease in the weight loss up to 4, 4, and 2 min of anneal. The
film is stable after nearly 22%, 33%, and 39% loss in the
weight, respectively. At 500 and 550°C, once again, the film
loses about 50% and 58% of weight, respectively, after first
1 min anneal and then is stabilized. The weight loss behavior
observed during isothermal anneals (as shown in Fig. 7) is
consistent with the TGA results of Fig. 5 where the weight
loss occurred rapidly at temperatures between 300 and
380'C and above 480°C and rather sluggishly at tempera
tures between 400 and 480°C.
Figure 8 shows a plot of the film thickness as a function of
the RT A temperature and for 1 min anneals. The ordinate is
normalized with respect to the film thickness after softbake.
The thickness, after 1 min R T A, decreases as the R T A tem
perature is increased. The reduction in thickness is nearly
5%, 10%, 35%, 50%, and 65% at 350, 400, 450, 500, and
550 ·C, respectively. These numbers correspond very well
with the % weight loss, after 1 min anneals, obtained from
Fig. 7. This one to one correspondence in thickness reduc
tion and weight loss would suggest that there was no change
in the density of the films as a result of the thermal treat
ment. More work is carried out at present time to understand
this behavior.
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:391765 Sun, Murarka, and Lee: Thermal stability of polyimldeslloxane (SIM-2000) 1765
100
90
80
--.
~ 0 70
.....;
~ 60 -.c 50 Ol
Q.)
~ 40
30
20
10
100 200 300 400
Temperature (0 C)
The IR spectra of the annealed polyimidesiloxane films
and softbaked films are compared in Fig. 9. There are no
major changes in the peak positions. However intensities of
some peaks decreased after heat treatment. Table I summar
izes the main observed changes. The changes occurred in the
absorption peaks at (1) 1360, 1720, and 1775 em t, (2)
1310 em -I, (3) 725 cm-1, and (4) 800, 845, 1030, 1100,
and 1260 cm-t which, respectively, could be associated with
(1) the imide carbonyl group (C= 0). (2) methyl group
( -CH3) attached to the benzene ring, (3) methylene
group -( CH2) n -between the siloxane segments and the
imide. and (4) Si-CH3 or Si-O-CH, in the siloxane seg
ments. The transmission infrared spectrum offuUy imidized
100 I-
90 t-
80 ;-
-70 r:--~ Q
~ 60 -
~ -50 - .s::.
OJ
'ID 40 r-S
30 ~
20 -
10 I-
0 I L 1 ~ J I
0 ,0 20 30 40 50 60
Time (minutes)
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. S, Vol. 6, No.6, Nov/Dec 1988
•• ".-,".".-.-.- •• ',' •••••••• ',. ••• ~ ••• < ••• :.:.:-:.:-; ••• ~ ••• ; •• ' •••••• ;> ••••••• :.:.:.;.:.:.:.:.;.;.;.~ •••••••• > •••••• ,:.'.'.' •• -.-.-••••••••• ,...... .-500 600 FlG. 5. Dynamic TGA of polyimidesi
loxane powder in nitrogen ambient,
heating rate is 10 "C/min.
polyimidesiloxane, after soft bake ( 180 "C) and anneal
(450°C) temperatures, indicated the intensity changes of
absorption peaks for rigid imide segments. In addition. the
change in the intensity levels of some flexible siloxane seg
ments in cured polyimidesiIoxane measured was very large
when compared with the levels of absorption measured for
softbaked polyimidesiloxane.
One can speculate that most of the initial weight loss at
high temperatures occurs due to volatilization of the film
and decomposition within the flexible siloxane segments
which is connected to the rigid imide structure. Upon heat
ing, the molecular motion of the silicones is relatively rapid
and the side chains connected to it (i.e.,-CH3) become weak
1
70 60 90 FIG. 6. Isothermal TGA ofpolyimidesi
loxanc powder at 450 OC (after the sam
ple has attained this temperature) in ni
trogen ambient. The initial loss occurs
during the heating of the material from
300 to 450·C (at a 10 'C/min rate).
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:391766 Sun, Murarka, and lee: Thermal stability of polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000) 1766
~ 100r-------------------------------~ c:
<a )(
.Q 80 'iii
~
"U 'e 60 >..
(5
0.. '0 40
I/)
I/)
.3 20
~ ~>-----o_____o 550·C
•• -•• -•• -._ ..... .........,--- .... --_. 500· C
~-<>--¢---<)------¢----,---<> 450· C
~~_a---o---- ...... _-__ . 430· C
.~-+----..... :----..... :---: ::::: "iF-O~~--~~~--~~--~~_~_L_~~ o 4 6 8 10 12
Annealing Time (min)
FIG. 7. Percent weight loss of polyimidesiloxane/Si as a function of tem
perature for rapid thermal anneals up to 10 min.
in the early stage of the decomposition. The intensities of
some imide segments decrease due to the breaking of C = 0
and CHr(benzene ring) bonds as observed in the IR spec
tra. Further heat treatment would not result in more weight
loss due to increasing rigidity of the molecular chain of the
residual polyimidesiloxane. Therefore, most of the weight
losses are speculated to be caused by thermal decomposition
of the flexible siloxane segments. Identification of the species
in the gas phase, at various temperatures, will help elucidate
the mechanism more conclusively. Experiments, employing
mass spectrometer and chemical analysis are in process to
identify the gaseous species and elemental content, respec
tively, of the softbaked and heat-treated material.
IV. CONCLUSION
In this investigation we have examined the stability of a
polyimidesiloxane (SIM-2000) material at temperatures in
the range 180-550·C, using both furnace and RTA meth
ods. The stability was followed by measuring the changes in
the thickness and weight of the softbaked film. TGA was
performed on the parent material in powder form.
The results indicate that the films and the powder are sta
ble up to 300°C, and lose weight and thickness at higher
m m
~ c:
..>< .2 1.0
~ I-
Q) c
<a 0.6 )(
.2
'V,j
Q)
"U 0.6 'e
>..
(5
0..
"U 0.4
~
.!::! m E 0.2 <; 350 450 550 Z
Annealing Temperature (0 C)
FIG. 8. Remaining polyimidesiloxane thickness after annealing at each tem
perature for 1 min in RT A.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B, Vol. 6, No.6, Nov/Dec 1988 c o ·00
.!!?
E
(/) c co
f: Anneaied (SIM-2000) at 4500 C, 30 min, N2
Softbsked (SIM-2000; at 180°C, 30 min, air
CM-1
FIG. 9. IR spectra of soft-baked and annealed films.
temperatures. The loss in weight corresponds well with the
thickness change at each temperature. There was an initial
weight loss that occurred in .;;;4 min resulting in a film which
did not lose any weight on continued annealing at the same
temperature. The TGA results show three ranges: (a) a high
weight loss rate region at 300-380 T, (b) a lower loss rate
region between 400 and 480°C, and (c) another high-loss
region between 480 and 600 °C. More experiments are in
progress to understand this behavior. IR spectra of the soft
baked and the 450 ·e annealed films clearly indicate changes
in the intensities of several functional groups. At the present
most of the weight loss is postulated to be associated with the
volatilization of the film and the decomposition of the flexi
ble siloxane segments.
At 450°C the film loses about 35% of its thickness and
then remains at the new thickness up to 30 min. This indi
cates the 450 ·C-treated films have a potential for use as in
terlevel dielectric film if other processing criteria are met.
Weare in the process of acquiring the understanding and
usefulness of this material.
TABLE 1. Typical IR spectra ofSIM-2000.
Characteristic Intensity Intensity
infrared bands 180·C (softbaking) 450 'C (annealing)
1260 cm-I
(Si-CH,) strong weak
1100 and 1030 em -I
CR,
(Si-d -) strong weak
845 and 800 em -I
(Si-CR,) strong very weak
1775 em-I
(carbonyl, C = 0) strong medium
1720 and 1360 cm .. ,
(carbonyl, C = 0) strong weak
72S cm-I
-(CR2),,- strong medium
1310 cm I
(CR3-O) strong medium
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:391767 Sun, Murarka. and lee: Thermal stability of polylmldesiioxane (SIM-2000) 1767
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Authors SPS and SPM are thankful to Occidental Chemi
cal Corp. for supporting this investigation and Dan Pulver
for help in carrying out initial experiments.
• ) SIM-2000 is a trademark name of Occidental Chemical Corporation.
'M. Teresawa, S. Minami, and J. Rubin, Int. J. Hybrid Microelectron. 6,
607 (l983).
2J. F. McDonald. A. J. Steckl, C. A. Neugebauer, R. O. Carlson, and A. S.
Bergendahl, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A 4,3127 (1986).
'L. B. Rathman, J. Electrochem. Soc. 127,2216 (1980).
4A. M. Wilson, in Polyimides:Synthesis. Characterization, and Applica
tions, edited by K. L. Mittal (Plenum, New York, 1984), Vol. 2, p. 715.
J. Vae. ScI. Techno!. S, Vol. 6, No.6, Nov/Dec 1988
••• " •• ".-.-••••••• >? ••••••••• ~ ••••••••• -.~.;.;.;-;.; ••• , •••••••••••••••••••• : ••••••• 50. Samuelson, Org. Coat. PJast. Prepr. 43 (2),446 (1982).
60. A. Brown, in IEEE Reliability Physics Symposium (IEEE, New York,
1981), p. 282.
7A. M. Wilson, Thin Solid Films 83,145 (1981).
sp. W. Schuessler, Int. J. Hybrid Microelectron. 6 (l), 342 (1983).
9S. D. Senturia, R. A. Miller, D. D. Denton, F. W. Smith, and H. J. Neu
haus, in Ref. 4, p. 107.
"'D. R. Day, D. Ridley, and S. D. Senturia, in Ref. 4, p. 767 .
"D. R. Sato, S. Harade, A. Saiki, T. Kimura, T. Okubo, and K. Mukai,
IEEE Trans. Parts Hybrid Packag. 9 (3),176 (1973).
I2A. M. Fraszer, in Polymer Reviews (Wiley, New York, 1968), Vol. 17.
Chap. 7, p. 315.
13M. Yataka, K. Noriyuki, H. Mitsuru, N. Shunichi, and M. Naohiro,
IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 34 (3), 621 (1987).
14G. C. Davis. B. A. Heath, and G. Oildenblat, in Ref. 4, p. 847.
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 158.42.28.33 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 09:19:39 |
1.343709.pdf | Temperatures in the plume of a dc plasma torch
D. A. Scott, P. Kovitya, and G. N. Haddad
Citation: J. Appl. Phys. 66, 5232 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343709
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343709
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Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsTemperatures in the plume of a de plasma torch
D. A. Scott, P. Kovitya, and G. N, Haddad
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIROJ Division of Applied Physics,
P. O. Box 218, Lindfield, N.S. W. 2070, Australia
(Received 22 March 1989; accepted for publication 26 July 1989)
A magnetohydrodynamic model of a plasma torch that describes the complete torch system
from the gas injection, through the arc region, and out into the plasma plume is presented. It is
a two-dimensional model but includes a swirl component of the flow and the K-E model of
turbulence and assumes local thermodynamic equilibrium. Temperatures i.n the plume of a
plasma torch have been determined spectroscopically by measuring the emission from neutral
argon. atoms, and these temperatures have been compared with the predictions of the model.
I. INTRODUCTION
The use of plasma torches as clean and efficient heat
sources in industry has been common for many years, but
many of the applications, such as materials processing,
would benefit from a better understanding of the physical
processes governing the interaction of the plasma and the
injected feedstock. The temperature and velocity fields in the
arc plume as it exits from the nozzle are of special interest as
the interaction generally occurs within this region.
Previous theoretical studies1-1 of plasma torches have
described the exit region of the torch. Turbulent flow was
included in these studies using theK-emodel,4 which is espe
cially suitable for two-dimensional calculations. An obvious
disadvantage in these approaches is the necessary specifica
tion of the temperature and velocity profiles across the noz
zle exit as boundary conditions. The results can be in
fluenced greatly by the upstream boundary conditions. For
example, McKelliget et al. l assumed flat temperature and
velocity profiles at the nozzle exit, while Dilawari and Szeke
ly2 assigned modified parabolic temperature and velocity
profiles; their computed results showed significant differ
ences in the decay of temperature as the distance from the
nozzle exit is increased. Lee and Pfender~ studied the effect
on the flow of two different temperature profiles at the noz
zle exit. They concluded that while the profiles had the same
mass-and energy-flow rates, the largest temperature differ
ence in their region of calculation 'N1iS 3000 K and the largest
velocity difference was 300 m s 1. These differences repre
sent variations in the temperatures of about 30% and in the
velocities of about 100%.
As these models do not include the arc region, the tem~
peratures and velocities of the plasma in the plume region
can only be predicted from gross inputs such as mass-and
energy-flow rates, which themselves require knowledge of
the voltage-current and voltage-flow characteristics. These
problems can. be overcome ifthe whole torch, which includes
the region behind the cathode, the arc region, and the plasma
plume region, can be modeled as a single entity. The bound
ary conditions at the nozzle exit then result naturally from
conditions in the arc and pre-arc regions, and the gas flow at
the nozzle exit is fully specified. Hence the exit assumptions
can be dropped.
In this paper we describe a model of the complete torch
system from gas injection behind the cathode, through the anode nozzle, and out into the plume. It is a two-dimensional
model but includes a swirl component of the flow and the K
e model of turbulence and assumes local thermodynamic
equilibrium. The equations of this model and the numerical
techniques used to solve them are presented in Sec. n.
Previous experimental temperature measurements in
plasma torches have included the use of probes and optical
techniques. 1.5.6 Calorimetric probes are limited to measuring
temperatures less than 10 000 K and have poor spatial reso
lution. Several different spectroscopic techniques may be
employed in which the following are measured: absolute in
tensities of atomic lines. relative intensities of atomic lines,
Stark width and Doppler width of atomic lines, and, in cases
where the plasma gas includes diatomic molecules, the rela
tive intensities of rotational and vibrational lines of molecu
lar spectra. The present experiments were designed to mea
sure the excitation temperature in the plume of the plasma
torch using spectroscopic techniques and are outlined in Sec.
HI. In Sec. IV we compare the measured temperature fields
with the predictions of the modeL
II. THEORY
In the present model of the plasma torch a magnetohy
drodynamic approach is employed in which it is assumed
that the collision times of the particles in the plasma are
much smaller than the time constants of the flow field so that
the particles can be considered as localized. Thus the Boltz
mann distribution function can be replaced by the number
density and the mean velocity, and the plasma behaves like a
fluid, which can be described accurately by the equation of
state and the con.servation equations.
Axial symmetry is assumed, so cylindrical coordinates
(r,e,z) are used and all variations in the e direction are ne
glected. The plasma is assumed to be in local thermodynam
ic equilibrium (L TE) and optically thin. The flow is as
sumed to be subsonic, and density variations due to pressure
changes caused by the flow are neglected. The ambient pres
sure is taken to be 1 atm (10 1. 3 kPa) in all cases. The equa
tions that result are similar to the equations used by Kovitya
and Cram 7 for the two-dimensional model of the gas-tung
sten welding arc. The K-E turbulence model of Launder and
Spalding4 is used to estimate the effect of turbulence on ener
gy and momentum transfer. Density fluctuations caused by
5232 J. AppL Phys. 66 (11), 1 December 1989 0021 -8979/89/235232-08$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 5232
Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsturbulence are ignored. As the plasma and the ambient gas
are both assumed to be argon, mixing effects that result from
the difference in gas enthalpies, say, for an argon plasma jet
operating into air, cannot arise, This is unlike the models of
Dilawari and Szekdy2 or Lee and Pfender3 which assume
the gas and plasma to be a binary mixture of "frozen" (i.e.,
nonreacting) components consisting of the plasma at a high
er temperature and the gas at a lower temperature. Thus a
single temperature (and pressure) defines the thermody
rw.rnic state of the present torch system.
The above assumptions are the standard assumptions
for plasma flow models. The equations of the model are
based on the equations given in Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot8
for the cylindrical coordinate system and are as follows.
Mass conservation:
1 d a --(rPVr) + -(pv?) = O. r dr c1z " . (1)
Radial momentum conservation:
( aUr V~ aUr \
p u ---+u -;; \ r dr , Z az
dP. 1 a ( aUr) = ---JzB o +--;-2r7J-a, r ar cf'
a [(au z aUr)] v, +- 11 -+- -211-· az ar aZ ,2 (2)
Azimuthal momentum conservation:
-+-~ (17 avlI).
dz az (3)
Axial momentum conservation:
( aVz auz) v -v -= P r dr + Z az
1 a [ (av. aVr)] +-- rTf --+-. (4)
r ar ar az
Energy conservation:
}; + j; U 5k (. aT . aT) =---+-Jr-+Jz-u 2e \ ar az
+ ~i!.. (rK aT) + ~ (I( aT)
r ar ar (JZ az
ap ap +Vr-+V,-, ar -aZ (5)
Electric current continuity:
~~ l/m. a¢;) +~ (u a¢;) = 0,
r a, (1r az dz (6)
. a¢;. a¢ Jr=U-' Jz=U-. ar dz (7)
In these equations the variables are pressure (P), radial ve
locity (vr), azimuthal velocity (ve), axial velocity (vz)'
plasma temperature (T), electric potential (¢), and radial
5233 J. Appi. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 11, 1 December 1989 and axial current density (j,. and}z). The plasma properties
are density ( p), heat capacity (cp ), radiative loss ( U), elec
trical conductivity (0'), and the azimuthal magnetic field
(Be)' The viscosity (11) and thermal conductivity (K) in
clude both laminar and turbulent components,
rj=r!t+Yf" K=K,+K t• (8)
The laminar components are derived from kinetic theory
while the turbulent components are determined using the K
E turbulence model. The other terms are the Boltzmann con
stant (k) and the electron charge (e). The magnetic field is
obtained using Maxwell's equation,
1 d , .D ) • -- ~rn(i =PoJz' , ar (9)
where Po = 4rrX 10 7 H m . I is the permeability of free
space.
In the K-E turbulence model, which is incorporated in
the present calculations, the eddy viscosity Tft and the eddy
thermal conductivity Kt are obtained from
(10)
where K is the turbulence kinetic energy, e is the dissipation
rate of the turbulence kinetic energy, Pr, is the turbulent
Prandtl number, and C'I is one of the constants of the mod
e1.4
The two turbulence variables K and E are obtained by
solving
( dK. BK) d [( Yft) dK] P Ur-<-;-V z-=G-pE+- Yf,+- -
\. dr Jz dz S K dz
1 d [ ( Yft \ /JK] +-- r 1l! +-)-r dr SK ctr (11 )
and
( rh; ae) p v,-+v z-dr az
=CIG~-C2P'; +~i!..[r(711+~)ae]
K K r ar SF 81'
+ ~[("tll + 17,) de] ,
Jz s. dz (12)
where G is the product of the eddy viscosity and viscous
dissipation terms. The constants in the turbulence model
equations are given in Table I. These are the suggested values
of Launder and Spalding4 for use in the case of flow in pipes.
In the exit region, where the flow is freely expanding,
Rodi9 suggested the following modifications to the param
eters e'l and C2 that we have adopted:
C'I = 0.09 -0.04J, C2 = 1.92 --0.0667/, (13)
TABLE I. Table of turhulence parameters.
C 1 C• 2 Pr,
1.44 1.92 1.0 1.3 0.09 0.9
Scott. Kovitya, and Haddad 5233
Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionswhere/is given by
/= I~(a(vz)o _I a(Vz)O 1)1°.2
,
2f'>.u Jz aZ (14)
where 8 is the diameter of the jet, !:s..u is the difference
between the center-line velocity and the free-stream velocity,
and (vz)o is the center-line velocity.
The maximum Mach number for a 200-A arc with a 30-t'
min -I gas flow is 0.35 inside the nozzle. For this case the
assumption that pressure variations are small compared to
the absolute pressure is justified. For higher flows the veloc
ities remain subsonic, so that for the worst case in our calcu
lations (400 A, 50 {'min -1) the Mach number is less than
0.8. The Reyno!ds number for a 200-A arc at a flow rate of30
11min -I is about 2000 in the current-carrying region and
drops to 600 at the nozzle exit. The reason is that the viscos
ity increases by an order of magnitUde as the plasma tem
perature drops from 20000 to 12000 K, while the density
only increases by a factor of 2. Gravity is not important, as
the Froude number is about 3 X 106•
All equations are then solved iteratively using the con
trol-volume approach of PatankarlO with nonuniform grids
to give Ur> VB' Vz' T, cj;, P, K, and E, This method has been
widely used by McKelliget et al., I Dilawari and Szekely,2
and Lee and Pfender.3 The advantage of the Patankar meth
od i~ that it is highly stable and converges relatively easily,
but It does suffer from numerical diffusion and is thus less
accurate than higher-order finite-difference methods. On
the other hand, higher-order methods tend to have conver
gence problems and use more computer time (see the review
article of Patankarll). To generate the temperature profiles
presented here a grid of 30 X 30 control volumes is used. The
ratio of the largest grid to the smallest grid is about 15, al
though the stretching ratio between adjacent grids is always
less t~an 2. To test the accuracy the calculations were repeat
ed wIth double the number of control volumes in both direc
tions, that is, 60 X 60 control volumes. For temperatures
greater than 100C{) K the differences amount to less than
4%. In the region where we are making a direct comparison
of experiment and theory (that is, in the nlume where
T> 6000 K) the differences are less than 10%. Where the
temperature gradients are large, for example, near the wall
of the nozzle and in the mantle of the plasma plume (at
temperatures < 3000 K for z < 25 mm), the differences are
up to 20%. However, because of the steep gradient of the
t~rnperature contours, even this figure represents a spatial
dIfference of the temperature contours of less than 0.2 mm.
The plasma properties are obtained using the method of
Gordon and McBridel2 to calculate the plasma density and
heat capacity, the method of Devoto 13 to calculate the vis
cosity and the thermal and electrical conductivities, and the
me,thod of Cram 14 to calculate the radiation loss. The prop
e.rttes are then calculated for each node by linear interpola
tlOn from a table with temperatures spaced at 1000-K inter
vals. Convergence is attained when Eqs. (1 )-( 6), (10), and
( 11) ,are satisfied to within 1 % of the largest contributing
term in each of the equations for every control volume. Fur
thermore, the integrated mass flow through the nozzle is
checked to be the same (to four significant figures) at each
5234 J. Appl. Phys" Vol. 66, No. 11, 1 December 1989 axial position. The calculation for the 30 X 30 control vol
umes takes 300 central processing unit (CPU) seconds on a
CYBER 205 for 600 iterations. The plume region and the
nozzle region are calculated concurrently.
Figure 1 shows typical results of this calculation, illus
trating the temperature contours [Fig. 1 (a) J and the mass
flow contours [Fig. 1 (b) J predicted by the model with oper
ating parameters of 600 A current at an argon flow rate of 30
t'min -I. (In this paper all volume-flow rates are in standard
t' min -1.) A radial cross-sectional view of the torch is pre
sented (the z axis is the axis of cylindrical symmetry) show
ing the cathode (shaded) in the lower left corner with an
included angle at the tip of 60·, and the hollow anode nozzle
(also shaded) above and to the right of the cathode. The
contour steps for the temperature are f'>.T = 2000 K with the
outermost contour 1000 K and the innermost 23 000 K. The
exit temperature of the gas on the axis is calculated to be
approximately 15 000 K. The (integrated) mass-flow rate as
a function of radius is defined as the rate at which mass (that
is, argon) flows through a circle of radius r centered on the
axis. The mass-flow rate is shown here as it illustrates the
effects of entrainment outside the nozzle of the plasma torch.
The contour steps for the mass-flow rate are f'>.m = 0.2 g s -!
and the center-line mass-flow rate is zero (as r is zero). The
turbulence model is applied from the entrance of the nozzle
(where the arc root occurs) through to the region outside
the nozzle in the plasma plume. The flow upstream of the
nozzle entrance is assumed to be laminar as the gas has not
been accelerated by arc heating. Outside the nozzle the ef
fects of turbulence can be seen: the temperature profiles are
flared and there is considerable entrainment of gases from
th~ external atmosphere into which the plasma torch is oper
atmg.
20 40 60 80
z (mm)
20 40 60 80
z (mm)
FIG. I. (a) Temperature contours for a 6OO-A arc in argon at 30 t'min-I,
The ,contour steps are AT = 2000 K, the outermost contour is T = 1000 K,
the mnermost T = 23 000 K. (b) Integrated mass-flow contours for the
same arc, with the contour step Am = 0.2 g 8-1, the center-line mass-flow
rate IS () and the outermost contour is 2.8 g s -I.
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5234
Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsOne of the major problems in the modeling of the plas
ma torch is the assumption of axial symmetry. It is known
that the anode root moves in a circular path assisted by the
swirling gas.S,IS If the assumption of axial symmetry is
dropped, the problem becomes three-dimensional in nature
and its solution is not feasible at present because of computer
time considerations. However, a simplifying assumption can
be made to keep the problem two-dimensional. The diffi
culty that arises is that the electrical conductivity of argon
falls rapidly below about 8000 K, and the gas is essentially
nonconducting below about 5000 K. If the electrical conduc
tivity as a function of temperature is calculated assuming
L TE, then the resistance of the incoming gas between the
anode and the cathode is very large. As a result ohmic heat
ing of the gas occurs, the electrical conductivity rises quick
ly, heating decreases, the conductivity falls quickly, and the
solution becomes oscillatory. Because of the anode spot mo
tion, the plasma and the gas flow near the anode become
mixed and the average temperature is lower than the plasma
temperature. However, the arc current is still carried
through the anode spot and the effective electrical conduc
tivity remaIns high. As an approximation to these complicat
ed electrode effects we have assumed that for temperatures
below 9000 K the electrical conductivity 17 (in units of
S em I) varies according to a power law given by
17 = O.2eT12000 (15)
and for temperatures above 9000 K the conductivity is equal
to the calculated (LTE) values. While the arc voltage is par
ticularly sensitive to the choice of the /7-T relation, experi
ments show that the anode root attaches itselfto the point on
the anode closest to the cathode, and therefore the choice of
any 17-T relation is limited to those that permit the arc cur
rent to flow between these two points. Moreover, if the total
nylon
Fl G. 2. Diagram of the plasma torch.
5235 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 11,1 December 1989 power input for the same plasma current remains the same
for any changes in the (T-T function, then the temperature
profile at the nozzle exit is insensitive to the changes. There
fore this method represents an advance over previous meth
ods because the plasma temperatures in the plume depend
only on the total power input. These assumptions are sup
ported by comparing the predicted and experimental volt
age-current and voltage-gas-flow characteristics (see Sec.
IV A) as these parameters are very sensitive to the near
electrode approximations.
m. EXPERIMENTAL ARRANGEMENT
The plasma torch used in this series of experiments con
sists of a water-cooled thoriated tungsten cathode and a wa
ter-cooled copper anode nozzle of 6 mm internzl dizmeter. A
scale diagram of the plasma torch appears in Fig. 2. The arc
is vortex-stabilized by the injection of the plasma gas via a
coaxial swirler mounted behind the cathode. Argon
(99.999% pure) is used as the plasma gas, and the maximum
power at which the torch may be run is 25 kW, with typical
operating conditions being 600 A, 30 V at a gas flow of 30
{min -I. The experimental arrangement used to measure
the temperatures in the plume of the plasma torch (shown in
Fig. 3) is essentially that used by Haddad and Farmerl6 for
temperature measurements in free-burning arcs. The plasma
torch is mounted in an x-y-z computer-controlled table. The
light from the plasma plume passes through an aperture and
is imaged by a pair of lenses onto the entrance slit of a I-m
monochromator. The effective spatial resolution of the opti
cal system is 10'0 X 200 pm. The monochromator spectral
resolution is set wide enough ( 1.2 nm) to pass the full width
of the spectral line being measured, and the signal level from
the photomultiplier is recorded by the computer as the x-y-z
table is scanned in the horizontal direction (that is, the x
direction across the diameter of the arc). At each point in the
plasma the signal level is measured over a period of 0.4 s, so
the emission intensity obtained in this experiment is the
average value over a time that is long compared with the
turbulence period, As the plasma plume is axially symmet
ric, these integrated line-of-sight intensities can be converted
into radial intensity distributions using the Abel inversion
lens Iei'lS aperture
plasma
torch
FIG. 3. Experimental arrangement used to measure excitation tempera
tures in the plume of a plasma torch.
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5235
Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsprocess. Horizontal scans are taken at various vertical posi
tions, thereby building up a map of the radial intensity pro
me emitted by the torch.
The intensity of a spectral line as a function of tempera
ture can be written as
neT) (-E\ SleeT) =K--exp --), u(T) kT (16)
where K is a constant dependent on the atomic properties,
u (T) is the internal partition function, n (T) is the atom
number density, and Eis the energy ofthe upper level of the
transition. For a high-temperature plasma in local thermo
dynamic equilibrium, the intensity of a spectral line initially
increases with temperature as the number density of atoms
in the upper level of the transition increases, but then de
creases as the number density is reduced due to both expan
sion and ionization of the plasma. The temperature at which
the emission passes through a maximum is called the "nor
mal" temperature, For the 696.5-nm line of neutral argon
the "normal" temperature at a pressure of 1 utm is 15 200 K.
Although this temperature is not reached in the plume of the
plasma torch used here, it is reached in the positive column
of a free-burning argon arc, Therefore by substituting a free
burning argon arc [in the form of a tungsten inert gas (TI G)
welding torch] for the plasma torch, the optical system may
be calibrated. This procedure allows radial temperature dis
tributions to be derived from measured radial intensity dis
tributions,
The temperatures measured using this technique were
checked by using a line ratio method. Emission intensities
from several neutral argon lines were measured, and, assum
ing a Boltzmann distribution of states, by taking the ratio of
these intensities the temperatures may be derived. This
method yielded temperatures that were in good agreement
(within 5%) with those derived using the emission tech
nique. However, in order to measure temperatures with
enough dynamic range and with acceptable precision, the
difference in the transition energy of the two lines used in the
line ratio technique needs to be large. It is difficult to find
two lines in the argon neutral spectrum that satisfy this crite
rion and do not have overlapping lines or suffer from self
absorption in the plasma. Ratios between argon neutral and
ion lines could also be used but the ion line intensities in the
plume of the plasma torch are very weak. For these reasons
the emission intensity technique is used in preference to the
Ene ratio technique.
IV. RESUl1S
A. VoltagEH:urrent and voltage-flow characteristics
The two most readily controllable operating parameters
ofthe plasma torch are the current and the gas flow. In order
to check the near-electrode assumption of the model out
lined above, the predicted voltage-current and voltage-flow
characteristics were compared with the measured values.
Figures 4(a) and 4(b) illustrate these comparisons, The
model does not include the potential falls associated with the
electrodes and so only the functional dependence of the two
voltage characteristics should be compared, rather than the
absolute values. It can be seen that the V-J curves are in fair
5236 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 11, 1 December 1989 40
30
~
III
ell
('II .... 20 '0
:0
10
()
0
la!
50
40
E 30
<II eo
0:1
"" "0
'" 20
10
0 0
(bl .... ---·---8-- __ & __
--0.---0
theory
100 200 300 400 500 600
current (A)
expt
..... ~ ...$"
.A'" .. ~ theory
..N~
~ A'
~
... _ ....... ~.A1'
10 20 30 40 50
flow II min-') 60
PI G. 4. (11) Voltage-current characteristics of the plasma torch operating in
argon at 30 f min .-" showing experimental results (-) and model predic
tions (---). (b) Voltage-flow characteristics of the plasma torch operating
at a current of 400 A, experiment (-) and theory (---).
agreement, both curves indicating that the voltage is largely
independent of the current. The theory predicts a V-I char
acteristic that has a slightly negative slope, whereas the ex
perimental data indicate a slightly positive slope for most of
the range of current. The sum of the anode and cathode fans
appears to be about 12 V, The predicted V-flow characteris
tics are in quite good agreement with the measured values,
and again the difference between them indicates the elec
trode faUs total around 12 V. As yet we have no dear expla
nation of the minor discrepancies between theory and exper
iment illustrated in Fig. 4, although the model calculations
indicate that these characteristics are very sensitive to the
changes in the boundary condition on the electrical conduc
tivity, as discussed in Sec. II. However, in general, these re
sults indicate that the simplifying assumptions incorporated
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5236
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are adequate and that the other predictions ofthe model may
be treated with reasonable confidence.
B. Temperature profiles
We have investigated the effects of the two major oper
ating parameters, gas-flow rate and current, on the tempera
ture profiles in the plume of the plasma torch. Figures 5 (a)
and 5(b) show the experimental and theoretical tempera
tures as functions of radius 1 mm from the nozzle exit of a
400-A arc. Data are shown for gas-flow rates of 20, 30, and
40 t'min-I, and it is clear that the temperature profiles are
essentially independent of flow rate. Figures 5 (c) and 5 (d)
show profiles 15 mm from the nozzle exit and indicate the
agreement between experiment and theory is reasonable.
The experimental results show that the temperatures near
the axis are relatively unaffected by changes in the gas-flow
rate and that the plasma appears to become marginally
broader with increasing flow rate.
The plasma current has a larger effect on the tempera
ture profiles. Figures 6(a) and 6(b) show experimental and
theoretical temperatures as functions of radius 1 mm from
the nozzle exit for a plasma torch operating with a gas flow of
30 t'min- 1 and currents of 200, 400, and 600 A. In this case
the temperatures near the axis are considerably higher for
the higher currents, and further from the nozzle exit, 15 mm
in Figs. 6(c) and 6(d), the plume becomes both longer and
broader for the higher currents. Two effects are present here:
an increase in the gas velocities (as the effective nozzle area
is reduced by the larger arc) and an increase in the power
delivered to the plasma, both caused by the increase in cur
rent. Both of these will contribute to the lengthening of the
plasma plume. However, if turbulence is not included in the
model, no significant increase in the width of the plasma
14 lal z=1 mm '4 \"" 13 "-u,,1 13 --~
12 .~ 12 -__ " !h .. ",¥
1~ 11
10 10
~ 9 9 ~
10 13 S ~\
10
~ C 7 1 K'
>< Go 2 3 aO 2 3
~
'" 14 14 .... (0) a;uHi ml'ft (ell •• 15 m", 1::
il.I 13 up! 13 I~ .. ",y
12-12 12
~ IE:
! 11 , 11
'~ ,
HI ',"':: HI
9 " "<::, 9
e " "':: a
7 '" "'" 7
50 2 3 5 0 2 :;
radius (mm}
FIG. 5. Radial temperature distributions for different gas-fiow rates at 400
A current: 20 imin-I (---),30 f'min-I (---), and 40 fmin-' (-). (a)
Experiment and (b) theory for z = I mm; (c) experiment and (d) theory
forz= 15 mm.
5237 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 11. 1 December 1989 14
13
12
11
10
9
13
7
a()!;--~--!2:---.L3 ~~ "'~(b) .,1 Mm
~ _" t~ .. "ry
12 '-, "-
11 ", "-
H) \ \
II \ \ \
13 '-\ \ .
7 \ \ \
radius (mml
FIGo 6. Radial temperature distributions for different currents at a gas-flow
rate of30 fmin I: 200 A (---), 400 A (---), and 600 A (-). (a) Experi
ment and (b) theory for z= I mm; (e) experiment arId (d) theory for
z=ISmm.
plume is predicted as the cu.rrent is increased (only the
length increases), and hence we infer that it is largely the
increase in gas velocities and the consequent increase in the
turbulence that cause the broadening of the plume. Again
the model predictions are found to be in agreement with the
trends demonstrated by the experimental results.
Figure 7 shows a comparison of experimentally deter
mined temperatures and temperatures predicted by the
model outlined above. The torch parameters arc 400 A, 33.2
V, and 30 t'min --1 argon gas flow. There is reasonable agree
ment between experiment and theory, especially in the hot
ter regions of the torch; however, there are clear discrepan
cies in the cooler regions. This divergence is better illustrated
by the temperatures as a function of radius at different dis
tances from the nozzle exit for fixed current and gas-flow
--- Ellipt ------ theory
:::
i 2
! 1
'" 0
::I 1 15
III 2 ..
:::
0 10 15 20
z (mm)
FIG. 7. Experimental (-) am! theoretical (---) temperature contours for a
plasma torch with parameters 400 A, 33.2 V at 30 (min-I. The plasma
torch nozzle exit is at z = 0 mm and the nozzle radius is 3 mm.
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5237
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~ 16 --- expt ------ theo~l'
0 14 0
0 ...
>(
10
(I) a ..
::3 .... (; «II ..
CD 4 Q,
E
CP 2 ... ------
CI
0 4
radius (mm)
FIG. 8. Temperatures as a function ofmdius at different distances (z = 5,
10, and 20 mm) from the nozzle exit. Torch parameters are 400 A, 33.2 V,
and 30 {min I
rate (see Fig. 8). It can be seen that the difference between
the model predictions and the experimental results becomes
larger for temperatures below about 10000 K.
These discrepancies may be explained via a number of
qualifications that should be made with regard to these mea
surements. First, no account is taken in the model for the
variation in number density in plasma jets due to turbulence.
The present spectroscopic measurements determine the
"unweighted" time-averaged temperatures. If number-den
sity fluctuations had been included in the model (by the
inclusion of the density in the time-averaged integral), a
"mass-weighted" average temperature would have been ob
tained; this temperature can be measured by using an enthal
py probe. Lee and Pfender3 have noted that there will always
be a significant difference between time-averaged unweight
ed temperatures when compared with the mass-weighted
values due to the presence of turbulence. The mass-weighted
temperatures will always be lower than the unweighted tem
peratures, and this difference increases as the temperature
decreases below 10 000 K.
Second, previous work3,17 has shown that there are sig
nificant differences between the temperature predicted by
models depending on whether the atmosphere into which
the argon plasma plume expands is argon or air. The diatom
ic molecules of air dissociate at low temperatures, and as this
process absorbs large amounts of energy the plume is cooled
much more rapidly than when the surrounding gas is argon.
The present experiments were performed in air, whereas the
model results presented here assume a surrounding gas of
argon. Instead of increasing the number of parameters and
the complexity of the model to account for this difference,
we believe the best way to proceed is to measure the tempera
tures in an argon atmosphere, and we are planning such a
series of experiments. The assumption that the plasma
plume is optically thin would also be brought into question if
an argon-air system was being modeled, but the experimen
tal results of Farmer and Haddadl8 show that absorption is
minimal in free-buring argon arcs. The modeling of radi
ation absorption in the plasma mantle is very difficult, espe
cially as optical paths have to be taken into account.
5238 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No. 11, 1 December 1989 Third, in free-burning argon al'es Farmer and Haddad 18
have shown that for temperatures above about 10 000 K lo
cal thermodynamic equilibrium exists in the plasma and that
the excitation temperature is equal to the atomic argon or
heavy-body temperature, but at argon plasma temperatures
below 10 000 K the plasma must be described by two tem
peratures, an excitation temperature and an atomic tempera
ture that is significantly lower than the excitation tempera
ture. The present spectroscopic technique gives a measure of
the excitation temperature and themodel calculates the tem
perature of the ground-state argon atoms. Cram 14 suggested
that departures from L TE in these types of arcs might arise
because the argon atoms in the outer regions of the arc are
exposed to intense resonance line radiation from the arc
core. Radiative excitation of argon ground-state atoms to the
upper level of the 696. 5-nm transition can result in very high
spectroscopically derived temperatures for this level when
compared with the LTE populations.l9
v. CONCLUSIONS
In this paper we have outlined a magnetohydrodynamic
model of a plasma torch and compared the calculations of
this model with experimental measurements. The theoreti
cal description outlined here represents the first report of a
plasma torch modeled in its entirety from the gas injection
behind the cathode, through the arc region in the nozzle of
the torch, and out into the plume. It also includes the effects
of swirl and turbulence. Torch parameters such as the volt
age-current and voltage-flow characteristics have been com
pared with the theoretical calculations, and this has high
lighted the difficulties of modelin.g electrode phenomena.
This model has also been used to predict the temperature
fields in a plasma torch operating with argon, and the tem
peratures in the plume of the plasma torch have been com
pared with temperatures measured spectroscopically by
monitoring the emission from neutral argon lines. These
comparisons have highlighted the simplifying assumptions
made in the model of the plasma torch and the consequent
differences between predicted and measured temperatures.
For plasma spraying and plasma processing applica
tions, an understanding of the interaction of the plasma and
the injected feedstock relies upon a knowledge ofthe thermal
histories of the injected particles. Since these particles are
heated almost exclusively by collisions with the hot argon
atoms, it is clearly very important to measure the argon tem
perature below 10 000 K, since the majority of the particle
trajectories will be in these regions.
Our future experiments are aimed at a more thorough
understanding of temperatures in the argon plasma plume.
The measurement of temperatures in the plume of a plasma
torch operating into an argon atmosphere will allow the di
rect comparison of the model calculations and empirical re
sults. The contribution of turbulence to temperatures may be
studied by varying the pressure of the surrounding atmo
sphere. We also plan to measure devi.ations from L TE by
measuring the temperature of the argon atoms using Ray
leigh scattering techniques.
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5238
Downloaded 31 Aug 2013 to 128.103.149.52. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsACKNOWLEDGMENT
The authors wish to thank K J. Powell for his technical
assistance.
IJ. McKelliget, 1. Szekely, M. VardelIe, and P. Fauchais, Plasma Chern.
Plasma Process. 2, 317 (1982).
"A. H. Dilawari and J. Szekely, Plasma Chern. Plasma Process. 7, 317
(1987).
3y. C. Lee and E. Pfender, Plasma Chem. Plasma Process. 7, I (1987).
4B. E. Launder lind D. B. Spalding. in Mathematical Models a/Turbulence
(Academic, London, 1972), Chap. 4.
sp. Fauchais, A. Vardelle, M. Vardeile, J. F. Coudert, and B. Pateyron,
Pure App!. Chern. 57,1171 (1985).
"e. Boffa, J. Heberlein, and E. Pfender, Wiirme- Stoffiibertrag. 4, 213
(1971).
5239 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.1 i, 1 December 1989 'P. Kovitya and L. E. Cram, Welding J. 65, 34 (1986).
8R. B. Bird, W. E. Stewart, and E. N. Lightfoot, in Transport Phenomena
(Wiley, New York, 1960). -
oW. Rodi, in Turbulence Models and their Applications in Hydraulics (111-
temational Association for Hydraulic Research, Delft, The Netherlands,
1980), pp. 27-29,44, and 45.
lOS. V. Patankar, in Numerical Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow (Hemisphere,
Washington, D.e., 1980).
liS. V. Patankar, J. Heat Transfer 110,1037 (1988).
12S. Gordon and B. J. McBride, NASA Special Publication No. SP-273
(1971).
13R. S. Devoto, Phys. Fluids 10, 2105 (1967).
14L, E. Cram, J. Phys. D 18,401 (1985).
"D. Apelian, M. Paliwal, R. W. Smith, and W. F. Schilling, Int. Met. Rev.
28,271 (1983).
lOG. N. Haddad and A. J. D. Fanner, J. Phys. D 17,1189 (1984).
17M. Vardelle, A. Vardelle, P. Roumilhac, J. M. Leger, J. F. Coudert, and P.
Fauchais, in Proceedings of the National Thermal Spray Conference, Cin
cinnati, 1988 (to be published).
I"A. J. D. Farmer and G. N. Haddad, J. Phys. D 21, 426 (1988).
19L. E. Cram, L, Poladian, and G. Roumeliotis, J. Phys. D 21, 418 (1988).
Scott, Kovitya, and Haddad 5239
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1.341305.pdf | Properties of liquidphase epitaxy grown Pb1−x Sn x Te homostructure diode lasers
with Gadoped cladding layer
A. Shahar and A. Zussman
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 64, 4306 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.341305
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.341305
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/64/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55Properties of liquid-phase epitaxy grown Pb1_XSnX Te homostructure diode
lasers with Ga .. doped cladding layer
A. Shahar and A. Zussman
Solid State Physics Department, Soreq Nuclear Research Centre, Yaune 70600 Israel
(Received 13 April 1988; accepted for publication 19 July 1988)
The properties of homostructure Ph) __ x Xu" Te diode lasers with tin compositions x = 0.126,
0.182, 0.210, and 0.238 fabricated from liquid-phase epitaxy grown p+ -p-n + layer structure
with Ga-doped n-type cladding layer were investigated. Threshold current density (J th ) and
quantum efficiency ('TJexl ) was measured as a function of temperature in the range lO.;;;T.;;; 140
K. Current versus voltage (1-V) and product derivative I dV /dI vs I characteristics were
measured at T = 10 and 40 K. J th was evaluated from basic principles taking into account
intrinsic radiative and nonradiative Auger recombination lifetime, where the last was
calculated using both parabolic and nonparabolic energy band structures. Satisfactory
agreement was obtained between the calculated and measured Jth for temperatures above 40
K, while at low temperatures the theory underestimates J th significantly. Using aJl electrical
equivalent model of the diode laser and best fit procedure the 1-V and I d V / dI vs I
characteristics were analyzed and the various current components and diode laser parameters
were obtained. It was qualitatively shown that the discrepancy at low temperatures follows
from the presence oflarge leakage and tunneling currents. The temperature dependence of the
observed 'TJext' which exhibits a maximum between 40 and 50 K, was shown to be related to a
filamentary lasing process.
I. INTRODUCTION
Homostructure diode lasers of lead salt compounds
have been intensively used in various molecular spectrosco
py related applications. I These lasers possess various attrac
tive properties such as low threshold current density, high
quantum efficiency and very slow degradation during ther
mal cycles of cooling and heating.2•3 These properties stem
from the crystallographic matching present in these devices.
Another important advantage is their relatively simple pro
duction process. Optical guiding is achieved in homostruc
ture lasers by the free-carriers dispersion which is very
strong at iong wavelengths:~·5 Carrier confinement is very
efficient in lead salt lasers due to their low density of states
which give rise to band filling eitects.2•6 An appropriate car
rier concentration profile in homostructure diode lasers can
be achieved by either a diffusion'·? or annealingS process or,
in a more controlled manner, by epitaxial growth techniques
such as molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) 9, I () and liquid-phase
epitaxy (LPE).J·!1.12
In a previous letterl2 we reported preliminary results on
the optical and electrical properties of p f--p-n +
Pbl x Sn~ Te homostructure diode lasers, grown by LPE
with gallium-doped n-type c1addng layer. The use ofGa as n
type dopant in this device has a significant advantage on that
of other n-type dopants of Pb] _ x SUx Te such as indium
(used in similar devices) sincePbl. xSnx Te epilayers with a
much higher electron concentration can be achieved, in par
ticular in a material with higher tin concentration. This
property enables the extension of the range of efficient oper
ation of LPE grown homostructure Pbl _ x Snx Te lasers
with Ga-doped cladding layer to composition x;;'0.24, which corresponds to wavelengths longer than 19 /-tID. Similar ho
mostructure lasers in which indium, is used for this purpose
are efficient only up to x < 0.15.3
In this work we present a detailed report of the experi
mental results and of the corresponding theoretical analysis
of the properties of Pbl_ x Snx Te homostructure diode la
sers with the four compositions x = 0.126,0.182,0.210, and
0.238. In Sec. II, the theoretical background is outlined. It
includes a description of the model used for the evaluation of
the threshold current density. In the calculation both radia
tive and nonradiative Auger recombination lifetimes are tak
en into account. The Auger lifetime is calculated using the
two different models ofEmtageU and Rosman and Katzir. 14
The experimental results and their numerical evaluation are
presented and discussed in Sec. III. These include measure
ments and calculation of threshold current versus tempera
ture, measurements of J-Vand I d V / dI vs I characteristics at
low temperatures and their best fit analysis according to the
equivalent circuit model. Also dealt with in this section is the
temperature dependence of the quantum efficiency. In the
last section the results are summarized and the limitations of
the model used are discussed.
II. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
A. Threshold current
The threshold current density is calculated assuming a
complete carrier confinement and optical guiding. Since the
diffusion length of the carriers in the active layer is assumed
to be much larger than the layer thickness d, the threshold
current density is given by'5
4306 J, Appl. Phys, 64 (9),1 November 1988 0021-8979/88/214306-12$02.40 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 4306
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55J ttl = q onthd fr. (1)
For a given layer thickness d, the threshold current is thus
determined by the threshold density of injected carriers {mth
and the lifetime r of the carriers in the active layer. The total
minority-carrier lifetime is given by
(2)
where rr and rnr are the radiative and nonradiative lifetime,
respectively. The radiative lifetime rr of the excess electrons
was calculated using the relation between the spontaneous
transition rate and the absorption (or gain) coefficient as
derived by Lasher and Stem. 16 The absorption was calculat
ed using the expression derived by Anderson 17 from the six
band model ofPb1 _ x Snx Te.
In the limiting condition of Eg > kT, which is valid in
our case, the expression for the radiative lifetime reduces to 18
r, = 5.2XlO-9INEgI(7jp)' (3)
where N is the refractive index, Eg is the energy gap and
rtp = QplkT is the normalized quasi-Fermi level. I( Tip) is
an integral given by
l~' x!/2 dx
I(rtp) = .
o p + exp(x -llp )]exp(x) (4)
Nonradiative lifetime in Pbj _ x Snx Te is dominated by
band-to-band Auger recombination. Using a two band mod
e{ parabolic dispersion relation and non-degenerate carrier
concentration the foHowing expressions for the Auger re
combination in Pbl _ x Sn~ Te (p-type material) was ob
tained by Emtage13;
lIrAlIg = Cp2, (5)
where the majority-carrier concentrationp is the sum of the
equilibrium density Po and the injected concentration 6,p. Cp
is a constant given by
Cp = 4.7X 1O-29(T lEg) 1/2E ~ sexp( -rEglkT), (6)
where r = m 11m I -O. 1 is the anisotropic ratio between the
transversal m, and longitudinal In, effective masses of
Pb! _ xSnx Te. Recently, Rosman and Katzirl4 evaluated
the Auger process in PbI __ x Snx Te using nonparabolic dis
persion relation and the six band model. Their calculation is
complicated and requires numerical integration. Under COIl
ditions similar to those applied by Emtage, i.e., r-< 1, nonde
generate carrier concentration and a temperature sufficient
ly low so that kT -<rEg, they obtained explicit expressions
for the lifetime which is larger by a factor of2,i2exp(-Egi
kT) than that derived by Emtage. At T= 125 K and
x = 0.220, for instance, this factor is about to. In the present
work the calculation of the lifetime and of the corresponding
threshold current density were carried out using both mod
els,
The threshold density of the injected carriers nIh is de
termined by the requirement that at lasing threshold the gain
equals the cavity losses 15:
g(13n'h) = a (Dna. ) +L -lln[R(8n'h)- I] (7)
where a and (L --1 )In(R-1) are the internal and mirror
losses, respectively. The gain function depends on the inject
ed carrier concentration which can be described in terms of
the quasi-Fermi levels of the valence (Qp) and conduction
4307 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988
, •• ,.-•••• ..-.-•. "'? •• "" ••• -••• -., •• ! .•... '.~ ... -... -.......• , ............ -.-. .•. ~ •... '.> ••••••• ,_ •• -.' •••• -". _ ••. -,. •• .-••• ,. ',' ., •••••• -••••• ~ ••••• ~ ••••••• -.:O;':.: ••••• ; •••• ~.:.:.:.z·;· .•. ·.;.:.:·:·:·;·;-;·,·.·.·.·.-.·.·.-···-,··,····" (Qn ) bands. The calculated quasi-Fenni level Qi (i = n,p)
versus carrier concentration for the relevant Pbl_ x Sn~ Te
compounds at various temperatures is shown in Fig. 1. At
high level ofinjection the terms in the right-hand side ofEq.
(7) also depend on the injected carrier concentration. The
origin of the losses is mainly due to free-carrier absorption
(FCA) in both the active and guiding layers and is therefore
given bylS
3
a = apeA = I rjaFCAi'
i =-1 (8)
where ri and aj are the corresponding confinement factors
and FeA in the region i, respectively. The free-carrier ab
sorption in Pb] _ x Snx Te is given byl7-19
(9)
where n is the carrier concentration, N the refractive index, f-1
the mobility, and m* the effective mass. The reffectivity
R = (N -1)2/(N + 1)2 depends on the level of injected
carrier concentration through the dispersion relation4,5,19
N2=€=€oc +.6.€(A)- (Nq2/41TC2m€o)A2, (10)
where £00 is the contribution from bound carriers at wave
lengths well beyond the absorption edge and t:.£(A) that due
to regions close to the absorption edge. Since both sides of
Eq. (7) depend on the total carrier concentration the thresh
old density ofinjected carriers 8n,h was calculated by solving
numerically, using an iterative procedure, the equation
gm [Qn (no + on),Qp (Po + 8P)'(;)m J
3
= 2: r j [Qp (Po + oP),{jjm ] ai (Po + 8p,no + {m,w", )
i~ 1
In this expression the energy wUrn is limited to the interval
Eq < W", < Eq + Qp (p + op) and is close to the position of
the gain maxima. The corresponding wavelength Am satis
fies the Fabry-Perot condition.
B. Electrical characteristics
In the present work both 1-Vand I dV I dI vs I character
istics were measured. In the product derivative method an ac
current is applied and the modulated response of the diode is
measured with a phase detector. Therefore, this technique is
more sensitive than the simple 1-V method. 20-22 The product
representation has the advantage that, in contrast to J-V re
lationship, it delineates the saturation of the junction voltage
at threshold. Furthermore, for the cases of a diode or a diode
in series with a resistor, it yields a linear plot. The derivative
technique is very useful in determining the distribution of
the current among the various parallel paths of the laser
device and its variolls current components. It is, therefore,
very helpful in the study of the mechanism of the lasing pro
cess.
1. Equivalent circuit mode!
The determination of the electrical equivalent circuit
model for homostructure mesa diode laser follows from a
consi.deration of the observed electrical derivative results,
the device structure and the assumed current transport
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4307
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:5540
30 ;; (al
)i: 12.6 %
'" 2C.!
10 Q. q
0 <: 0
-10 0;
".
OJ
-20 = E
-30 of ,
-40 ';;;
'" ::> -50 a
1016 1011
Corrier concentration, n,p! cm-3)
40
(bl X'IEl2 % 30-:> ...
20.§
10 ~
0 c
0 --10 .. >
-20 ::
~ E E -30~
Q. ,
0 -40 'g CO :> 0 -50 0
0
1016 1011'
Corrier concenlrolion,n,p!cm-~) ~ E
a.
0
c
0 ..
~ 0
~ E
<>.
0
c
0
0; ,.
.!!! 0 ~----------------------------~ 40
!c)
1016 v:fl
Carrier concentration, n,p I cm-~)
(d)
x: 23.S%
1016 1011
Carrier concentration, n,p (em-;,) 30>
2O.§
10 ~
o &
-10 .. > ..
-20 ~
-30~
50
40>
OJ
30.§.
20 ~
10 c a
0 .. ,.. ..
-10 :g
-ZO~ .
-30 'g
:>
-40 0
-50
FIG. 1. Quasi-Fermi levels vscarrier concentration at various temperatures for Pbl _ "Snx Tecompounds. (a) x c= 0.126, (b) x ,= 0.182, (c) x = 0.210, Cd)
x = 0.238.
mechanisms in the diode. In Pb] __ , Snx Te diodes diffusion
and tunneling are considered to be the dominant current
mechanisms, In addition, leakage curent through parallel
shunt path plays an important role and must be taken into
account. The presence of this current is apparent at the re
gions of small currents of the I dV IdI characteristics. Its
magnitude depends on the surface treatment. This current
path is linear and will therefore be represented in the equiva
lent circuit by a resistor.
The diffusion current, which is responsible for the lasing
process, is given by the relation23
Id = [dO [exp(qV IkT) -lj.
The diffusion saturation current is given by23
[dO = qnp (Lplrp )coth(d ILp)' (12)
(13)
where np' Lp' andTp are the minority-carrier concentration,
4308 J. Appl. Phys., VoL 64, No.9, i November 1988 diffusion length, and recombination lifetime, respectively, in
the p-type active layer of thickness d. The saturation current
can be calculated using known experimental values of carrier
concentration24 and mobility25 of Pbl_ x Snx Te and calcu
lated values of the radiative and Auger recombination life
time. For temperatures below 40 K the lifetime in
Pb] __ x Snx Te is dominated by the radiative mechanism.
Since this mechanism is well understood reliable values of r
can be obtained.
Tunneling in Pbl _ x Snx Te diodes is a multistep recom
bination tunneling process taking place via intermediate
states (trapping levels) in the forbidden gap of the depletion
region.26 The forward tunneling current is given by26
I, = Itoexp(f3V) = BN,exp[ -a(J 1/2( Vd -KV)],
(l4)
where
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4308
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B is a constant, N, the density of the trapping levels, Vel the
built-in voltage of the homostructure diode, m* the effective
mass of Pbl _ x Snx Te, E the dielectric constant of
Pb] xSn~ Te, KV = N"/(N" + N,,) V the voltage drop on
the p -Pbl x Sn~ Te active region side of the junction, and
13 is a constant. For highly doped n-type cladding layer
N" >,pNa and thus K = 1. In this case 1/13 is equal to the
number of tunneling steps. In homostructure diode
Vd ~EJq, therefore,
1'0 =BN,exp[ -aeI/2Eg(x)] and {:J~aeI12
Thus, the saturation current 1'0 is expected to increase
strongly with the decrease in the energy gap. The depen
dence of B on material parameters is not clear since e is not
known. The total current that flows through the diode is
1= ld + It + IR, where IR is the leakage current.
In a broad area diode laser the lasing process can be
inhomogeneous and take place via filaments having different
threshold current density. An equivalent circuit describing a
laser device with two filaments is shown in Fig. 2. Each fila
ment is represented by paralIel diodes Dt and D d and a resis
tance Rs representing tunneling, diffusion and leakage cur
rents, respectively, and a zener diode Dz representing the
voltage saturation of the corresponding filaments at thresh
old. The two filaments are coupled by the cladding layer
resistance R ~ and R c is the contact resistance. The equiva
lent circuit can alternatively be described by the circuit
shown in Fig. 3. The resistors in the two circuit are related by
Rc =R;2/(2R:. +R1.), R\ =Ri.R;/(2R; +Ri.).
(16)
This representation is more suitable for numerical analysis.
2. Analysis of the !~ V and product characteristics
There are three basic states of the equivalent circuit de
pending on the excitation states of the two filaments: (1)
both filaments are in a sublasing condition, (2) one of the
filaments is above threshold, (3) both filaments are above
threshold. The corresponding current versus voltage rela
tionships is given in state 1 by
~~ l--_I'l""'L\e_---I R~---1
.--.-+-.. 'Ie
'---'--t~~--.-_-.J __ ~~_D~2 J
FIG. 2. Electric equivalent circuit representing a broad area diode laser
with two filaments. Rc C~ contact resistance, R;_ ,-= lateral resl.stance of the
dallding layer, R, = junction leakage resistance. D" and D, represent dif
fusion and tunneling currents through the junction, respectively. Dc, and
D,2 are zener diode representing diode !illturation voltage at lasing thresh
old.
4309 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988
.. -......... ~ •••. -..•• ,. .... -•.....•.. " .-.-..........•• n~"' ••..•• _ . .-................ -;-." ......•.•.........•.•.•••...•. -........................... '7;,-••••• 7 •.•.•.•.•.••..• ;.< ••••• -.v ••• -;-•••••••• r II2 = Jdo(exp{(qlkT) [V -J(Rc + RIll) P -1)
+ Iwexp{f3 [V -J(Rc + RI/2)]}
+ [V -[eRe + RJ2) ]IRs' 07a)
in state 2 by
1-(V --IRe --Vthl )IR1
= Ido(exp{(qlkT) [2V -J(2Rc + R1) -Vth] ]} -1)
+ I,oexp{f3 [2V -J(2Rc + R, ) -V.hl J},
(17b)
where VI'" is the threshold voltage of the filament which
lases first, and in state 3 by
(17c)
The product! dV IdI can be obtained directly by differ
entiating the above current versus voltage relations. Alterna
tively, since dV IdI represents the dynamic resistance of the
whole circuit, it can be obtained by applying the rules of
resistance addition to the dynamic resistance of its various
circuit components. In particular, the dynamic resistance of
the diffusion and tunneling diodes are given by
r" = [(qlkT) (ld + Ielo)] -l~ [(qlkT)ld] -I
and
r, = [{:J(l, + 1,0) 1-1-({3I, )-1,
respectively. This yields for state 1,
--=1 /-+-I d -rIJI, IRe, I dV [( 1 . q . ) -1/2, 1
dl \Rs kT
where, (18a)
ld =Ido(exp{Cqlkn[V-I(R c +R,/2)]}-1),
and
I, = l,oexp{B [V -1(Re + Rjl2) p.
For state 2,
+2R\ , I }-I
(lSb)
where
Rc
Vc ,-
v
-.l
PIG. 3. Alternative representation of the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 2.
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4309
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55ld = l,iO(exp{(q/kT) [2V -1(2Rc + R1) -V.hl ]} -1),
and
I, = I;oexp{f3 [2V -J(2Rc + R,) -Vth1 p.
For state 3,
IdV =I(R.+!2). dI c 2 (lSc)
C. Quantum efficiency
The external quantum efficiency defined by the rela
tion,15
q dpl
1]<,1 =--/ fUu dl hI",
can be written in the form
1]ext = 'lJint7J)n(1/R)/[a + In( lIR)]. (19)
The last factor in the right~hand side ofEq. (19) is the frac
tion of the total radiation power produced in the laser cavity
and emitted through the mirrors. 1](nt is the internal quan
tum efficiency given by llint ='1,-1/(7,-1+ 7,;;:1), where
7 - 1 and 7 - 1 are the radiative and nonradiative transition
r~tes. Abo~~ threshold the radiative recombination is domi
nated by stimulated transitions, i.e., 7nT,tim ~r[l<' therefore
1]int -1. This relation is valid only in the case where the las
ing process is homogeneous and takes place over the entire
active layer width. In a filamentary lasing 71t"t = 1 for the
lasing filament while 7J,nt < 1 in the nonlasing volume. 7Jc is
the injection efficiency given by the ratio between the incre
ment of the diffusion current, which is responsible to the
lasing process, to the increment of the total current, i..e.,
1Jc = !lId/(A1d + aI,), where Id and It are the diffusion
and tunneling currents, respectively. The injection efficiency
thus depends on the relative contribution of the current
transport by diffusion and tunneling above I til' It also de
pends on the homogeneity of the lasing process.
Let us assume that the lasing takes place ever the entire
active region. Above threshold the junction voltage is
clamped at V ~ Egi q, and the diffusion current is given by
ld ~ldOexp(Eg/kT). Although the diode voltage is pinned
at Vg the diffusion current above Vg will continue to grow.
This growth can be described by the increase in the satura
tion current/dO -q!lflth CD /r) 1/2 due to the increase in the
stimulated transition rate '1-1_ Tstim -I. On the other hand,
it is not clear whether or not the tunneling current It
= Ito exp(f3V) will saturate above threshold. This depends
on the behavior of Ito above I th' According to the tunneling
model discussed in Sec. II B, ItO is independent of the life
time parameter and therefore the tunneling current is ex
pected to saturate above Ith and thus, 1]c = 1. However,
since the details of the tunneling mechanism are not known,
this conclusion is not wen established. The situation is differ
ent for filamentary lasing. In this case the external quantum
efficiency is given by
where the indices I and 2 correspond to the lasing and non-
4310 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9. i November 1988 lasing regions, respectively. This expression can be written in
the form
1fI -IlII ?1.'p lIn (.l) faL + In (l..)] . (21) 'Iext -All + AI2 ·,mt! Ie R R
Assuming saturation of the tunneling current in the lasing
filament then, 71cl = 1 and the injection efficiency of the en
tire laser device becomes
!lIDl (22)
Thus, in a filamentary lasing 1J, < 1 and depends on the
amount of tunneling in the non-lasing regions. It is impor
tant to note that filamentary lasing may foHow from rather
small inhomogeneities in the active region and device inter
faces. Since below threshold the current distribution over the
entire laser area is almost uniform, the threshold current
density defined as the ratio between the threshold current
and the laser area is almost equal to that of the lasing fila
ment.
m. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
140 Laser fabrication and characterization
Homostructure Pb1_ x Sn~ Te lasers were prepared
from Ll>E layer structures grown lattice matched to p -t -
Pbl _ x Snx Te substrates. The substrates were 1 X I cm2 wa
fers cut along the (100) plane from Pb] x Snx Te single
crystals grown from the vapor phase.27 The wafers were pol
ished mechano-chemicaHy, first in a 10% and then in a 2%
Br2 solution in concentrated HBr. Just before the start of
LPE growth the wafers were given a lO-s Norr etch. The
layers were grown in a horizontal LPE system containing a
graphite boat in a quartz tube flushed with ultrahigh-purity
hydrogen and heated by a semitransparent gold coated fur
nace. The LPE layers were grown under super-cooling of
AT = 3 ·C and a cooling rate of2 ·C/min. The first (active)
layer, 1.5-3 pm thick, was grown in the temperature range
500-480°C. The second, n+ -cladding layer, about 2 11m
thick, was subsequenHy grown. The doping was obtained by
adding Ga to the growth solution in an amount determined
by the composition x and the required carrier concentra~
tion.12,28 The carrier concentration in the active undoped
layer was assumed to follow the equilibrium phase dia~
gram.24 Stripe geometry mesa structure lasers, about 200 pm
wide and 500 /Lm in length, were fabricated using standard
techniques. The contacts to the device were made by electro
plating In on the n + -cladding layer and Au/Ni-Cr/ln on the
p+ substrate. The laser was cold bonded in a copper holder
of the type used by Laser Analytic!> and was mounted in a
closed cycle refrigerator. The threshold current was mea
sured using current pulses about 2 ps wide applied at a rate of
102-103 Hz. The laser emitted power was collected using! /2
ZnSe optics and measured by means of HgCdTe photocon
ducting detector having an active area of 1 mm2, a response
time shorter than 1 ps and a cut-off wavelength of 20 /Lm.
The spectral response of the detector and its absolute sensi
tivity were calibrated using a blackbody source.
The external quantum efficiency defined by Tlext
= (q/"lku)(dP IdI) was obtained from the single mirror
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4310
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(ol
~t- -~~---1 _---JR
~--~
~ ,/'~
I '" I02.r
~ r X·12.6 %
« .
:E -:>
,Olf-
10° -
10'
0 20 40 60 80 140
T(K)
~
2:
~IO ~-
<t t
"'-" 1
161~-L~ __ L--L __ ~J-~ __ L--L~
o 20 40 60 80 100
T (K) '" E
<.) .....
:::'02 -:: -,
IOI~
~
10J
0 20 40
20 40 60 80
T(K)
60 80
T (K) 100
100 120
FIG. 4. Pulsed threshold current density vs temperature for homostructure Ph, x 511, Te diodelasers. J M = measured, J E' J R = threshold current calculat
ed using Auger lifetime according to Emtage" and Rosman and Katzir, '4 respectively. (a) x = 0.126, (h) x~, 0.182, (c) x"~ 0,210, (d) x =. 0,238.
4311 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988 A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4311
.............................. : .. ,.: .... ;.; ............ "...··· .. ···-·-··.··.· ... · .. ,:.·.·~-.·;:·-····.·.·.·.·s-,..·.·.· .. ;.".··.·.'.·.·;·.·.·.·.·.-.·-;;: .... -·.·.·s •. ";" .•. ·.·.v.-.-> ....• ;< ••••• 0;.,. .•... -.. .
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55power versus current (P-I) characteristics assuming equal
power from the two laser facets. The measured power was
corrected for the transmission losses of the optics. However,
since the half power beam width of the emitted laser radi
ation is somewhat larger than that collected by the f 12 op
tics, the results obtained represent rather a low limit of the
laser efficiency. The J-V characteristics were measured using
a simple system consisting of a current source and resistor in
series with the laser used for measuring the applied current
flow. In this arrangement the voltage drop across the leads is
eliminated but not the IRe potential drop on the contact
resistance Rc. The first derivative dV Idl and the product
I d V / dI were measured using an analog system similar to
that described previously by Dixon20 and Barnes and Pao
li.2i The method relies on ac modulated current superim
posed on a slowly varying dc bias current applied to the
diode laser. The amplitude of the ac current is kept small
relative to the dc current. The modulated voltage which de
velops across the laser device terminals is measured by
means of a phase detector. The rms of the first harmonics of
the laser response voltage is proportional to the first deriva
tive dV /dI. The product I dV /dI is obtained by using an
analog multiplier. The product I dV /dl and the dc current
are supplied to the y and the x inputs, respectively, of an x-y
recorder. The system response is calibrated against a known
resistor. Similar arrangement is used to obtain the laser pow
er derivative versus current, dP /dI vs I, characteristics.
B. Threshold current density
The threshold current density of the Pb! _ x Snx Te ho
mostructure lasers with compositions x = 0.126, 0.182,
0.210, and 0.238 was measured as a function of temperature
in the interval 10 < T < 140 K using current pulses. For each
x several diodes fabricated from the same grown layer struc
ture were tested and the best one was used to represent that
x. The results are shown in Figs. 4(a)-4(d). Also shown in
these figures is the threshold density calculated according to
the procedure described in Sec. n A, whereJ E andJ R corre
spond to Auger lifetime derived from the models of Em
tagel> and Rosman and Katzir, 14 respectively. The results of
Fig. 4 show that in general at low temperaturesJ th increases
rather slowly with T. At temperatures above about 40 K the
observed Jth increases almost exponentially with tempera
ture and in a limited range of temperatures it can be de
scribed by the relation J til = Jo exp ( T 1 To), where To is an
empirical parameter. This temperature dependence is not
due to a single mechanism but follows from a combination of
several mechanisms. The results of the characteristic tem
perature ~) obtained from the high-temperature exponential
region of J th VS T are summarized in Table 1. The ~) mea
sured in the present homostructure lasers with Ga-doped
cladding layer are similar to those observed in single or dou
ble heterostructure ternary PbSnTe-PbTeSe diode lasers6•29
and in quarternary DRS PbSnTe Se-PbTeSe lasers.30 How
ever, PbSnTe homostructure diode laser grown by LPE with
indium-doped cladding layer exhibited a lower characteris
tic temperature of To = 12-13 K. 3 The relatively high To
observed in this work demonstrates the advantage of Gal
lium as a dopant for n-type cladding layer of this device. The
4312 J. Appl. Phys" Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988 TABLE I. Values of T" for homostmcture Pb, _ x Su, Te diode lasers.
x 0,126 0,182 0.210 0.238
22.0 17.2 16.3 15.5
lower ~) in the In-doped device may be a consequence of
insufficient carrier confinement due to low potential barrier
for the injected carrier and/or short nonradiative lifetime in
the In-doped confinement iayer31 or in the active layer (due
to diffusion of indium into this layer).
The calculation of the threshold current relies on values
of active layer thickness and carrier concentration deduced
from the LPE growth conditions using equilibrium phase
diagram.24 These values may be erroneous due to a diffusion
during LPE growth of acceptors and donors from the p +--
substrate and n +--PbSnTe cladding layer, respectively, into
the p-PbSnTe active layer. In the calculation of the Auger
recombination lifetime a nondegenerate carrier concentra
tion was assumed.
A comparison between the observed and calculated J th
vs Tshows that the agreement is satisfactory above ]';=40 K.
For diode lasers with the compositions x = 0.126,0.182, and
0.210 a good agreement is obtained for Auger lifetime calcu
lated according to the two band model of Emtage, [3 while for
x = 0.238 a much better agreement is obtained when the
Auger lifetime is calculated using the model of Rosman and
Katzir 14 based on a non parabolic energy dispersion for
Pb[ _ x Sn, Te. If the model of Emtage is more appropriate
for PbSnTe, as implied by the results of the three lowest x
values, then the discrepancy observed for x = 0.238 diode
lasers may be related to a large overestimation of the carrier
concentration in the active layer. Another explanation
which may account for this effect is related to a process of
diffusion of ions from the p -+ substrate into the p-active
layer. Such a process may lead to a diffused (graded) p +--p
junction and to a narrowing of the active tayer effective
width, and therefore to a significant reduction in the calcula
tion J tit. This effect is stronger for diode lasers with higher x
due to the higher carrier concentration in the corresponding
as grown bulk Pbl _ x Snx Te substrate. As can be seen from
Fig. 4, the increase in the characteristic temperature To with
the decrease in the tin fraction x fonows from the threshold
current theory. The low-temperature discrepancy between
the calculated and measured J th is attributed to current
transport by tunneling and leakage which do not involve
carrier injection and therefore do not contribute to the lasing
process. These effects are discussed in the next section.
C. Electrical derivative and current versus voltage
characteristics
The results of the electrical derivative measurements
which demonstrate more clearly certain properties of the
diode laser that are relevant to the mechanism determining
the threshold current density are discussed first. Measured
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4312
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(Q)
60
;;:-102
E «
E >, ... ...... 30 .....
I-< IO!
10°
0 40 SO 120 160 200 240
I(mA)
0
(b)
I i02~
) <t
:> E
E i-I
~I;j 101
.... R"'O.07'o'
40 80
I (rnA)
FIG. 5. Electricall dV Idlvslandlvs V-IR,. characteristics of homos true
ture Ph, . xSn, Tc diode la.~er with x = 0.238 at (a) T= 40 K, (b) T~~ 10
K, I d V I dI vs I characteristics: broken line, measured; unhroken line, cal
culated; dash-dot line, calibration curvc measured with a resistance.
and calculated I d V I dl vs I characteristics of a laser diode
with a tin fraction x = 0.238 at T = 40 K are shown in Fig. 5.
The calculations were performed according to the equiva~
lent circuit shown in Fig. 3. Also shown in Fig. 5, I vs V~lR
plot of the same diode. The straight line is a calibration curve
obtained from I dV /dI measurements on 0.33-0 resistance.
The discontinuities of 1 dV I dI at I, = 145 mA and 12 = 230
mA are due to lasing onsets at these currents. In the current
interval between I, and 12 the voltage is not completely satu
rated. The behavior of the laser in this region can be attribut
ed to either a transition from one longitudinal mode to an~
other one, or from a lasing in one filament to lasing in two
filaments. In the first case the entire active region of the laser
operates as a single filament. The increase in the current
above II causes a change in the refractive index of the active
region and therefore to a variation in the lasing wavelength
so that the Fabry-Perot condition Nd = A.m is satisfied. The
heating also gives rise to a shift in the energy gap and in the
position of the energy Emax at which the gain attains its max
imum. The variation in A. and Emax are not identical. There
fore, in order to maintain the lasing conditions the gain and
4313 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988
........... ..........•..••............•..•....•.................... ~ ... ~ .•..• " ....... .w ........... . 2
15 !lsI;;
0.5 ~I;;
160 175 190 205 220 235
[ (mA)
FIG. 6. Electrical characteristics of Pb" Sn, Tc diode (x = 0.238) at
T= 40 K in the current interval between thc two discontinuities I, and I,.
(a) Analytical current derivative of the product I dV idl shown in Fig. 5.
(b) Calculated current flow through the lasing filament above the first las
ing point. (c) Current derivative of I, relative to the derivative at 1,= 145
rnA. (d) Current derivative of the emitted power versus current relative to
its value at I,~ 145 mAo
the height of the quasi-Ferm level should increase. This ef
fect is associated with a super linear variation of the J dV /dI
characteristics above II' The second discontinuity will occur
when the wavelength of the next longitudinal mode coin
cides with the position of the gain maximum. Experimental
ly, however, the I dV /dI characteristics were found to be
sublinear in the current interval II < I < 12, as shown in Fig. 6
where the derivative (d /dI) [/(dV /dJ) J, calculated nu~
merically from the product derivative, is plotted versus the
applied current The second derivative decreases slowly with
the increase in the current indicating that, in fact, there is no
increase in the quasi-Fermi level for II < 1< 12, The observed
behavior is, thus, in a better agreement with the model of a
filamentary lasing process; a situation most likely in lasers
with relatively wide active region (about 200 ,urn). The las
ing which starts first in a part of the volume of the active
region gives rise to the first discontinuity. Though the junc
tion voltage of the lasing filament is saturated the voltage at
the non-lasing filament can continue to grow since the two
are separated by the lateral resistance (R ;, in Fig. 2) of the
active layer. The voltage drop on the device is therefore not
completely saturated and increases until the lasing onset of
the second filament.
A comparison between the I d V / dI vs I and log I vs ( V
IRe) characteristics, also shown in this Fig. 5, demonstrates
the advantage of the derivative method in revealing lasing
phenomena. While in the derivative curves two discontinui
ties are clearly evident this effect is obscured in the J-V char~
acteristics. It is evident from Fig. 5 that a good agreement
can be obtained between the measured I dV IdI characteris
tic and that calculated using the model represented by the
equivalent circuit and best fit procedure. The electrical pa
rameters of the diode thus obtained are summarized in Table
U. dV /dJ is, by definition, the dynamic resistance of the
diode and I dV /dI is therefore the voltage which develops
across this resistance. This concept is very useful in the anal
ysis of the product derivative characteristic. The product
A Shahar and A. Zussman 4313
..-.. -.. -."' .. -.-.~ ••.• =.-.. -.-.-.-.. -.-.-.-.. -..• -.-.-•.•... ~ •.•
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55TABLE n. Pho.762 Sn023• Te diode parameters obtained from best fit analy-
sis of the equivalent circuit and the electrical derivative measurements.
T fJ qlkT 1'0 1'/0 Rc RI
(K) (V-I) (V-I) ({tAl (Al (n) (n)
41 120 280 5.0 2,8XlO-1O 0.24 0.08
10 120 1156 1.5 0.1 0.0025
derivative versus current plot can be divided into five dis
tinct regions.
(n 1<,10 rnA. The I dV Idl characteristic is linear, In
this region the diodes representing current transport by tun
neling and diffusion have a much larger resistance than the
leakage shunt resistance. The total dynamic resistance of the
device is equal to the contact resistance R : in series with half
the shunt resistance R, of each diode, therefore,
dV RI +Rs -=R +--=--~ dI c 2
(n) 10 rnA < 1< 30 rnA. In this region the voltage drop
across the shunt resistance R, increases until the current
flow first through the tunnel diode and at higher currents
also through the diffusion diode becomes significant. The
dynamic resistance of the device starts to decrease and there
fore the product derivative reaches a maximum observed
around 10 mA.l dV /dI decreases from this maximum to a
local minimum around I = 30 rnA determined by the diodes
and the passive resistive components of the circuit. Around
this minimum the diffusion and tunneling currents are al
most equal, ID = 7 rnA and It ;:::;;6 mAo Above this point the
diffusion current becomes predominant since q/kT>/3.
(III) 30 mA < 1< 145 rnA. The diode resistance contin
ues to decrease with the increase in the current. When it
becomes lower than the passive resistance of the device the
I dV /dI vs I characteristic attains a linear form until the
lasing onset of the first filament at 145 mAo At this point
I d V / dl abruptly drops.
(IV) 145 rnA < I < 230 rnA. The second filament is be
low threshold and the dynamic resistance is given by
(23)
where rd (1) = dVd/dld is the dynamic resistance of the
nonlasing diode. r d is already very small at the first lasing
point [rd (145 mAl = 23 mOl and it continues to decrease
at higher currents. Since r d <t"Rc the effect of the reduction in
rd on the total dynamic resistance of the device is not appar
ent in the product derivative characteristics. For the same
reason the discontinuity at the second lasing point is much
smaller than that of the first. These effects can be observed in
the second derivative on the current can be obtained by ex
panding dV IdIinto a series in the variable rdlRi which to
second order yields
IdV -I(R RJ)\ 1 1 dI - C +2 + 2A -4RtA2J'
where A = qlkT. The second derivative is then given by
4314 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988 ~(IdV\ -R +~ 1 dI drJ -c 2 + 4RiA 212'
showing a sublinear behavior, in agreement with the experi
mental results of Fig. 6. Also shown in this figure are the
calculated current increment I, = 1-Ithl flowing through
the lasing filament, its derivative drdldI and the measured
power derivative dPolJt / dl, where the last two are normal
ized with respect to their value at the first lasing point 1\. The
sublinear behavior of Ir (l) and the decrease of the deriva
tives d/,ldJ and dPou\ldJ with the applied current I are
caused by the Joule heating of the device. The coincidence of
the relative derivatives shows that dPoutldl is proportional
to dI,ldI. Since Pout = nexJr Vth, it follows that in the cur
rent interval Ith! <I <llh2 the voltage across the diode is
saturated at Vthl and 1Jextl is constant.
(V) 230 mA<I. At 12 = 230 rnA a second discontin
uity occurs due to the lasing onset of the second filament.
Above I th2 the dynamic resistance of the device is given by
dV =R +~ dI c 2
and the I dV IdI characteristic is linear in the current.
The electrical characteristic of this diode measured at
T = 10 K exhibits, as shown in Fig. 5 (b), only one discon
tinuity (atI = 30 rnA). The device behaves homogeneously
as a single filament. The calculation based on a diffusion
current and the optical model yields a threshold current of 1
rnA at this temperature. Moreover, the diffusion forward
current given by lei = IdoCexp(qV IkT) -1] with a calcu
lated saturation current of IdO = 10-80 A is much smaller
than the observed current in the entire voltage interval in
cluding Vlh• This implies that at low temperatures diffusion
is negligible and the current transport is dominated by tun
neling and leakage currents. The diffusion current was there
fore neglected in the best fit analysis the results of which are
shown in Fig. 5 (b). The observed discontinuity in the prod
uct characteristics at the lasing point is much larger at
T = 10 K than at 40 K. This effect can be explained qualita
tively as follows. The discontinuity of I dV / dI at threshold is
equal to the inverse of the exponent of the dominant current
component. At T = 10 K tunneling is dominant hence the
jump is 8( 10 K) = 11/3 = 0.0083 V, whereas at T = 40 K
diffusion is dominant and 8(40 K) = kT Iq = 0.0047 V.
Thus, 8( 10 K) > 8( 40 K) as observed. If, however, diffusion
current was dominant also at T = 10 K then the magnitUde
of the discontinuity would be larger at T = 40 K than at 10
K. The value of R! = 0.08 n obtained at T = 40 K corre
sponds to a lateral effective resistance R L = 0.16 0 of the
cladding n-type layer. Using the layer parameters
n = 1.1 X 1019 cm --3, p = 1.5 X lcr cm2 IV S,28 layer thick
ness of 3 f.tm and active layer width of 300 f.tm, a value of 55
pm for the distance between the two filaments is obtained.
1. 1-V characteristics
Measurement of the 1-V characteristics were carried out
on diode lasers with an four compositions X. The electrical
parameters were derived from these measurements assum
ing lasing over the entire laser active area and using one
branch of the equivalent circuit shown in Fig. 3. The J-V
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 4314
............................. ·····1
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55(a)
4: .s 101
~-!/ lot~LI~ __ k--L_~ __ L-~I __ L-~I __ ~-L~~
a 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
V(mV)
FIG. i. /-V characteristics of hmnostructure Pbl _, SUx Te diode lasers
with four compositions. (a) T = 10 K, (b) T= 40K. Experimental: dotted
circles: x -, 0.126; crosses: x~· 0.182; circles: x= 0.210; triangles:
x'· 0.238. Calculated: nonsolid lines lying along the lines joining the ex
perimental data.
characteristics exhibit a relatively small dependence on tem
perature and much stronger on the tin fraction x. Therefore,
the 1-V curves were plotted with x rather than Tas a varying
parameter. Measured and calculated J-V characteristics for
the four compositions x are shown for T = 10 and 40 K in
Figs. 7(a) and 7(b), respectively. The device parameters
obtained from the best fit analysis are given in Table n. A
typical voltage dependence of the various current compo
nents obtained from the parameters of Table II is demon
strated in Fig. 8 for a PbO.R74SUO.126 Te diode laser. From
these results it follows that at low current the 1-V character
istic is dominated by a current flow through the shunt leak
age resistance R,. (R, is in fact, equal to the zero voltage
resistance Ro of the diode). The shunt resistance is in general
(excluding x = 0.182) larger for the diodes with the higher
energy gap, At intermediate currents tunneling is predomi
nant. The tunneling current is higher for diodes with lower
energy gap. This follows from the exponential dependence of
the tunneling saturation current on the built-in potential de
scribed in Eq. (15). The current interval where tunneling is
dominant is wider at 10 K than at 40 K since at higher tem
peratures diffusion becomes significant. At higher currents
the effect of contact resistance increases and it is completely
dominant above threshold,
It can be seen from Tables II and III that the exponent (J
is independent of temperature. This property is a character
istic of tunneling mechanism. f3 decreases slightly with the
tin fraction x. According to the multistep tunneling model
4315 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988 102 r--------------,
40 80 120
V (mV)
FIG. 8. Various current components vs app\ted voltage in a
PbO"74SnOI2' Te diode laser. 1, 0' leakage current, I, = tunneling current,
In = difIusi(ll1 current.
f3 = a() liZ, where a -(m*E! Na ) 1/2 rEq. (16) J. Since the
effective mass m* decreases with the increase in x and the
acceptor concentration Na in the LPE grown p-type active
layers increases with x (according to the phase diagram), 24
a is expected to decrease with the increase in x. In order to
confirm with the observation that f3 increases with x, ()
should increase with x. That is, the number of tunneling
steps R-1/ e decreases with the energy gap. This is a reason
able conclusion since one expects the magnitude of single
step to be independent of the energy gap.
2. Current components at threshold
The threshold voltage and the various current compo
nents at threshold were derived from the device parameters
given in Tables n and III and the observed threshold current
I tn (Fig. 4) using the relation
lin = I D ( V th ) + II ( V th ) + 1, ( V th ).
Since below threshold the voltage dependence of the various
current component is known from the best fit of the electri
cal model to the experimental 1-Vand 1 d V I d! vs I results,
this equation can be solved at threshold to yield Vth as well as
the various current components at Vth. At T = 10 K the
diffusion current is negligible compared with the other cur
rent channels, The current components at threshold derived
from the! dV Idl andJ-V characteristics are given in Tables
IV and V, respectively. Also shown in these tables are the
observed threshold current! til and the threshold current I D 1
calculated from optical lasing theory. It is evident from these
tables that at T = 40 K there is a good agreement between
the diffusion current at threshold 1D(th) derived from the
electrical measurements and the threshold current 1m cal
culated from optical lasing theory. At this temperature the
percentage of the diffusion current is between 55% to 70%
of the total current, depending on x. The fraction of the leak
age current increases with x from Is (th)llth = 0.03 for
x = 0.126 to 0.14 for x = 0.238. At T = 10 K, where diffu
sion is negligible, this ratio is larger and varies from
I,(th) /l th = 0,16 for x = 0.126 to 0.95 for x = 0.238.
A. Shahar and A. lussman 4315
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55TABLE IIt Parameters ofPb, ., Snx Tc diode lasers obtained from a best fit of the electrical model to the observed 1-V characteristics.
T fJ q/kT 1'0 Ido Rc
X (K) (V· ') (V·') (pA) CA) (n)
0.238 41 120
0.238 10 120
00210 42 112
0.210 10 112
0.182 43 108
0.182 10 !O8
0.126 43 WO
0.126 10 100
Do Quantum efficiency
The power versus current characteristics P-I was mea
sured at various temperatures. At low applied current the p
I characteristics are linear. At currents where longitudinal
mode transitions take place the power saturates or even
drops. The external quantum efficiency 'TJexl derived from
the P-I characteristics at a laser power of p = 15 fl W versus
temperature for diode laser with tin fraction x = 0.126,
0.210, and 0.238 is shown in Fig. 9. An obvious feature of
Fig. 9 is the occurence of a maximum for an three x values in
the temperature interval 40 to 50 K. The maximum effi
ciency is about 2.7% for x = 0.126 and 1.5% for x = 0.21
and 0.238. Quantum efficiency of the order of 1 % is com
mon in heterostructure PbSnTe-PbTeSe or homo structure
PbSnTe diode lasers in the long wavelength range.29,K In ex
ceptional cases a quantum efficiency above 15% was ob
served.3,32,33
The temperature dependence of the external quantum
efficiency, in particular the presence of the maximum, can be
explained by a model of filamentary lasing. The temperature
dependence of 11e" is contained in all the four factors of Eq.
(21). The factor
In(R -l)/faL + In(R -l)]
decreases monotonically with temperature due to the in
crease in the free carrier absorption a with T. If one assumes
that the tunneling current of the lasing filament (No. I) is
saturated above threshold, j.e., 17inll = 1 and 'TJcl = 1, then
Eq. (22) holds. Since according to Fig. 4 and the analysis of
the electrical characteristics the fraction of the tunneling
current reduces with the increase in temperature 11", given
byEq. (22), wil1increasewith T 17cxt which is expressed as a
product of two independent factors, the relative emitted
TABLE IV. Current components at lhreshold of a l'b" 7(,2 SnO.23' diode laser
obtained from electrical derivative and optical measurements,
T lib ID, Eo I, I,
(K) CA) (Al (A) (A) (Al
41 0.142 0.098 0.104 0.021 0.020
10 0.026 0.0015 O.OtH O.02l
4316 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1986 280
1156
275
1156
270
1156
270
1156 3.0 2.8X 10-J<J 0.140
2.5 0.120
3.0 I.OxIO·" 0.165
1.0 0.165
1.6 l.Ox 10 11 0.095
1.2 0.060
0018 3.0X 10-15 0.155
0.17 0.168
power which decreases with T, and the device injection effi
ciency which increases with T, must therefore attain a maxi
mum at a certain temperature. This model accounts for the
low value of "flex! , the presence of a maximum in the "f7ext vs T
plot and is consistent with the electrical measurements. If
one assumes, on the other hand, homogeneous lasing then
'Thnl = 1. The presence of a maximum in the 17ext versus T
curve implies an increase in l1c with T. This is possible only if
the tunneling current is not saturated above threshold, a re
quirement which is not easy to justify. Moreover, the homo
geneous model does not account for the observed low quan
tum efficiency.
IV. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
LPE grown homostructure Pb) _ x Snx Te diode lasers
with Ga-doped n + -cladding layer exhibit low threshold cur
rent density and efficient power emission over a wide range
of wavelengths extending beyond 19 pm. These devices are
therefore useful for various spectroscopic applications in the
long wavelength range, Threshold current density and elec
trical 1-Vand I d V / dI vs I characteristics were measured as
a function of temperature in homostructure Pbl _ x Snx Te
diode lasers with four compositions in the range
0.13 <x < 0.24. The electrical measurements were found to
be very useful in determining quantitatively the current
components contributed by the various transport mecha
nisms and the diode laser passive parameters. The results of
the best fit analysis based on electrical equivalent circuit
TABLE V. Current components at threshold of Ph, _" Sn, Te diode lasers
obtained from 1-V characterislics and optical measurements.
T l'h IDI In 1, I,
X (K) (A) (A) (A) (A) (A)
0.238 41 0,142 0.098 0.101 0.021 00020
0.238 10 0.026 0.0015 0.008 O.Q18
0.210 42 0.139 0.072 0,080 0.048 0.011
O.2lO 10 0.DI9 0.0009 0.01l 0.008
00182 43 0.119 0.075 0.064 0.051 0.(J04
0.182 10 0.031 0.0003 0.025 0.005
0,126 43 0.098 0.078 0.070 O.Q2S 0.003
0.126 10 0.Q28 0.0003 0.024 0.004
A. Shahar and A. Zussman 43i6
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129.24.51.181 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:03:55\
2 +
20 40 60 80 100 ,20 140
T(K)
FIG. 9. Temperature dependence of the external quantum eflkic.ncy ofho
mostructure Phi .,Sn, Te diode lasers measl.lr~d at a power P" 15 p.W.
Crosses: x = 0.126; triangles: x = 0.210; circles: x = 0.238.
model of the diode laser clearly show that at low tempera
tures Jth is dominated by tunneling current. At lower cur
rents leakage through a shunt resistance path is very signifi
cant. At high temperatures diffusion becomes the dominant
cnrrent mechanism. At temperatures above 40 K good
agreement was obtained between the observed J th VS T of the
three lowest x lasers and that evaluated from basic theory of
lasing threshold, assuming current transport by diffusion
and using Auger recombination lifetime derived from the
models suggested by Emtage.13 The magnitude of the ob
served external quantum efficiency and its temperature de
pendence, in particular the existence of a maxima, was
shown to be consistent with a filamentary lasing.
In the calculation of J til a uniform carrier concentration
profile in the active and passive regions of the laser device
was assumed, neglecting possible inter diffusion. This model
can be considered only as an approximation since in LPE
growth of Pbl x Snx Te at temperatures around 500°C a
significant diffusion of acceptors from the p + substrate and
donors (Ga) from the n+ -cladding layer into the active re-
4317 J. Appl. Pl1ys., Vol. 64, No.9, 1 November 1988
.... -.-.-.•.............. ~ ... -.• "." --'".-.-.-.-.. -. , .. ", ..•..... --. ....... -.-..... -, .........•.•.•.•.•.............. gion is expected giving rise to a nonuniform graded active
region. In a more realistic and accurate model these effects
must be taken into account.
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Report, Lincolll Lab. MIT (1977:4) p. 3.
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(1983).
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A Shahar and A. Zussman 4317
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1.1684418.pdf | An Electron Beam Method for Measuring High Sheet Resistances of Thin Films
A. N. Chester and B. B. Kosicki
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 41, 1817 (1970); doi: 10.1063/1.1684418
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1684418
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:40THE REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS VOLUME 41. NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 1970
An Electron Beam Method for Measuring High Sheet Resistances of Thin Films
A. N. CHESTER* AND B. B. KOSICKI
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974
(Received 27 May 1970; and in final form, 23 July 1970)
Measurement of sheet resistances of high resistance (up to 10'612/0) thin films using conventional methods is
both difficult and subject to error. We have developed a method for making sheet resistance measurements in
which a low velocity electron beam is used to inject charge into the film. The injected charge drifts under the
influence of its self-induced field to metal electrodes evaporated on the film, where it is collected and measured
externally as a time dependent current. We give examples of thin GaAs films for which the measured current can
be fit with a current predicted by a simple model over many orders of magnitude by adjusting only one parameter,
the sheet resistance of the film. The good agreement between experimental and theoretical currents provides
reliable values for the sheet resistance. This allows an estimation of a lower limit on the carrier density native to our
GaAs films.
INtRODUCTION
IT is well known that the leakage resistance of the sur-
face of insulating materials can be strongly affected by
surface contaminants, such as adsorbed water. In order to
minimize the possibility of such effects, it may be desirable
to make sheet resistance measurements of high resistance
thin films under vacuum conditions.
Standard two-or four-probe resistance measurements on
high resistance (lOlL 1016 Q) samples are difficult in a
vacuum, since the leakage resistance of the vacuum elec
trical feed through must be made much larger than the
sample resistance. There is also the possibility that poor
contacts, space charge accumulation, or other contact
effects could cause error in the measurement of sheet
resistance. We have developed a low velocity electron
beam method which surmounts some of these difficulties.
A low velocity electron beam for measurement of elec
tron transport in a direction normal to the insulating film
plane has been recently used by several workers.I-3 It has
been recognized that use of an electron beam in place of a
top contact in the usual MIM or MIS structure offered
freedom from the effects of pinhole shorts and poor
injecting contacts.I However, the actual voltage profile in
the insulating thin film under study cannot be measured
directly, and indirect determinations of this quantity re
quire questionable2 simplifying assumptions1.3 about the
secondary emission coefficient of the thin film.2
In this paper we introduce a technique for measurements
of lateral sheet resistance of high resistance thin films using
low energy electron beam injection. This technique is
similar in concept to previous measurements of sheet
resistance of thin films deposited on Si diode array vidicon
targets.4 We employ a ground plane closely spaced ('" 1 !J.)
to the thin film under measurement, in order that voltages
on the surface of the film in this lateral transport measure
ment be well defined in contrast wIth the longitudinal
transport measurements referred to above,l-a As a conse
quence, if care is taken during the measurement, the
experimental conditions can be made to approximate
1817 closely a simple and easily soluble problem. The agreement
between theory and experiment gives confidence that the
quantity measured is in fact physically meaningful.
Finally, it should be ~entioned that by limiting the energy
of the incident electron to ;S 5 eV, the chance of electron
bombardment induced conductivity is kept small; that is,
the thermalized transport properties of the thin film are
measured.
We will discuss the specific assumptions used in de
veloping the model. Experimental application is then made
in the measurement of GaAs polycrystalline thin films
whose sheet resistance varies from 1011 to more than
1016 Q/O. Finally, a variation of this technique is described
in which the electron beam is eliminated and only an
external voltage supply is used to charge the film under
measurement, although for very high sheet resistance films
charging the sample in this way is not as convenient as
using an electron beam.
1. DESCRIPTION OF METHOD AND
SAMPLE GEOMETRY
As stated above, it is desirable to perform high sheet
resistance measurements in vacuo in order to minimize
extraneous effects due to adsorbed species. Furthermore, a
nearby ground plane is necessary so that the potential in
the film depends only on the local charge density in the
resistive film under examination. It is then possible to
consider making sheet resistance measurements with no
external connections to the sample; for example, charge
could be deposited non uniformly, by an electron beam, and
the spreading of charge due to differences in surface po
tential could be monitored by later electron scans. How
ever, we have elected to add a collector electrode to act as a
sink for the deposited charge. The more complex sample
geometry is offset by greater convenience and more cross
checks in the consistency of the measurement, and, in fact,
as discussed later, it is possible to eliminate the electron
beam and perform a one contact resistance measurement in
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:401818 A. N. CHESTER AND B. B. KOSICKI
Si/Si02
SUBSTRATE RESISTIVE
LAYER
EVAPORATED METAL CONTACT TO Si ~ METAL
/ELECTRODES
FIG. 1. Typical sample geometry for resistive film measurement
(not drawn to scale).
which contact space charge effects should be negligible for
at least one polarity of the measurement.
The sample geometry is shown in Fig. 1. The substrates
are n-type low resistivity silicon wafers, which are ther
mally oxidized to a thickness of about 7000 A. 5 This
thickness provides sufficient charge storage in a convenient
area ('" 1 cm2) and at low enough voltages (5 V) so that
discharge currents can be easily measured. A resistive film
is deposited on this substrate, and the gold collector elec
trode is evaporated in two steps through appropriate
evaporation masks. The exposed area of the resistive film is
uniformly charged by an electron beam to a potential close
to the cathode potential. The beam is then turned off and
a current flow is monitored as a function of time in an
ammeter attached between the collector electrode and the
5i ground plane as the deposited charge drifts from the film
onto the collector electrodes, which are held at the silicon
ground plane potential. The linear geometry of many
parallel stripes was chosen for ease of fabrication (a
spacing of about 0.5 mm between electrodes will be shown
to be convenient for sheet resistances greater than
1011 0/0), as well as ease of analysis.
II. ANALYSIS OF THE MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUE
The problem that must be analyzed is as follows: Long
narrow stripes of resistive film of width s and thickness d
(d«s) lie on oxidized silicon, having capacitance Ca per
unit area to the silicon (see Fig. 1). The stripe width s is
much greater than the oxide thickness, and there are N
stripes, each of length L»s. The silicon substrate will be
taken as the zero of potential. Both edges of each film stripe are attached to a metal contact stripe; these contacts.
are all connected to the substrate through a current
measuring device of resistance RL• We shall generally be
interested in the case in which RL is sufficiently small that
the edges of the film stripes are maintained at essentially
zero potential. At t=O the film is at uniform negative
potential V and the metal contacts are at ground poten
tial; it is required to find the current flowing to the sub
strate as a function of time from then on. We assume, of
course, that charge transport in the 5i02 film will be
completely negligible.
In the absence of any injected charge, let the charge
density per square centimeter due to mobile electrons and
holes in the film be q. and qh with effective mobilities of JJ..
andJJ.h.
Let the injected electronic charge density be qi, with
effective mobilitY)J.i. The current flow is in the x direction,
which is perpendicular to the long dimension of the film
stripe, and in the plane of the film. The current in amperes
per unit length of film is
. age aqh aqi
J=[JJ..q.+JJ.hqh+JJ.iqiJE-D.--Dh--D j-, (1)
ax ax ax
where q. and gh may now depend on position, and the D's
are the diffusion coefficients. Here we consider fJ.., fJ.i, D.,
Di, q., qi<O, andfJ.h, Dh, qh>O.
In several cases we may simplify this expression and
treat only unipolar conduction:
(1) If the majority carriers in the film are electrons, we
may neglect the term JJ.hqh. The total mobile charge is then
(q.+qJ=q. We assume that the injected electrons will
occupy states with the same effective mobility fJ.'=fJ.. and
diffusion constant D'=D. as the mobile electrons already
present. In the absence of any injected charge, the native
electrons in the film are distributed homogeneously over
the area of the film, with charge density q.=qo.
(2) If, on the other hand, the majority carriers in the
film are holes, we neglect the term JJ..q •. We may assume
that the injected electrons will rapidly combine with these
holes, as long as there are sufficient holes available (we
restrict I qi I < I qh I here in order to make the problem
tractable). We then have a total mobile charge density
q=qh+qi, all with mobility l =JJ.h and diffusion coefficient
D' =Dh• Again in the absence of injected charge the native
carriers have a uniform charge density qh=qO'
In either case we may write
j=fJ.'qE- (D'aqjax) (2)
and the equation of motion for the mobile charge may be
written
aq(x,t)jat= -aj(x,t)jax. (3)
We therefore have a simple unipolar form [Eqs. (2) and
(3)J which describes the charge motion, regardless of
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:40RESISTANCE OF FILMS 1819
whether the film is p type or n type, and regardless of
whether the conductivity behavior is Ohmic (j ex: E) or not.
Because of the thinness of the oxide layer compared
with the stripe width, it may be shown that the film po
tential can be determined in the capacitance approxima
tion; that is, as a function only of the local excess (un
compensated) charge density (q-qo), and unaffected by
the distribution of charges elsewhere,
V (x,t) = [q(x,t) -qoJ/C a• (4)
The transverse drift field is therefore
E(x,t)= -aV(x,t)jax, (5)
which is assumed to be homogeneous throughout the
thickness of the film.
Thus, using Eqs. (2)-(5), and the fact that aqo/ax=o,
aq(x,t) = _~[(P.'q _D,)aq].
at ax Ca ax (6)
In order that the problem be soluble we require the silicon
ground plane to be of sufficiently high conductivity so that
the capacitance Ca is independent of the surface potential,
and therefore independent of x and t.
In general, the quantities /J.' and D' may depend upon the
local electric field, since they may be controlled by field
dependent trapping processes. Equation (6) allows for this
possibility; however, at sufficiently long times that the
electric field does not exceed 104 V / cm such effects are
probably not important. 6
Equation (6) is not only nonlinear in q but also involves
effective mobilities and charge densities that are not, in
general, known for high resistance thin films. It is therefore
desirable to obtain an initial linear solution depending upon
as few unknown parameters as possible.
The excess (uncompensated) charge density, which we
now denote by q' (x,t),
q' (x,t) =q(x,t) -qo, (7)
gives rise to the net transverse electric field as expressed
by Eqs. (4) and (5). In order to further simplify Eq. (6),
we consider the condition
I q' (x,t) 1« I qo I, (8)
that is, the injected charge density is small compared to the
native charge density in the film. As long as the material
under study is not intrinsic, this assumption can always be
satisfied in principle by injection of only an infinitesimal
amount of charge. Moreover, we will discuss later a possible
model for conduction in semiconductor thin films which
suggests that this condition should easily be satisfied for
semiconductor films even with moderate injected electron
densities. The size of the diffusion term may be estimated with the
help of the Einstein relation
D'=/J.'kT/e. (9)
Since q' /Ca is initially several volts, but even then is much
less than qo/Ca according to Eq. (8), D'«/J.'q/C a and
diffusion may be neglected.
In addition to Eq. (8), we now consider times suffi
ciently long and therefore E sufficiently small so that J.t'
does not depend upon E. Then Eq. (6) becomes (neglecting
the diffusion term)
(10)
where the second form arises by defining an effective sheet
resistance
RO = (qOp.')-I. (11)
In this approximation the current flowing into the film
electrode, which is also the current measured, per unit
length of film boundary, is
i = -[qoJ.t' EJ.,=8/2 = + (ROCa)-I[ aq' (x,t)/ ax ],"-8/2, (12)
where x=o in the center of a film stripe of width s. Thus
the boundary conditions applicable to Eq. (10) are
q' (x,O) = VC a, (13)
q'(s/2,t)/C a= (RdRoCa)[aq'(x,t)/aXJ"=8/2, (14)
[aq'(x,t)/axJ,,=o=O, (15)
where V is the initial film potential.
In the special case that the external resistance, RL~O,
which is obtained in practice, the solution is found to be
00 (-1)n4 (2n+ 1)1I'X
q'(x,t)=VC a L ---cos---
n=O (2n+l)1I' s
Xexp[ -(2n+ 1)2t/fJ (16)
with an effective time constant of
(17)
Equations (12) and (16) lead to a total measured current of.
00
I=2NL·i=I o L exp[ -(2n+1)2t/rJ, (18)
n=()
where
In this equation, Qtotal=CaNLsV is the total charge
density deposited on the film, in coulombs. For t> l' one
may take
I ~Io exp( -t/f). (20)
The current of Eq. (18) is indefinitely large at 1=0; this
is due to the small amount of charge near the metallic
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:40lR20 A. N. CHESTER AND B. B. KOSICKI
104r-~--r-~~r-----------------------'
'" t02
~
Q
,.:
~ 10' a: a:
G TOTAL INITIAL
CHARGE/IO'sec
TIME, SECONDS
FIG. 2. Current I predicted by Eq. (18), as a function of time t,
for various values of time constant 'T. Experimental conditions are:
V= -5 V, C,,=4XIQ-9 F fern!, area=NLs=O.73 em!, Qtotal= -1.45
X lO-s C.
contact, which flows into the contact quickly as soon as the
potential of that contact is changed. At short times, the
current may be approximated by an integral,
10 f exp[ -(2n+l)21/f]::doj'" exp[ -(2n+l)2l/fJdn
n~ & ,
= (10/4) (n·f/t)!, t«f. (21)
The specific predictions of this Ohmic solution will now
be shown for a typical set of geometrical and physical
quantities used in this work, which are as follows:
V = -S V (initial potential applied);
/,=0.877 cm (length of resistive film stripes);
N= 15 (number of resistive film stripes);
s=0.555 mm (spacing between metallic contacts, that
is, equal to the width of the resistive film stripes) ;
Ca=4X10-9 F /cm2 (silicon dioxide layer 7000 A thick).
UJ
II: g tot5
'" a:
UJ a.
If) IOt4
::.
:t:: o
102
101
10° 101 10' 10°
TIME CONSTANT T, SECONDS UJ
<!)
'" >-..J
0 >
t:: z :0
0
Z .. ..
UJ a: ..
N
§ -a:
0 "-
vi
UJ a:
UJ a.
::!; .. 0 u
5:
S
FIG. 3. Predicted sheet resistance RO vs observed time constant 'i
for various electrode spacings (left scale); current 10 for 1 em! area
and unit voltage, as a function of observed time constant T (right
scale). Capacitance assumed: C.=4Xlo-a F/cm2• For these values,
Qtotal = -1.45 X 10-s C, (22)
and
1o(nA)=5.9/f (sec). (23)
The current 1 as a function of time predicted by Eq. (18)
for a typical case is shown in Fig. 2 for various values of
time constant f. Note the regions of validity for the short
and long time functional forms [Eqs. (21) and (20)J given
above.
The considerations going into choosing the spacings (an
experimental geometry) are displayed in Fig. 3. The time
constant f given by Eq. (17) is shown as a function of
sheet resistance Ro for various electrode spacings s. From
this plot and Eq. (23) it may be seen that the experimental
geometry referred to in Fig. 2, when used to measure sheet
resistances between 1011 and 1016 n/o, gives measured
values of 10 ranging from 10 nA to 1 pA and characteristic
time constants ranging from 0.1 to 104 sec. This makes the
currents acceptable within the sensitivity and response
times of available meters having appropriate input
impedances.
III. EXPERIMENTAL
It is clear that a demountable electron gun is highly
desirable for performing electron beam injection experi
ments. We have used a commercial vidicon gun,1 sealed
into a flange with low vapor pressure epoxy cement,S as
shown in Fig. 4. During sample changing, the oxide coated
cathode is protected from atmospheric moisture by flowing
dry N 2 through the stem.
Elevated filament voltage was required during operation
(8-9 V), but the tube could be repeatedly opened and
closed without serious deterioration of the cathode. Al
though O-ring seals were used, with continuous pumping
by a titanium SUblimation-sputter ion pump combination,
the vacuum was sufficiently good that ion damage to the
cathode was not a problem.
SAMPLE AND
MOUNTING
RING (Si
CONTACT -TO .
SECOND VACUUM
FEED THROUGHl
REMOVABLE
FRONT
FLANGE
+ TYPE BNC VACUUM ELECTRICAL
FEED THROUGH
EPOXY SEAL
VACUUM PORT
FIG. 4. Schematic diagram of demountable electron gun.
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:40RESISTANCE OF FILMS 1821
Since the currents measured were often less than 10-12 A
(see Fig. 2), careful shielding and high leakage resistance
were required. We found glass sealed, Teflon insulated type
BNC connectors satisfactory as electrical vacuum feed
throughs.9 Although two electrical feedthroughs were used,
one for the collector electrode and the second for the Si
ground plane, only the first of these is shown in Fig. 4.
During an initial charging period, the target was elec
trically disconnected from the sensitive current meter in
order to prevent serious overload to the meter, and to allow
the entire sample surface to become fully charged. By using
a relay instead of a manual switch the timing can be made
precise enough to observe the current pulse as close as 10
msec after the start of current flow, thus allowing measure
ment of films with time constants as short as 0.1 sec.
Furthermore, the switch can be repetitively opened and
closed rapidly enough for convenient observation of
rapidly changing current pulses on an oscilloscope.
During the charging cycle, the following sequence of
events occurs:
(1) The metal collector electrode is disconnected from
the meter input and connected to a voltage source (a
voltage pulser with an adjustable pulse length); the pulse
height is set equal to the applied cathode voltage (this
prevents beam pulling to the electrode during the charging
cycle); at about the same time the beam is turned on for
many frames (0.5 sec total).
(2) After 0.5 sec, the entire face of the sample is ap
proximately at cathode potential, and the beam is turned
off. No charge flows onto the collector electrodes, since
these electrodes are still maintained at approximately the
same potential as the resistive film by the voltage source.
(3) The voltage on the metal collector is now set tQ
ground potential. This defines the start of the current flow
[i.e., the boundary conditions given by Eqs. (11)-(13) at
t=O].
(4) Very shortly thereafter (,....,10 msec), the relay con
nects the meter again and the measurement of current
decay begins.
Because of the small currents to be measured good
shielding and a sensitive, stable current meter are required.
The electrometer which we have used10 measures current as
a voltage drop across a grid resistor, which is adjustable
from 10 to 1011 12. As mentioned earlier, this grid resistor
RL should be large enough to sense the voltage drop, yet
small compared to the effective total source resistance
(RT) of the sample measured. In practice, it was found
satisfactory to choose RL so that the voltage drop across
the meter input was always limited to 1 m V or less.
In order that sheet resistance will be the only unknown
parameter in our measurement, it is necessary to measure
the total charge Qtotal deposited on the resistive film. ELECTRON
BEAM
SCANNED
AREA
~~~STlVE:'-~~~~S~IO~2!2m,zM~
Si
(b) COLLECTOR
ELECTRODE
FIG. 5. (a) Arrangement for measurement of deposited charge.
(b) Approximate equivalent circuit for (a).
Qtotal can be accurately measured by the experimental
arrangement of Fig. Sea), whose approximate electrical
equivalent is shown in Fig. S(b). CE and CR represent the
total capacitance of electrode and resistive film, respec
tively; RT is an effective film resistance; Q E and Q R are the
charges deposited on electrode and film when the electron
beam is turned on; and C is a large external series capaci
tor. The voltage V M across C measures the total charge
deposited by the electron beam.
If both the film and the contact are uncharged before the
beam is turned on, then QR=Qtotal and the measurement
gives Qtotal+QE. If CE is then discharged (by shorting the
electrode to the silicon substrate for a time short compared
with RrCR), a second electron beam charging will deposit
only charge QE. This allows a determination of Qtotal
without accurate knowledge of C E, C R, or RT•
In general the voltage to which the resistive film is
charged, V = Qtotal/C R, is not as large as the cathode
voltage Ve. This comes about because of a voltage drop in
the cathode and the contact potential difference between
the resistive film and the oxide coated cathode. Since C R
can be estimated from a knowledge of the Si02 thickness,
the measurement of Qtotal allows the potential drop ~= Vo
-V to be determined, as will be discussed in the following
section.
If the gold electrode is connected to the Si substrate
after charging, and the current decay curve monitored for
some time, it is obvious that the charge QR required to
recharge the film at the end of this time will be equal at the
integral of the current decay curve up to that time; this has
been verified experimentally.
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:401822 A. N. CHESTER AND B. B. KOSICKI
SA~~LE IS~CI Roln/o) QRICOULI
... -GoAs-83 -.4-3.5 X 10" '1.4 X 10'8
0-Go As -34 14 1.1 X 10'3 -.65XIO,8
• -GoAs -67 110 aox 10'3 -,76XIO,8
0-Go As -38 630 4.7X 1014 -c79XIO'8
e-GoAs-37 _10' -7XIO'6 (c8 X 10-8)
X -BARE Si02
Co 4000 pflcm2
S= .555mm
X
X
X
,62
':;-L....U.J..1J..1I<~..J....UwuJ.--'--U.I.WJ..I..-'--L.J.J..LwL.,,w...u..u.w.....-L..J...u..uuI
~ ~ 10 ~ ~ ~
TIME. SEC.
FIG. 6. Measured current as a function of time for five GaAs films
(points) compared with calculated current (solid curves).
IV. RESULTS
We repeat here that the objective of this work is to
characterize lateral sheet resistance in high resistance thin
films. If the current flow is Ohmic like (not an unreasonable
assumption for the small electric fields which prevail after
the initial bit of charge adjacent to the electrodes has
decayed) and if the density of injected carriers is much less
than the density of native carriers in the film, then there
should exist a current decay curve, calculated for some
sheet resistance, to which the measured current decay
curve corresponds reasonably well over a large range in
current and time. All physical parameters other than the
resistance (i.e., electrode spacing and film area, capacitance
per unit area of the substrate, and initial charge deposited)
can be determined independently of the current measure
ment. In this section we will show that the single parameter
characterization is valid for carefully prepared GaAs thin
film samples, and we will point out some of the practical
aspects of making such measurements.
Most of our sheet resistance measurements have been
taken on very thin GaAs films (S~400 A, measured by
optical and mechanical techniques), We will use the results
of five of these samples, collected in Fig. 6, to illustrate the
capability and limitations of the technique discussed
above. Each experimental curve (points) can be fitted well
with a theoretical curve (see Fig. 2) by varying only one
parameter, the time constant f. The agreement between theory and experiment generally extends over many orders
in current and time .
Samples 83 and 37 were chosen since they represent
approximately the limiting times over which current can be
measured. As explained above, the shortest time is limited
by the time accuracy with which the electromechanical
relay can be made to close. By careful adjustments of the
timing sequence discussed above, it is possible to make
measurements down to less than 10 msec (not shown in
Fig. 6). On the other hand, it is obvious that measurement
times greater than 104 sec (",,3 h) are inconvenient. This
last reason, together with the fact that the measured
currents are becoming extremely small, is the reason that
no knee appears in the current decay curve for sample 37.
In order to estimate the time constant of this sample,
current was allowed to decay overnight, but was not mea
sured during this time. At the end of this time, the charge
needed to restore the sample was measured as described
above. The time constant f could then be estimated by
integrating Eq. (18). The value of QR=-0.8X10- sC
obtained from the current decay curve together with the
overnight recharging measurement is consistent with
values of Q R measured for the other samples.
Note in Fig. 6 that the sample with the shortest time
constant (No. 83) has a total charge QR = Qtotal close to
that expected if the resistive layer were charged to -5 V,
the cathode potential [measured value of QR, 1.4X1Q-s C,
expected value from Eq. (22), 1.4SX1Q-s CJ. This comes
about because this sample has such a short time constant
(0.4 sec) that it can be almost fully charged by the fixed
voltage applied to the contacts for 0.5 sec; thus its charge
reflects this voltage rather than the potential produced by
the electron beam.ll
For the other samples, the time constant T greatly ex
ceeds 0.5 sec, so that their total charge reflects only the
influence of the electron beam charging. As previously
discussed, the charge deposited on these samples permits a
calculation of the potential drop.:l= Vc-V due to cathode
potential drop and contact potential. Using the estimated
resistive film capacitance of 2900 pF (4000 pF /cm2 and film
area NLs=0.73 cm2) , a charge QR of 0.8X1Q-s C implies
an actual initial potential of the film of 2.8 V. Thus the
potential drop .:l is about 2.2 V.
This calculation can be independently confirmed by
varying the cathode voltage. Since the capacitance of the
sample is approximately independent of applied voltage, an
increase in the cathode voltage from 5 to 10 V should (if .:l
is constant) cause the initial potential of the resistive film
to rise by 5 V, to about 7.8 V. The observed decay current
from the sample using 10 V on the cathode should thus be
QR(lOV)/QR(S V)=2.8 times the current measured with
5 V applied to the cathode, but with the same functional
dependence on time. This measurement was performed
with sample No. 37. The current ratio was found to be
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:40RESISTANCE OF FILMS 1823
approximately constant as a function of time, ranging from
2.6 to 2.8. This is considered satisfactory agreement with
the predicted value of 2.8.
As indicated in the introduction, it is very difficult to
carry out conventional, two-or four-probe resistance
measurements under vacuum conditions for such high
resistance samples being considered here. Such two-probe
resistance measurements, carried out in a dry atmosphere,
were made on GaAs films similar to the ones described
here, with largely unsatisfactory results.12
Furthermore, direct resistance comparisons were made
on a series of TaHfN samples, each of which was measured
both by our technique and by a conventional two-probe
technique, again carried out in a dry atmosphere.13 The
conventional technique always gave lower sheet resist
ances, which differed from the sheet resistances given by
our technique by widely varying amounts. This may be due
to the effects of adsorbed species in the two-probe method,
which may be acting to short out the high film resistance,
and points up possible difficulties with the conventional
method, on samples not contained in a vacuum.
There are several small but persistent discrepancies be
tween the model predicted curren ts and the measured ones,
which occur for many samples. These are (1) a larger than
expected current for t«f (see Fig. 6, samples 67, 38, and
especially 37), and (2) a larger than expected current for
t> f (see Fig. 6, samples 34 and especially 83).
The larger than expected current observed at short times
is thought to arise from nonideal contact geometry, caused
by gold creeping under the shadow evaporation mask,
therefore causing nonsharp electrode edges, or even a lower
effective sheet resistance near the contact. In cases where
severe masking problems have occurred, evidence for an
invisible conducting region extending an appreciable dis
tance from the electrodes has been obtained from video
pictures of the sample produced by scanning. the electron
beam as in a conventional vidicon tube. It is impossible to
obtain a good fit with the current decay curves of these
samples, which show very large excess currents for t;:; f.
The excess current in Fig. 6 for sample 37 near 1 sec is not
severe, when it is realized that this occurs at a time about
five orders of magnitude below the characteristic time
constant.
A tail similar to that in Fig. 6 for sample 83 occurs for the
current decay curves of many samples and is thought to be
due to either thermal effects or adsorbed species on the
surface, since generally this tail diminishes in time, after
the sample has been mounted and is under vacuum. In fact,
the data fit to the predicted curve for some samples has
been seen to improve more than an order of magnitude
simply by allowing the sample to remain under high
vacuum overnight. Adsorbed species could possibly modu
late the current as suggested here by adding deep traps
which change the effective mobility of the film. These considerations again underline the appropriateness of
performing high sheet resistance measurements under high
vacuum conditions.
Charging by the contacts alone was mentioned earlier as
a way to perform resistance measurements on samples of
our geometry without the use of an electron beam. The
contact charging method is less convenient and flexible
than using electron beam charging [for example, the
sample must charge through the electrodes for many time
constants, a time interval which is initially unknown,
whereas, the charging time required with the electron beam
(much less than 0.5 sec) is a function only of the beam
current, capacitance per unit area of the substrate Ca, and
cathode voltage Vc]. On the other hand, the contact
charging method has the advantage that the sample can be
easily charged either negatively or positively with respect
to the ground plane, and can be charged to a high voltage
(we have charged some samples to 100 V, a limit deter
mined only by the breakdown field of the Si02 layer)
without exposing the sample to high energy electrons. The
capability of charging to either polarity is quite useful as a
test for space charge accumulation effects at the contact,
since this effect can only limit the current in at most one
polarity.I.6 We have used the contact charging method in
conjunction with electron beam charging and have verified
that no observable contact effects occur in our GaAs thin
film samples (the same current decay curve is obtained
with either polarity) and that contact injected carriers are
equivalent to beam injected electrons in our film (the same
current decay curve results from beam charging and
contact charging).
If, varying only f, a good fit cannot be obtained between
experimental data on a given film and the theoretical
curves, then either the assumptions of the theory are
violated for this film, or nonideal experimental conditions,
such as those outlined above, are hiding the true curve
shape. The two main assumptions of the model are (1) that
the mobility f.I is field independent, which is probably true
for the small field conditions « 104 V jcm) under which all
data of Fig. 6 were taken, and (2) that the number density
of injected electrons is much less than the number density
of native charge carriers, which may be violated for very
high resistivity, nearly insulating films. It is possible to
discriminate between what we call nonideal experimental
conditions and real breakdown of the model assumptions,
which can give information about the physical conduction
processes occurring in the film. For example, the excess
current at t < f observed in Fig. 6 for the high resistance
sample 37 might be thought to be due to either nonconstant
mobility (too great an initial field) or too great an initial
number of injected charges, either of which may relax to
values satisfying the model at later times. A test of this
hypothesis is given by simply taking a second current
curve at a different, say, larger initial voltage (and, of
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128.42.202.150 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 13:10:401824 A. N. CHESTER AND B. B. KOSICKI
course, charge density). If the model assumptions have
been violated, the new current curve will not be simply
displaced upward in current, since the time at which model
assumptions are met will also be displaced to a later time.
The results of this experiment on sample 37 showed, how
ever, a simple displacement in current, proportional to the
increased amount of charge deposited on the sample.
Collecting together the information given above, we can
estimate, under the conditions of our experiments, the
carrier concentrations in our GaAs films. We have injected
up to 1012 electrons/cm 2 (corresponding to about 1018
electrons/cm3 for 100 A thick films), and as shown above
we have observed no strong departures from the predicted
curves. The arguments above imply therefore that these
are lower limits on the native carrier concentrations in our
films. This relatively large concentration, and the at
tendant low mobility (lO-L 10-7 cm2/V· sec) necessary to
account for the high sheet resistances observed (lOlL
10140/0) may be explained by a model in which all
carriers reside in deep traps either on the surface o~ in the
bulk, and conduction takes place by hopping or tunneling
between neighboring trap centers.6 The fields are generally
too small « 104 V /cm) to observe any field dependent
mobility behavior.6 Surface trap densities of greater than
1012/cm2 may be expected for GaAs and other semicon
ductor surfaces,9 and volume trap densities greater than
1018/cm3 are not unreasonable for such polycrystalline
films; therefore, either type of trap could reasonably
account for the apparent agreement with the initial as
sumptions of the theory.
These techniques can obviously be extended to give
some information about samples in which there is observed
a current increase which is nonlinear in deposited charge.
To discriminate between field dependent mobility or in
jected charge effects, a second sample would be necessary, either with different substrate capacity (the surface voltage
being held constant) or with different electrode spacing
(the deposited charge density being held constant in this
case). Finally, it is obvious that the tail observed at long
times (as, for example, in sample 83) cannot be caused by
breakdown of the model assumptions, since the first part of
the current decay, in which the charges and fields are the
highest, apparently satisfies the assumptions quite well.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
For helpful discussions we are grateful to D. Kahng,
F. J. Morris, M. Kuhn, Y. S. Chen, and M. H. Crowell.
We thank D. A. Brooks and A. G. Timko for capable
assistance in preparation and measurement. We also ap
preciate mechanical design work by R. P. Hynes and
resistive film deposition by F. J. Morris, E: W. Chase, R. A_
Furnanage, and L. D. Locker.
.. Present address: Hughes Research Laboratory, Malibu, Calif.
90265.
I W. Tantraporn, J. Appl. Phys. 39, 2012 (1968).
1 K. A. Pickar, Solid State Electron. 13,303 (1970).
3 J. Lampert, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. 6, 753 (1969).
4 M. H. Crowell and E. F. Labuda, Bell System Tech. J. 48, 1481
(1969).
• A. S. Grove, B. E. Deal, E. H. Snow, and C. T. Sah, Solid State
Electron. 8, 145 (1965).
6 P. M. Hill, Thin Solid Films 1, 39 (1967); A. K. Jonscher, ibid., p.
213; A. K. Jonscher, Thin Film Dielectrics, edited by F. Vratny
(Electrochemical Society, New York, 1969), p. 3.
7 Griffiths Electronics, Inc., Linden, N. J.
8 "Torr-Seal," Varian Associates, Palo Alto, Calif.
9 Gremar model 912AjV bulkhead receptacle, Gremar Mfg. Co .•
Inc., Woburn, Mass.
10 Keithley model 602, Keithley Instruments, Inc., Cleveland,
Ohio 44139.
11 This effect could have been avoided by adjusting the fixed voltage
to the value V c-il.
12 F. J. Morris (private communication).
13 L. D. Locker (unpublished data).
14 D. R. Frankl in Semiconductors, edited by H. K. Henisch
(Pergamon, New York, 1967), Vol. 7, p. 269.
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1.98375.pdf | Implantation damage and the anomalous transient diffusion of ionimplanted boron
A. E. Michel, W. Rausch, and P. A. Ronsheim
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 51, 487 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.98375
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.98375
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Published by the AIP Publishing
Articles you may be interested in
Suppression of anomalous diffusion of ionimplanted boron in silicon by laser processing
J. Appl. Phys. 71, 3628 (1992); 10.1063/1.350923
Influence of implant condition on the transientenhanced diffusion of ionimplanted boron in silicon
J. Appl. Phys. 71, 2611 (1992); 10.1063/1.351082
Implantation damage and anomalous diffusion of implanted boron in silicon
Appl. Phys. Lett. 54, 1433 (1989); 10.1063/1.101353
Transient boron diffusion in ionimplanted crystalline and amorphous silicon
J. Appl. Phys. 63, 1452 (1988); 10.1063/1.339926
The diffusion of ion−implanted boron in silicon dioxide
AIP Conf. Proc. 122, 20 (1984); 10.1063/1.34817
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132.174.255.116 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 04:51:15~mp~antation damage and the anomaloBJs transient diffusion of ion-imp~anted
boron
A. E. Michel
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center. Yorktown Heights. New York 10598
W. Rausch and P. A. Ronsheim
IBM East Fishkill Facility. Hopewell Junction. New York 12533
(Received 13 April 1987; accepted for publication 17 June 1987)
The effect of the implantation of silicon ions on the anomalous transient diffusion of ion
implanted boron is investigated. It is found that silicon ion fluences well below that necessary
to amorphize the lattice substantially reduce the anomalous transient diffusion of subsequently
implanted boron. The sheet resistance, however, is increased by the additional silicon implant.
The implantation of silicon ions into activated boron layers causes additional anomalous
diffusion at substantial distances beyond the range of the silicon ions. The anomalous motion is
also reduced in regions where the damage is greater. The effects can be explained in terms of
the generation of point defect clusters which dissolve during anneal and the sinking of point
defects in the regions of high damage by the formation of interstitial type extended defects.
The anomalous diffusion of ion-implanted boron during
the thermal anneal and activation process is a phenomenon
of considerable importance in the fabrication of shallow p-n
junctions in silicon. A definitive explanation of the phenom
enon is still being debated. The proposed mechanisms fall
into two categories: one which involves a fast diffusing inter
stitial component of the boron I· 3 and the other an enhanced
point defect concentration related to the implantation dam
age.4-6
In this letter we present data that demonstrate two dis
tinct effects of ion-implantation damage. The first is that
lattice damage generated by the implantation of silicon ions
prior to the boron implant and in the region of high boron
concentration retards the anomalous diffusion in the tail re
gion of the boron distribution. This is believed to be caused
by an increase in the density of extended defects which act as
a sink for the point defects.4 The other effect is that the lattice
damage resulting from implanting silicon ions into a stabi
lized, i.e., substitutional, boron distribution causes anoma
lous diffusion of the boron at considerable distances from the
implanted silicon distribution. Both of these effects strongly
support a model in which the implant damage is the source
of point defects which are trapped in small clusters7 after
implantation and during subsequent thermal treatment, de
pending on the density, either grow and generate extended
dislocations or dissolve and rapidly distribute through the
lattice enhancing the boron diffusion. It is further speculated
that the point defects involved are interstitials, since the ex
tended defects are of the interstitial type and it is known that
boron diffusion is substantially enhanced by a supersatura
tion of silicon interstitials.8
Several fluences of 130 keY silicon ions were implanted
at a 7° offset into (100), 10 n cm, n-type, silicon wafers. The
wafers were subsequently implanted with a fluence of
2 X 1014/cm2, 60 keY boron ions. The energies were selected
so that the ranges of the boron and silicon ions are about
equal. The secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) pro
files of the boron after a 35-min furnace anneal at 800 DC are
shown in Fig. 1. The solid curve is the as-implanted profile for the case with no silicon implantation. The lowest silicon
ion dose of 2 X 1014!cm2 is wen below that necessary to
amorphize the silicon lattice. The intermediate dose of
5 X 1014/cm2 is at the amorphization threshold at the con
centration peak. The highest dose of 2 X 1015/cm2 is suffi
cient to amorphize the lattice approximately 100 nm on ei
ther side of the peak. It is apparent that, in a11 cases where the
silicon is initially damaged, a significant reduction in the tail
diffusion is observed. At 800 °C there is little motion in the
region of the boron peak, with or without the silicon implan
tation. It might be argued that some of the reduction in the
tail diffusion is caused by a decrease in the boron channeling
tail. However, in practice the boron channeling tail is not
substantially reduced unless the crystal is amorphized to a
sufficient depth to contain the majority of the boron profile.9
In the highest dose case the displacement is less in the con
centration range of 10 17_101 scm 3, i.e., in the upper part of
the taiL This may be due to a difference in the channeling tail
produced by the rather thick amorphous region. The dis
placement in the :lower concentration part of the tail is some
what greater than for the samples with the lower silicon
~'8s,~ N'I~ on1
• NONE
0-2Xl014/C1"!""2, UC .ell
0-5>::10'''/crrl, 1JC -ell
t,,-2xl0'5/cm2. 13G ~,ev
zooo 4C:;0 60C~
DEPH-(AlJGS TRC \AS)
FIG. 1. Reduction by silicon ion implantation ofthe anomalous boron dif
fusion during an 800 ·C furnace anneal.
487 Appl. Phys. Lett. 51 (7). 17 August 1987 0003-6951/87/330487-03$01,00 @ 1987 American Institute of Physics 487
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132.174.255.116 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 04:51:15""1
1
2 u 1 [119
~
Z 10'B
o
f-« 0:: f-
Z lj 10"
Z o
U 2eSi+ mplant
.,. NONE
0-2X10'4/cm2, 130 keY
0-5xl014/cm2, 130 keY
~-2xlo'5jC'T12• 130 keY
2000 4000 6000
DEPTH (ANGSTRO~S)
FIG. 2. Reduction by silicon ion implantation of the anomalous boron dif
fusion during a 1000 'C rapid anneal.
doses; however, it is still considerably less than the sample
with no silicon implant. The transient diffusion is not elimin
ated by the additional damage but is reduced by an amount
comparable to that achieved by a short high-temperature
rapid thermal anneal (R T A). 10
Shown in Fig. 2 are the SIMS profiles for wafers pre
pared with the same implant conditions as the sample for
Fig. 1, but given a rapid thermal anneal at 1000 DC for 10 s
instead of the 35-min 800 °c furnace anneal. At a tempera
ture of 1000 DC the entire boron distribution is involved in
the anomalous diffusion 10 and, as in the case of the low
temperature furnace anneal, a retardation of the displace
ment is observed for the samples with implanted silicon ions.
The curve with the highest silicon dose has nearly the same
anomalous displacement in the very low concentration re
gion as that for the sample with no silicon implant.
The sheet resistance measurements for these samples
are shown in Table I. Note that while the anomalous diffu
sion is diminished by the silicon damage, the sheet resistance
is increased in proportion to the dose of silicon ions. Also in
all cases the sheet resistance values for the furnace anneal are
greater than those for the corresponding sample with the
RTA. This presumably is related to the improvement of the
defect removal at the higher temperature. 11
The retardation of the anomalous diffusion is difficuh to
reconcile with the mechanism involving a fast diffusing in
terstitial boron component, since it is unlikely that the sili
con implantation would reduce the amount of boron intersti
tials. It may be understood, however, by the effect of the
implantation damage on the point defect concentration. For
TABLE I. Sheet resistance values for 35-min 800 'C furnace anneal and IO-s
lOOO'C RTA for various silicon implant fluences.
488 Silicon dose
(fern')
none
2X 1014
5X 1014
2X 10" Sheet resistance (n)
Furnace anneal Rapid anneal
481
555
569
703 414
436
466
496
Appl. Phys. Lett .. Vol. 51 , No.7, 17 August 1987 the two cases where the silicon implant dose is insufficient to
amorphize the lattice, the increase in lattice disorder genera
ted by the silicon implant may enhance the formation of
extended defects in the initial part of the anneal. The addi
tional extended defects absorb the silicon interstitials4 which
are emitted as the small point defect clusters dissolve during
the anneal cycle.7 This mechanism is also present in the case
without the silicon implant since there are extended defects
formed in the region of the boron peak. The sheet resistance
data are also consistent with an increase of damage which
may act as trapping centers for boron atoms thus reducing
the electrical activity.
For the highest dose silicon implant another mechanism
must be considered. Here the lattice is amorphized and re
grows by solid phase epitaxy in a fraction of a second at the
beginning of the anneal. 12 Since the majority of the implant
damage is concentrated in this region, the density of defect
clusters may be substantially reduced by the epitaxial re
growth process, causing a reduction in the source of the dif
fusion enhancing silicon interstitials. In the case where the
boron implant is entirely within the amorphous region there
is no substantial anomalous diffusion. 13.14 Since the boron
concentration is well below the solubility limit, one might
expect the boron to be all electrically active in the region of
the peak and hence have a very low sheet resistance. The
measured sheet resistance values in Table I show the oppo
site trend. It is thus likely that the recrystaUized region is
heavily defected.
The effect of silicon implantation on the motion of stabi
lized boron distributions is shown in Fig. 3. In this experi
ment the boron implant was annealed for 30 s at 950 DC dur
ing which the boron is activated, i.e., moved into
substitutional sites and the anomalous diffusion effect is
completed. to For this condition the boron diffuses only by
the normal mechanisms during a subsequent heat treatment.
Since the boron concentration only slightly exceeds the in
trinsic level, the concentration enhanced diffusion is mini
mal and the diffusion length for a subsequent anneal for 30
min at 800 DC is only 3 nm. In fact no significant displace
ment is observed during such a heat treatment on a stabilized
-
G 2000 4000 6D)0
JEPlr1 (ANGSiROMS;
FIG. 3. Generation of anomalous diffusion of a stabilized boron distribu
tion by a 13O-keY silicon ion implantation.
Michel. Rausch, and Ronsheim 488
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132.174.255.116 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 04:51:15Z ,('8
o \
I
\
16Si"' ImpiO"'lt
.~ NONE
, ,)_. 1 )(1014/Cm2, 50 loreV -
-
-
o
1CI'6 '--___ -.l. __ ~_-'-____ _L_ _ _'____J
o 2000 4000
DEP 1 H (ANGSTROI;1S
FIG, 4, Generation of anomalous diffusion of a stabilized boron distribu
tion by a 50-keV silicon ion implantation,
boron distribution. One wafer was subjected to a 2x 1014/
cm2 silicon implant prior to the anneal. The solid line is a
Gaussian representation of the silicon ion distribution using
the range and standard deviation tables of Gibbons et al.ls
The sample that received the silicon implant, however,
shows a displacement of the boron in the tail region of over
100 nm, similar to the anomalous transient displacement of a
boron implant for such a heat treatment. 10 A similar effect
on a stabilized boron distribution was reported by Cho et al.6
during RTA after a boron 10 implantation.
Figure 4 demonstrates that an anomalous displacement
of the same magnitude is obtained with a much lower energy
silicon implant. The solid curve is again the Gaussian repre
sentation of the implanted silicon ion distribution, The dis
placed boron atoms in the tail of the boron distribution are
about 500 nm deeper than the average penetration of the
primary silicon ions or the secondary displaced lattice
atoms. This phenomenon clearly requires a species that has
an extremely high diffusion coefficient and the only possible
candidates are point defects. It is thus consistent with the
picture that the anomalous boron diffusion is a result of the
489 AppL Phys, Lett.. Vol. 51. No, 7. 17 August 1987 breakup during anneal of interstitial clusters which rapidly
diffuse and enhance the boron diffusion.
A comparison of the displacement in the surface region
for the cases with the different energy silicon implant (the
curves with open circles in Figs. 3 and 4) shows that there is
much less boron motion for the low-energy case. This is
again consistent with the concept that in the region of high
damage the motion is retarded by the increased formation of
extended defects,
'w, Hofker, H. Werner, D, Osthoek, and H. deGrefte, AppL Phys. 2, 265
( 1973),
'R. T Hodgson, V, Deline, S, M. Mader, F. E Morehead, andJ, C Gelpey.
Mater. Res, Soc. Symp, Proc, 23, 253 (1984); Appl. Phys, Lett 44. 589
( 1984),
'L. C Hopkins, T, E. Seidel, J, S, Williams, and J, C Bean. Electrochem,
Soc. 32, 2035 (1985),
4R. B. Fair, J J, Wortman, and J, Liu, J, Electrochem. Soc, 131, 2387
(1984).
'G, S, Oehrlein. R, Ghez. J. D. Fehribach. E, F, Gorey. T, O. Sedgwick. S.
A Cohen, and V. R, Deline. Proceedings of the 13th International Confer
ence on Defects in Semiconductors. edited by L. C. Kimerling and J. M,
Parsey. Jr. (Metallurgical Society of AIME, Warrendale. PA, 1984), P
539.
"K. Cho. M. Numan, T. Finstad. W, Chu, J. Lui, and J, Wortman, AppL
Phys, Lett. 47.1321 (1985).
'F Cembali. M. Servidori, E. Landi, and S, Solmi. Phys, Status Solidi A 94.
315 (1986),
"S. M, Hu, J, App!. Phys, 45,1567 (1974),
"c. I. Drowlwy, J. Adkission. D, Peters, and S, Chiang, Mater, Res, Soc.
Symp, Proc, 35, 375 (1985),
lOA, E. Michel. W. Rausch, p, A Ronsheim. and R. H. Kastl, Appl. Phys,
Lett SO, 416 (1987),
liT. 0, Sedgwick. presented at Symposium on Reduced Temperature Pro
cessing for VLSI, Fall Meeting ofthe Electrochemical Society, Las Vegas.
NV, Oct \3-18, 1985,
"G. L. Olson, in Energy Beam -Solid Interactions and Transient Thermal
Processing (1984 MRS Symp, Proc.), edited by D. K. Biegelsen, G, A.
Rozgonyi, and C. V. Shank (Elsevier. North-HolIand, 1985),
"T. 0, Sedgwick. Mater. Res, Soc, Proc. 71. 403 (1986),
14T. E. Seidel. IEEE Electron Device Lett. EDL-4. 353 (1983).
"J, F. Gibbons. W, S, Johnson, and S. W, Mylroie, in Projected Range Sta
tistics (Halstead, Straudsburg, PA. 1975).
Michel. Rausch. and Ronsheim 489
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1.1140328.pdf | Determining the integrated cavity emissivity of blackbody furnaces
Quansheng Wu, Yinghang Chen, Zaixiang Chu, and Bijuan Li
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 60, 1140 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.1140328
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140328
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/60/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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A new compact fixed-point blackbody furnace
AIP Conf. Proc. 1552, 300 (2013); 10.1063/1.4821382
Comparison of the emissivity uniformity of several blackbody cavities
AIP Conf. Proc. 1552, 757 (2013); 10.1063/1.4819637
Design of an isothermal cavity with nonuniform local instrinsic emissivities to give true blackbody radiant
characteristics
Rev. Sci. Instrum. 63, 3213 (1992); 10.1063/1.1142581
Comment on Blackbody Radiation in Small Cavities
Am. J. Phys. 42, 505 (1974); 10.1119/1.1987762
Blackbody Radiation in Small Cavities
Am. J. Phys. 40, 1337 (1972); 10.1119/1.1986827
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130.216.129.208 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:37:56Determining the integrated cavity emissivity of blackbody furnaces
Quansheng Wu and Yinghang Chen
Institute No. 303, Ministry of Aerospace Industry, Beijing, China
Zaixiang Chu and Bijuan U
Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, China
(Received 6 June 1988; accepted for publication 20 November 1988)
An apparatus has been constructed for determining the integrated cavity emissivity of blackbody
furnace simulators near 500 K and for calibrating infrared detectors. A difference-ratio method is
described for measuring the radiant emission characteristics of the simulator by using a high
quality heat-pipe blackbody as a standard radiant source operated at 500 K and a water-immersed
cavity as a reference source operated at a lower temperature. It is verified that the total
uncertainties of the method are less than 0.6% for determining the integrated cavity emissivity
and 0.5% for determining irradiance from the 500-K standard blackbody on the detectors.
INTRODUCTION
Radiant sources at temperature near 500 K are increasingly
used for calibrating industrial blackbody furnaces (hereafter
referred to as simulators), infrared detectors, infrared sys
tems and instruments, infrared radiation thermometers, and
so on. It is usual to calculate the radiant emission character
istics of a cavity, that is, the distribution of effective emissi
vity along the inner wall of the cavity, by theoretical meth
ods.1-3 The values of effective emissivity within the cavity
depend upon the geometrical configuration, the temperature
distribution along the inner wan of the cavity, and the intrin
sic emissivity of the material of the cavity wall. It is very
difficult to measure the emissivity of the cavity wall and the
temperature distribution. Further, the temperature distribu
tion within the cavity and the material emissivity may
change with time of use. Consequently, it is valuable to set up
an apparatus and employ a method for determining and
monitoring many blackbody simulators with a total uncer
tainty less than ± 0.5%--0.6%.
A system that includes a heat pipe with a 500-K stan
dard blackbody whose emissivity is readily calculated, a wa
ter-immersed reference blackbody with stable and uniform
temperature distribution, a pyroelectric detector integrated
with a high-quality amplifier or a thermoelectric pyrometer,
a mechanical reset to assure correct positioning of the stan
dard and calibrated blackbodies, a temperature controller,
and a microcomputer for controlling operation of the system
has been set up in our laboratory. The schematic diagram of
the system is shown in Fig. 1.
i. DIFFERENCE-RATIO METHOD FOR DETERMINING
BLACKBODY FURNACES
A difference-ratio method is proposed to calibrate simu
lators in order to eliminate the effect of surrounding radi
ation and assure an accuracy within ± 0.6%.
It can be seen from Fig. 2 that the net flux received by
the detector from the standard blackbody is
(1) FlG. 1. Schematic diagram of 500-K standard blackbody and radiation
comparison system. 1,12: Leveling instruments; 2: cross mark plate; 3: de
tector; 4: precise stop; 5: flowing water switch; 6: water-cooled shield; 7:
chopper; 8: standard blackbody; 9: reference blackbody; 10: blackbody fur·
nace; 11: He-Ne laser; 13: microcomputer; 14: digital voltmeter; 15: radi
ation shield; 16: radiation comparison operating board.
where t'; is the integrated cavity emissivity of the standard
blackbody. Ed and ad are the emissivity and absorptivity of
the detector, respectively. Tj and TO! are the temperatures of
the standard blackbody and the detector, respectively. F;)l
and Fd" are the geometry factors of the detector to the stan
dard blackbody and to the surroundings, respectively. WI,s
is the net radiant contribution from the surrounding to the
detector and ()' is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant. If a pyro
electric detector is used and a chopper is located between
blackbody and stop, it is reasonable to suppose WI•s to be
zero. Similarly, we can write
FIG. 2. Geometry and temperatures of the blackbodies, simulator, and de
tector.
1140 Rell. Sci. Instrum. 60 (6), June 1989 0034-6748/69/06 i 140-03$01.30 @ 1989 American institute of Physics 1140
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130.216.129.208 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:37:56W2 = ~adoTiFo2 -Cd aT 62 Fd,s + W2•s, (2)
W3 = E~adO'T1Fo3 -£dO'T63Fd.s + W3•s• (3)
where W2 and W3 are the net fluxes received by the detector
from the simulator and the reference blackbody, respective
ly. £~ and £~ are the integrated cavity emissivities of the
simulator and the reference blackbody. T2 and T3 are the
temperatures of the blackbody furnace and the reference
blackbody, respectively. F02 and Fo} are the geometry fac
tors of the detector to the blackbody furnace and the refer
ence blackbody, respectively, Wz,s and W3., are the radiant
contributions from the surrounding to the detector corre
sponding to the cases in which the detector views the simula
tor and the reference blackbody, respectively. Tm and T03
are the temperatures of the detector when viewing the black
body furnace and the reference blackbody, respectively.
In order to eliminate the radiant effect from the sur
rounding to the detector, we utilize a parameter which is the
ratio of the radiant flux differences as
(4)
The temperature of the detector can be controlled to be con
stant in the calibration procedure and the temperatures of
the detecting surface in three cases are nearly the same,
hence
TOl :::':: I;J2 :::':: T03,
ad =€d' (5)
(6)
Because the geometrical configuration of the standard
blackbody and the reference blackbody are identical and the
two cavities are both isothermal, it follows that
€'; = £L
FOI = F02 = Fm,
WI,s = W2•s = W3,s' (7)
(8)
(9)
The integrated cavity emissivity can be calculated according
to the method described in Ref. 4.
Combining Eqs. ( 1 )-(9), we can obtain finally the basic
equation for calibrating the industrial blackbody functions,
(10)
We limit the area of effective radiant surface on which the
temperature distribution is sufficiently uniform, so T2 is the
temperature of the radiant surface of the simulator viewed
by the detector.
It APPARATUS DESCRIPTION
A photograph ofthe experimental apparatus is shown in
Fig. 3 and the major components are described in the follow
ing section.
A. Standard blackbody
A heat pipe, cylindro-double cone cavity with effective
emissivity greater than 0.9995 is used for the standard black
body and reference blackbody in order to assure demands for
high effective emissivity and uniform temperature distribu
tion. The specifications for the geometry of the cavity are:
1141 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No.6, June 1989 FIG. 3. Experimental apparatus.
the half-angle of the cone is 36°; the frustum is part of a cone
having half-angle of 30°; the radius and the length of the
cylinder are 15 and 150 mm, respectively; and the radius of
the aperture is 10 mm. The zonal approximate method pro
posed by Bedford and Ma3 has been developed and used here
to calculate the effective emissivity distribution of the cavity.
The effective emissivities of the portion viewed by the detec
tor are 0.9995 ± 0.0003.
When the cavity is used in the infrared region, the specu
lar reftection component within the cavity must be consid
ered. In this condition, the directional effective emissivity
can be defined from the work of On05; the half-angle of the
cone is taken as 36° in order to maintain higher effective
emissivity in both the visible and infrared regions, The direc
tional effective emissivity of the cavity has been calculated
using the Monte Carlo method.
The working fluid selected for the heat pipe is deter
mined by the desired operating temperature. The design
principle is that the pressure of saturated vapor be less than
2 X 106 Pa (20 atm) at 500 K, so octane is used. The material
of the tube and wick is stainless steel which is compatible
with octane. Three tubes with length 195 mm and inside
diameter 6 mm for measuring the temperature are arranged
in the vapor space. They accommodate a platinum resistance
thermometer and copper versus Constantan thermocouple
for temperature measurement and control. The measured
results show that the temperature uniformity and the tem
perature stability of the heat pipe cavity are better than 0.1 K
and 0.1 K/4 h, respectively,
B. Reference blackbody
In order to eliminate the effect of surrounding radiation
and improve accuracy of calibration, an isothermal refer
ence blackbody at 323 K is provided. The cavity is immersed
in flowing water whose temperature is well controlled by the
microcomputer. To simplify the calibration equation, the
reference blackbody is designed with the same geometry and
thus has the same values of effective emissivities as the stan
dard blackbody. It can be seen from the measured data that
the temperature stability of the reference blackbody is better
than 0.1 K12 h.
Blackbody furnace simulator 1141
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130.216.129.208 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:37:56c. Mechanical reset system
This system is designed to measure the radiant fluxes
emitted from the standard blackbody, the reference black
body, and the simulators. The microcomputer collects and
processes the detected signals and completes the determina
tion of the integrated cavity emissivity of the blackbody fur
naces.
The radiation comparison system is composed of a later
al comparison guide, a vertical measurement guide, a data
acquisition system, a controlling unit, and a beam alignment
system as shown in Fig. 1.
The standard blackbody, the reference blackbody, and
the simulator are set on an operating board which can be
moved by a stepping motor. The resct accuracy of the oper
ating board is within 0.05 mm.
Another operating board for locating the detector is as
sembled on the vertical guide on which a water-cooled radi
ation shield is also set to prevent the influence of stray radi
ation from the surroundings. The beam alignment system
uses a helium-neon laser and a leveling instrument to adjust
I
Substituting the experimental data listed in Table I into Eq.
( ! 1), we find that the total uncertainty of the integrated
cavity emissivity determination is less than 0.6%.
The method proposed in our previous article'~ can be
used to calculate the irradiance from the standard blackbody
onto the detector. An approximate expression for estimating
this irradiance is
(12)
where (yis the Stefan-Boltzmann constant, E~ is the integrat
ed cavity emissivity of the standard blackbody, 1'1 is the tem
perature ofthe standard blackbody, Td is the temperature of
TABLE l. Values of the rc1evanl errors of the system.
Error sources
M~,M;
Ll r,tan
~T>
!:J.D
b.r
Diffraction loss Absolute values of error
O.OCll
0,3 K
0.4 K
O.5mm
D,003 mm
0.1%
1142 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No.6, June 1989 the axes of the three blackbodies parallel with one another
and vertical to the receiving plane of the detector. The entire
system is automatically controlled by the computer.
iii 0 UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS
The main errors for determining the integrated cavity
emissivity of the blackbody furnaces are due to uncertainties
associated with: (1) the isothermal calculation of the effec
tive emissivity of the standard blackbody and the reference
blackbody, (2) temperature measurement of the standard
and reference blackbodies, (3) temperature control of the
reference blackbody, (4) position reset of the operating
board, (5) instability of the radiation detecting system, and
(6) the distance measurement between the stop and the de
tector. When the apparatus is used for absolute calibration,
the error due to the stop radius measurement, the tempera
ture increase of the stop, and the loss of diffraction must be
considered.
We can derive the following expression for the total un
certainty of the system from Eq. (10):
(11 )
the detector, r is the radius of the source stop, and D is the
distance between the stop and the detector. The total'uncer
tainty can be expressed as
(13)
Substituting the measured data into Eq. (13), we can calcu
late that the total uncertainty in the irradiance is less than
0.5%.
I R. E. Bedford and C. K. Ma, J. Opt Soc. Am. 64, 339 ( 1974).
'R. E, Redford and C. K. Ma, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 65, 565 (1975).
'R, E Bedford and C. K. Ma, J. Opt. Soc. Am, 66, 724 (1976).
·S. Chen, Z. Chu, and H. Chen, Mctrologia 16, 69 (1980).
'A. Ono, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 70,547 (1980),
Blackbody furnace simulator 1142
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130.216.129.208 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 00:37:56 |
1.2810992.pdf | Mylar Giri
Moses Chan and Milton Cole Attilio Stella
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 94 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810992
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810992
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsBoth men earned PhDs from Har-
vard: Ewen in 1951 and Purcell in
1938. Purcell shared the 1952 Nobel
Prize with Felix Bloch for the discov-
ery of nuclear magnetic resonance.
The Tinsley Prize was awarded to
Ewen and Purcell at the Boston AAS
meeting in January. —PHA
PHYSICISTS ELECTED
FOREIGN MEMBERS OF
SOVIET ACADEMY
The Soviet Academy of Sciences elect-
ed 16 US scholars as foreign members
last December. The scholars consti-
tute the largest group of foreign
members ever electe d at one time.
Eight of the 16 new members work in
physics or a closely related field:
Roald Hoffman, professor of chemis-
try at Cornell University; Peter David
Lax, professor of mathematics at the
Courant Institute of Mathematical
Sciences at New York University;
Edward N. Lorenz, professor at the
Center for Meteorology and Physical
Oceanography of MIT; Wolfgang Pan-
ofsky, director emeritus of SLAC;
David Pines, professor of physics at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign; Frank Press, president of
the National Academy of Sciences; J.
Robert Schrieffer, director of the In-
stitute for Theoretical Physics at the
University of California, Santa Bar-
bara; Samuel Ting, professor of phys-
ics at MIT; and Peter Wyllie, head of
the department of geological and pa-
leontological sciences at Caltech.
IN BRIEF
Steven Kivelson and Sudip Chak-
ravarty, former assistant professors
at the State University of New York,
Stony Brook, have been named profes-
sors of physics at UCLA.
Alan Lightman, formerly a staff
member at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, has been
appointed professor of science and
writing at MIT, teaching in the de-
partments of physics and humanities.
Kevin D. Pang, a physicist at Cal-
tech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has
been awarded Dudley Observatory's
Herbert C. Pollack Award for re-
search in the history of astronomy
and astrophysics. Pang received the
$10 000 prize for his studies of an-
cient Chinese eclipse records aimed
at determining the past rotation rate
of the earth.Leon J. Radziemski, former head of
the physics department at New Mexi-
co State University, has been appoint-
ed associate dean and director of the
research center in the university's
college of arts and sciences.
Ethan T. Vishniac and Donald E.
Winget have been promoted from
assistant professors to associate
professors with tenure in the astron-
omy department at the University of
Texas at Austin.
OBITUARIES
William Savage
William R. Savage, a professor in the
department of physics and astronomy
at the University of Iowa, died on 28
May 1988 following a brief illness.
Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on 12
September 1926, Savage received his
BS in 1951 and his PhD in 1956, both
in physics, from Iowa State Universi-
ty. His thesis, done under Donald
Hudson and Frank H. Spedding, was a
study of the heat of sublimation of
rare-earth metals by an extension of
the Knudsen and Taylor-Langmuir
methods. From 1956 until 1958 he
worked as a research physicist at the
Honeywell Research Center in Hop-
kins, Minnesota. In 1958 he moved to
the Central Research Laboratories of
Texas Instruments at Dallas, where
he contributed to investigations of
surfac e properties of semiconductors
using the field emission microscope.
Savage joined the University of
Iowa as an associate professor of
physics in 1963. He established a
solid-state physics laboratory there
and supervised many MS and PhD
students on research projects involv-
ing measurements of the specific
heats, resistivities and magnetic sus-
William R. Savageceptibilities of dilute magnetic alloys
and intermediate-valence compounds.
During the year before his death he
turned his attention to the prepara-
tion and study of materials related to
the high-rc superconductors.
After volunteering several years
ago to teach a course in acoustics for
music and speech pathology students,
Savage became seriously interested in
musical acoustics. He collaborated on
studies of harpsichords and other
instruments. From 1976 until 1979 he
was chairman of the technical com-
mittee on musical acoustics of the
Acoustical Society of America. Be-
tween 1974 and 1987 he organized six
conferences on acoustics and the phys-
ics of sound and music that were held
at the University of Iowa.
William Savage was an enthusiastic
teacher and researcher who will be
fondly remembered by his students,
colleagues and friends.
JOHN W. SCHWEITZER
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Mylar Giri
Mylar Giri died suddenly on 1 July
1988, at the age of 37. This brought to
a premature end a promising career
as a physicist and educator. He was
an associate professor of physics at
the Hazleton campus of The Pennsyl-
vania State University, where he had
taught for eight years.
Giri was educated at Bangalore
University, the Indian Institute of
Technology, New Delhi, and Rutgers
University. He had been a research
scientist with E. I. du Pont de Ne-
mours & Company Inc and a visiting
professor at the University of Padua.
His research interests and publica-
tions were wide ranging, and included
percolation, phase transitions, poly-
mers, films and fractals. He brought
to these problems great intensity,
curiosity and enthusiasm. He pub-
lished only the most important contri-
butions (to his collaborators' occa-
sional dismay).
Giri was appreciated enormously
also for his dedication and skill in
teaching both researchers and un-
dergraduates. His generosity with
time to his students was legendary.
Those who knew him will miss his
wit, his warmth, his openness and
his intelligence.
MOSES CHAN
MILTON COLE
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, Pennsylvania
ATTILIO STELLA
University of Padua
Italy'
94 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 |
1.2810989.pdf | Physicists Elected Foreign Members of Soviet Academy
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 94 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810989
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810989
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsBoth men earned PhDs from Har-
vard: Ewen in 1951 and Purcell in
1938. Purcell shared the 1952 Nobel
Prize with Felix Bloch for the discov-
ery of nuclear magnetic resonance.
The Tinsley Prize was awarded to
Ewen and Purcell at the Boston AAS
meeting in January. —PHA
PHYSICISTS ELECTED
FOREIGN MEMBERS OF
SOVIET ACADEMY
The Soviet Academy of Sciences elect-
ed 16 US scholars as foreign members
last December. The scholars consti-
tute the largest group of foreign
members ever electe d at one time.
Eight of the 16 new members work in
physics or a closely related field:
Roald Hoffman, professor of chemis-
try at Cornell University; Peter David
Lax, professor of mathematics at the
Courant Institute of Mathematical
Sciences at New York University;
Edward N. Lorenz, professor at the
Center for Meteorology and Physical
Oceanography of MIT; Wolfgang Pan-
ofsky, director emeritus of SLAC;
David Pines, professor of physics at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign; Frank Press, president of
the National Academy of Sciences; J.
Robert Schrieffer, director of the In-
stitute for Theoretical Physics at the
University of California, Santa Bar-
bara; Samuel Ting, professor of phys-
ics at MIT; and Peter Wyllie, head of
the department of geological and pa-
leontological sciences at Caltech.
IN BRIEF
Steven Kivelson and Sudip Chak-
ravarty, former assistant professors
at the State University of New York,
Stony Brook, have been named profes-
sors of physics at UCLA.
Alan Lightman, formerly a staff
member at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, has been
appointed professor of science and
writing at MIT, teaching in the de-
partments of physics and humanities.
Kevin D. Pang, a physicist at Cal-
tech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has
been awarded Dudley Observatory's
Herbert C. Pollack Award for re-
search in the history of astronomy
and astrophysics. Pang received the
$10 000 prize for his studies of an-
cient Chinese eclipse records aimed
at determining the past rotation rate
of the earth.Leon J. Radziemski, former head of
the physics department at New Mexi-
co State University, has been appoint-
ed associate dean and director of the
research center in the university's
college of arts and sciences.
Ethan T. Vishniac and Donald E.
Winget have been promoted from
assistant professors to associate
professors with tenure in the astron-
omy department at the University of
Texas at Austin.
OBITUARIES
William Savage
William R. Savage, a professor in the
department of physics and astronomy
at the University of Iowa, died on 28
May 1988 following a brief illness.
Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on 12
September 1926, Savage received his
BS in 1951 and his PhD in 1956, both
in physics, from Iowa State Universi-
ty. His thesis, done under Donald
Hudson and Frank H. Spedding, was a
study of the heat of sublimation of
rare-earth metals by an extension of
the Knudsen and Taylor-Langmuir
methods. From 1956 until 1958 he
worked as a research physicist at the
Honeywell Research Center in Hop-
kins, Minnesota. In 1958 he moved to
the Central Research Laboratories of
Texas Instruments at Dallas, where
he contributed to investigations of
surfac e properties of semiconductors
using the field emission microscope.
Savage joined the University of
Iowa as an associate professor of
physics in 1963. He established a
solid-state physics laboratory there
and supervised many MS and PhD
students on research projects involv-
ing measurements of the specific
heats, resistivities and magnetic sus-
William R. Savageceptibilities of dilute magnetic alloys
and intermediate-valence compounds.
During the year before his death he
turned his attention to the prepara-
tion and study of materials related to
the high-rc superconductors.
After volunteering several years
ago to teach a course in acoustics for
music and speech pathology students,
Savage became seriously interested in
musical acoustics. He collaborated on
studies of harpsichords and other
instruments. From 1976 until 1979 he
was chairman of the technical com-
mittee on musical acoustics of the
Acoustical Society of America. Be-
tween 1974 and 1987 he organized six
conferences on acoustics and the phys-
ics of sound and music that were held
at the University of Iowa.
William Savage was an enthusiastic
teacher and researcher who will be
fondly remembered by his students,
colleagues and friends.
JOHN W. SCHWEITZER
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Mylar Giri
Mylar Giri died suddenly on 1 July
1988, at the age of 37. This brought to
a premature end a promising career
as a physicist and educator. He was
an associate professor of physics at
the Hazleton campus of The Pennsyl-
vania State University, where he had
taught for eight years.
Giri was educated at Bangalore
University, the Indian Institute of
Technology, New Delhi, and Rutgers
University. He had been a research
scientist with E. I. du Pont de Ne-
mours & Company Inc and a visiting
professor at the University of Padua.
His research interests and publica-
tions were wide ranging, and included
percolation, phase transitions, poly-
mers, films and fractals. He brought
to these problems great intensity,
curiosity and enthusiasm. He pub-
lished only the most important contri-
butions (to his collaborators' occa-
sional dismay).
Giri was appreciated enormously
also for his dedication and skill in
teaching both researchers and un-
dergraduates. His generosity with
time to his students was legendary.
Those who knew him will miss his
wit, his warmth, his openness and
his intelligence.
MOSES CHAN
MILTON COLE
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, Pennsylvania
ATTILIO STELLA
University of Padua
Italy'
94 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 |
1.2810991.pdf | William Savage
John W. Schweitzer
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 94 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810991
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810991
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsBoth men earned PhDs from Har-
vard: Ewen in 1951 and Purcell in
1938. Purcell shared the 1952 Nobel
Prize with Felix Bloch for the discov-
ery of nuclear magnetic resonance.
The Tinsley Prize was awarded to
Ewen and Purcell at the Boston AAS
meeting in January. —PHA
PHYSICISTS ELECTED
FOREIGN MEMBERS OF
SOVIET ACADEMY
The Soviet Academy of Sciences elect-
ed 16 US scholars as foreign members
last December. The scholars consti-
tute the largest group of foreign
members ever electe d at one time.
Eight of the 16 new members work in
physics or a closely related field:
Roald Hoffman, professor of chemis-
try at Cornell University; Peter David
Lax, professor of mathematics at the
Courant Institute of Mathematical
Sciences at New York University;
Edward N. Lorenz, professor at the
Center for Meteorology and Physical
Oceanography of MIT; Wolfgang Pan-
ofsky, director emeritus of SLAC;
David Pines, professor of physics at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign; Frank Press, president of
the National Academy of Sciences; J.
Robert Schrieffer, director of the In-
stitute for Theoretical Physics at the
University of California, Santa Bar-
bara; Samuel Ting, professor of phys-
ics at MIT; and Peter Wyllie, head of
the department of geological and pa-
leontological sciences at Caltech.
IN BRIEF
Steven Kivelson and Sudip Chak-
ravarty, former assistant professors
at the State University of New York,
Stony Brook, have been named profes-
sors of physics at UCLA.
Alan Lightman, formerly a staff
member at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, has been
appointed professor of science and
writing at MIT, teaching in the de-
partments of physics and humanities.
Kevin D. Pang, a physicist at Cal-
tech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has
been awarded Dudley Observatory's
Herbert C. Pollack Award for re-
search in the history of astronomy
and astrophysics. Pang received the
$10 000 prize for his studies of an-
cient Chinese eclipse records aimed
at determining the past rotation rate
of the earth.Leon J. Radziemski, former head of
the physics department at New Mexi-
co State University, has been appoint-
ed associate dean and director of the
research center in the university's
college of arts and sciences.
Ethan T. Vishniac and Donald E.
Winget have been promoted from
assistant professors to associate
professors with tenure in the astron-
omy department at the University of
Texas at Austin.
OBITUARIES
William Savage
William R. Savage, a professor in the
department of physics and astronomy
at the University of Iowa, died on 28
May 1988 following a brief illness.
Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on 12
September 1926, Savage received his
BS in 1951 and his PhD in 1956, both
in physics, from Iowa State Universi-
ty. His thesis, done under Donald
Hudson and Frank H. Spedding, was a
study of the heat of sublimation of
rare-earth metals by an extension of
the Knudsen and Taylor-Langmuir
methods. From 1956 until 1958 he
worked as a research physicist at the
Honeywell Research Center in Hop-
kins, Minnesota. In 1958 he moved to
the Central Research Laboratories of
Texas Instruments at Dallas, where
he contributed to investigations of
surfac e properties of semiconductors
using the field emission microscope.
Savage joined the University of
Iowa as an associate professor of
physics in 1963. He established a
solid-state physics laboratory there
and supervised many MS and PhD
students on research projects involv-
ing measurements of the specific
heats, resistivities and magnetic sus-
William R. Savageceptibilities of dilute magnetic alloys
and intermediate-valence compounds.
During the year before his death he
turned his attention to the prepara-
tion and study of materials related to
the high-rc superconductors.
After volunteering several years
ago to teach a course in acoustics for
music and speech pathology students,
Savage became seriously interested in
musical acoustics. He collaborated on
studies of harpsichords and other
instruments. From 1976 until 1979 he
was chairman of the technical com-
mittee on musical acoustics of the
Acoustical Society of America. Be-
tween 1974 and 1987 he organized six
conferences on acoustics and the phys-
ics of sound and music that were held
at the University of Iowa.
William Savage was an enthusiastic
teacher and researcher who will be
fondly remembered by his students,
colleagues and friends.
JOHN W. SCHWEITZER
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Mylar Giri
Mylar Giri died suddenly on 1 July
1988, at the age of 37. This brought to
a premature end a promising career
as a physicist and educator. He was
an associate professor of physics at
the Hazleton campus of The Pennsyl-
vania State University, where he had
taught for eight years.
Giri was educated at Bangalore
University, the Indian Institute of
Technology, New Delhi, and Rutgers
University. He had been a research
scientist with E. I. du Pont de Ne-
mours & Company Inc and a visiting
professor at the University of Padua.
His research interests and publica-
tions were wide ranging, and included
percolation, phase transitions, poly-
mers, films and fractals. He brought
to these problems great intensity,
curiosity and enthusiasm. He pub-
lished only the most important contri-
butions (to his collaborators' occa-
sional dismay).
Giri was appreciated enormously
also for his dedication and skill in
teaching both researchers and un-
dergraduates. His generosity with
time to his students was legendary.
Those who knew him will miss his
wit, his warmth, his openness and
his intelligence.
MOSES CHAN
MILTON COLE
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, Pennsylvania
ATTILIO STELLA
University of Padua
Italy'
94 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 |
1.2810990.pdf | In Brief
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 94 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810990
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810990
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of PhysicsBoth men earned PhDs from Har-
vard: Ewen in 1951 and Purcell in
1938. Purcell shared the 1952 Nobel
Prize with Felix Bloch for the discov-
ery of nuclear magnetic resonance.
The Tinsley Prize was awarded to
Ewen and Purcell at the Boston AAS
meeting in January. —PHA
PHYSICISTS ELECTED
FOREIGN MEMBERS OF
SOVIET ACADEMY
The Soviet Academy of Sciences elect-
ed 16 US scholars as foreign members
last December. The scholars consti-
tute the largest group of foreign
members ever electe d at one time.
Eight of the 16 new members work in
physics or a closely related field:
Roald Hoffman, professor of chemis-
try at Cornell University; Peter David
Lax, professor of mathematics at the
Courant Institute of Mathematical
Sciences at New York University;
Edward N. Lorenz, professor at the
Center for Meteorology and Physical
Oceanography of MIT; Wolfgang Pan-
ofsky, director emeritus of SLAC;
David Pines, professor of physics at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign; Frank Press, president of
the National Academy of Sciences; J.
Robert Schrieffer, director of the In-
stitute for Theoretical Physics at the
University of California, Santa Bar-
bara; Samuel Ting, professor of phys-
ics at MIT; and Peter Wyllie, head of
the department of geological and pa-
leontological sciences at Caltech.
IN BRIEF
Steven Kivelson and Sudip Chak-
ravarty, former assistant professors
at the State University of New York,
Stony Brook, have been named profes-
sors of physics at UCLA.
Alan Lightman, formerly a staff
member at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, has been
appointed professor of science and
writing at MIT, teaching in the de-
partments of physics and humanities.
Kevin D. Pang, a physicist at Cal-
tech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has
been awarded Dudley Observatory's
Herbert C. Pollack Award for re-
search in the history of astronomy
and astrophysics. Pang received the
$10 000 prize for his studies of an-
cient Chinese eclipse records aimed
at determining the past rotation rate
of the earth.Leon J. Radziemski, former head of
the physics department at New Mexi-
co State University, has been appoint-
ed associate dean and director of the
research center in the university's
college of arts and sciences.
Ethan T. Vishniac and Donald E.
Winget have been promoted from
assistant professors to associate
professors with tenure in the astron-
omy department at the University of
Texas at Austin.
OBITUARIES
William Savage
William R. Savage, a professor in the
department of physics and astronomy
at the University of Iowa, died on 28
May 1988 following a brief illness.
Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on 12
September 1926, Savage received his
BS in 1951 and his PhD in 1956, both
in physics, from Iowa State Universi-
ty. His thesis, done under Donald
Hudson and Frank H. Spedding, was a
study of the heat of sublimation of
rare-earth metals by an extension of
the Knudsen and Taylor-Langmuir
methods. From 1956 until 1958 he
worked as a research physicist at the
Honeywell Research Center in Hop-
kins, Minnesota. In 1958 he moved to
the Central Research Laboratories of
Texas Instruments at Dallas, where
he contributed to investigations of
surfac e properties of semiconductors
using the field emission microscope.
Savage joined the University of
Iowa as an associate professor of
physics in 1963. He established a
solid-state physics laboratory there
and supervised many MS and PhD
students on research projects involv-
ing measurements of the specific
heats, resistivities and magnetic sus-
William R. Savageceptibilities of dilute magnetic alloys
and intermediate-valence compounds.
During the year before his death he
turned his attention to the prepara-
tion and study of materials related to
the high-rc superconductors.
After volunteering several years
ago to teach a course in acoustics for
music and speech pathology students,
Savage became seriously interested in
musical acoustics. He collaborated on
studies of harpsichords and other
instruments. From 1976 until 1979 he
was chairman of the technical com-
mittee on musical acoustics of the
Acoustical Society of America. Be-
tween 1974 and 1987 he organized six
conferences on acoustics and the phys-
ics of sound and music that were held
at the University of Iowa.
William Savage was an enthusiastic
teacher and researcher who will be
fondly remembered by his students,
colleagues and friends.
JOHN W. SCHWEITZER
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Mylar Giri
Mylar Giri died suddenly on 1 July
1988, at the age of 37. This brought to
a premature end a promising career
as a physicist and educator. He was
an associate professor of physics at
the Hazleton campus of The Pennsyl-
vania State University, where he had
taught for eight years.
Giri was educated at Bangalore
University, the Indian Institute of
Technology, New Delhi, and Rutgers
University. He had been a research
scientist with E. I. du Pont de Ne-
mours & Company Inc and a visiting
professor at the University of Padua.
His research interests and publica-
tions were wide ranging, and included
percolation, phase transitions, poly-
mers, films and fractals. He brought
to these problems great intensity,
curiosity and enthusiasm. He pub-
lished only the most important contri-
butions (to his collaborators' occa-
sional dismay).
Giri was appreciated enormously
also for his dedication and skill in
teaching both researchers and un-
dergraduates. His generosity with
time to his students was legendary.
Those who knew him will miss his
wit, his warmth, his openness and
his intelligence.
MOSES CHAN
MILTON COLE
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, Pennsylvania
ATTILIO STELLA
University of Padua
Italy'
94 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 |
1.857545.pdf | A periodic grain consolidation model of porous media
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon
Citation: Physics of Fluids A: Fluid Dynamics (1989-1993) 1, 38 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.857545
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.857545
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38A periodic grain consolidation model of porous media
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon
Department o/Chemical Engineering, University 0/ Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
(Received 1 August 1988; accepted 22 September 1988)
Calculations are presented for a periodic grain consolidation model of porous media. The
model is an extension of previous work on lattices of spheres, in which the radius of the spheres
is allowed to increase past the point of close touching to form a consolidated medium. A
collocation method is used for the solution of Stokes How in terms of Lamb's general solution
in spherical coordinates. Excellent accuracy is achieved with only moderate computational
effort. At low concentrations up to the close touching limit excellent agreement is found with
the earlier calculations of Zick and Homsy [J. Fluid Mech. 115, 13 (1982)]. For high
concentrations above the close touching limit, an asymptotic theory is presented that agrees
within a few percent with the numerical computations over the entire consolidated range.
I. INTRODUCTION
Fluid How through a porous medium plays an impor
tant role in many engineering systems such as packed beds of
particles, fibrous materials used in filtration, and naturally
occurring materials such as permeable rock in petroleum
reservoirs. Theoretical attempts to model such materials
generally fall into two classes. The first class employs net
works of capillaries and pores of various sizes with simple
rules for How resistance based on the size of the capillaries.
The simplified mechanics allows consideration of a large dis
tribution of capillary sizes and network topologies yielding
information on the statistical relationship between network
structure and macroscopic How properties. Such informa
tion may be combined with empirical data to achieve good
descriptions of real porous materials. In the second class of
model, detailed How fields are calculated for idealized media
typically involving lattices of simple particle shapes such as
spheres or cylinders. These models may provide highly accu
rate results, but their usefulness depends on the extent to
which they are a faithful representation of the actual materi
al of interest. As an example, a lattice of close touching
spheres might be an excellent model of a packed bed of
smooth particles, but perform poorly as a model of fibrous
materials or permeable rock. In the present effort, we pre
sent a new model of porous media, which falls in this second
class, but which captures certain features of real media not
previously represented in lattice-type models.
The simplest type of lattice model one might consider
consists of two-dimensional arrays of circular cylinders.
Such models were widely studied during the 1950s and 19608
using ad hoc "cell models" with artificial boundary condi
tions. Results from this approach are not rigorous and need
not be discussed further. The first rigorous results for the
permeability, or alternatively the friction coefficient, of a
regular lattice of circular cylinders were presented by San
gani and Acrivos. I These authors gave results for both
square and hexagonal arrays and discussed their results in
the context of heat transfer in porous media. A further study
of two-dimensional lattices of cylinders was conducted by
Larson and Higdon,2.3 who considered How in both the axial
and transverse directions. A variety of different lattice geom-etries and inclusion shapes were analyzed to study their ef
fect on the concentration dependence and anisotropy of the
permeability. The most significant contribution of this work
was its use of these lattice models to investigate the How near
the boundary of a porous medium.
Arrays of two-dimensional inclusions present a simple
model for analysis and may prove useful in modeling fibrous
materials, but they fall short when three-dimensional media,
such as packed beds, are to be modeled. Hasimot04 gave the
first results for three-dimensional lattices of spheres, though
his results were limited to small concentrations. Snyder and
Steware and Sorensen and Stewart6 calculated the perme
ability for a few close touching lattices of spheres represent
ing the high concentration limit. The first results for a full
range of concentrations for spheres in regular arrays were
given by Zick and Homsy7 and by Sangani and Acrivos.8
These results for the friction coefficient (or permeability)
were obtained by independent research groups using differ
ent methods and may be considered as the definitive results
for this classic model.
With reliable results for lattices of spheres, one may ask
whether further studies based on idealized periodic lattices
are worthwhile. It is certainly feasible to calculate the per
meability for other particle inclusion shapes, perhaps to in
vestigate anisotropy, but there is a limit beyond which
further permutations lose interest. We believe that there are
certain extensions to existing models that do add significant
new physical insight, even within the context of isotropic
media. Flow through lattices of spheres involves the concept
of How around objects rather than How through narrow con
strictions found in many porous media. Only in the close
touching limit does the lattice begin to mimic this type of
How. Owing to the kinematic constraints of the lattice, ar
rays of spheres are limited to relatively modest maximum
concentrations (0.5236, 0.6802, and 0.7405 for the classic
geometries), which fall significantly below the solid volume
fraction of many real porous materials, especially in geologi
cal applications. One final limitation of sphere models is that
they represent unconsolidated media, that is, the solid inclu
sions are separated from each other by the Huid. In a consoli
dated medium, including essentially all real media, the two
phases are both interconnected with neither phase isolated
38 Phys. Fluids A 1 (1), January 1989 0899-8213/89/010038-09$01.90 © 1988 American Institute of Physics 38
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38GRAIN CONSOLIDATION MODEL
UNIT CELL 1m W
FIG. I. Schematic view of three-dimensional consolidated medium based
on overlapping spheres on a simple cubic lattice. Inset shows unit cell used
for computations.
into distinct inclusions in a space filling medium. While not
essential for accurate estimates of permeability, the solid
connectedness is important for various other transport prop
erties. These include the effect of heat conduction through
the solid matrix and the deformation of the solid in an elastic
medium. The propagation of acoustic waves or vibrations
may be markedly different through a consolidated model of
a porous medium than through a lattice of isolated spheres.
To address these issues, we present calculations for flow
through a model of a consolidated porous medium.
The simplest way to achieve a consolidated medium is
through a trivial extension of work on classic sphere lattices.
We retain the same lattice geometries and spherical inclu
sions, but allow the sphere radii to increase beyond the point
of touching (see Fig. I). The overlapping spheres then form
a consolidated medium whose volume fraction may increase
up to one, completely filling the space. All channels for fluid
flow are closed off at concentrations just a few percent below
unity. At volume fractions just below these critical concen
trations, the fluid spaces consist of very narrow constrictions
connecting somewhat larger pores. The shape and sizes of
the pores and constrictions vary according to the lattice ge
ometry and solid concentration. While this overlapping
sphere model is chosen primarily for its mathematical sim
plicity, it is also appealing because it mimics certain features
of real porous media in which grains of solid are forced to
gether under high pressure and temperature, flattening their
contact surfaces.
To solve for the velocity field and permeability of the
consolidated grain lattices, we require a technique for the
solution of the Stokes equations in periodic domains. There
39 Phys. Fluids A. Vol. 1. No.1. January 1989 are a number of possible choices dictated by the representa
tion of the velocity field and the manner in which periodicity
is enforced. If one employs the periodic form of the funda
mental solution as given by Hasimoto,4 then this condition is
satisfied implicitly and the only remaining boundary condi
tion is the no-slip condition on the sphere under the flow
produced by a specified mean pressure gradient. This was
the approach chosen by both Zick and Homsy and by San
gani and Acrivos. The former used an integral equation
based on the fundamental solution, while the latter group
employed a harmonic expansion based on the fundamental
solution and its derivatives.
Owing to the complexity of the periodic fundamental
solution, we have chosen to work with the free space form of
the fundamental solution, sometimes called the Stokeslet.
Under such conditions, periodicity must be enforced expli
citly on the boundaries of the unit cell. In our initial attempts
at this problem, considerable effort was devoted to the solu
tion in the form of an integral equation using refinements of
the method first proposed by Youngren and Acrivos.9 De
spite the success of this approach in the work of Zick and
Homsy and in our own two-dimensional calculations, we
were unable to achieve satisfactory results using the integral
method. The primary difficulties were the extremely long
computational times required for accurate integral evalua
tions over the complicated body surfaces and the construc
tion of an accurate interpolant for the surface force over the
intersecting spherical surfaces. Zick and Homsy were able to
avoid these difficulties by performing analytical integrations
using a global expansion based on spherical harmonics.
These simplifications did not apply for the truncated spheri
cal surfaces in our domain.
After abandoning the integral equation approach, we
formulated the problem as a collocation method based on
the harmonic expansion of the velocity field using Lamb's
general solution in spherical coordinates (see Happel and
BrennerlO). Such collocation methods have been used wide
ly to solve Stokes flow problems in a variety of geome
tries.II-13 One difficulty that is often encountered is the ex
treme sensitivity to the placement ofthe collocation points.
This problem was avoided by using an excess number of
collocation points and finding a least squares solution of the
resulting overconstrained linear system. The details of the
method are described in Secs. II and III. We note that excel
lent accuracy was achieved with modest computation times.
Typical runs on a single processor of the Cray XMP-48
ranged from a few seconds for nonoverlapping spheres to
several seconds for the overlapping consolidated media. An
asymptotic approximation for high concentration is de
scribed in Sec. IV. Detailed results of the numerical compu
tations are given in Sec. V along with comparisons with the
results of Zick and Homsy at low concentrations and the
asymptotic theory at high concentration.
II. MATHEMATICAL FORMULATION
Under the assumption of vanishingly small Reynolds
number, the velocity field is described by the solution of the
Stokes equations representing the momentum balance and
the continuity equation representing the mass balance,
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 39
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38-Vp + ftV2U = 0,
VoU = o. (1)
(2)
In spherical coordinates, Lamb's general solution to
these equations is written (Happel and Brenner, 10 p. 62) Negative orders are identical with n replaced by -(n + I).
In these expressions, p, X, and ~ are the coefficients multi
plying each harmonic. They will, of course, take on different
values for each value of m, n. The factor (1/a)" has been
pulled out of each constant for convenience; a will be defined
later as the radius of a sphere. The argument of the associat
ed Legendre function P '; is of course cos 0 in all cases. In the
tP dependence, we have included only the term sin mtP or
cos mtP, which is used in satisfying the boundary conditions
in the present problem. In all cases, the general solution in
cludes both terms. 00
p= L PIt' (3)
n = -00
00
u= L [VX(rx,,) +V<I>" +aJ2Vp" +p"rp,,],
II = -00
(4)
where Pn' X" and <l>n are solid spherical harmonics. The
numerical coefficients an and PIt are defined for conven
ience. Their values are given by The above expressions for the velocity are valid at all
values of r, however, they are not the most convenient forms
for satisfying the no-slip condition on a sphere of radius a. In
this case, we follow Happel and Brenner and define the ex
pressions a" = (n + 3)/2(n + 1)(2n + 3)ft,
p,,= -nl(n+I)(2n+3)ft· (5)
Each of the harmonics p", X,,, and <1>" is written in
terms of associated Legendre functions in the form 00 (na n) L PIt +-<1>" , ,,= _ 00 2ft (2n + 3) a r = a rnp,;(cos O)eim¢. (6)
With these expressions for the harmonics, the three
components of velocity associated with each harmonic may
be written explicitly as f (_n.....;.(_n_+_I_)a_ p" + n(n -I) <I>/l) , (8)
40 ur = (ria)" cos mtP [~P';(nlr)
+pP';(na" +p,,)r],
Uo = -cosmtP Xp';-.-+<I>-P';-,,= _ 00 2ft (2n + 3) a r = a
00
[ro(Vxu)],=a = L [n(n + l)X,,]r=a·
n = -00 ( r)" (-m -d I
a sm 0 dO r
-d pIt ) +p- ma"r , dO
( r)n (-d -m (7) For velocity equal to zero on a sphere r = a, each of
these expressions must be zero. This result is used to advan
tage in Sec. III.
u'" = -sin mtP -X -r;: -<l>P'; --.-a dO r sm 0
-pm rm) -p "a" -.-. sm 0 It is convenient to write the stress tensor as the sum of a
pressure contribution and a viscous contribution such that
O"i) = -p8i) + 'Ti). The explicit form of the viscous stress T
in spherical coordinates becomes
'Trr = (ria)" cos mtP P';{~[2n(n -l)/r] + p(2)(n + I )(na" + P It}'
'T rO = ( : r cos mtP P ~n (X m; :i; ol) ) + ( : r cos mtP :0 P'; (~ (2n;; 2) + p( 2na" + p" ) ) ,
(r)". d m(-(1-n») (r)n. A.pm( A;.2(n-l)m _(2na/l+p,,)m)
'Tr¢ = -sm mtP -P n X + -sm m'l' n -'V _2· 0 -P . 0 ' a dO r a r sm sm
'TOO = ( : r cos mtP [X C :i: 0) (:0 P'; -cot OP '; )] + ( : r cos mtP [ ~ (~ ) (:02
2 P'; + nP:7) ]
+ (: r cos mtP [P(2) (a" :022 p~n + (nan + PIt )P,;)] ,
'To", = (: r sin mtP[x (+ ) (cot 0 :0 P'; -Si:220 P'; -:022 p,;)]
+ (: r sin mtP[~ + p(anr)] (r-s~mo) (:0 P'; -cot OP';) ,
'T "'''' = ( : r cos mtP [X C~i!~) (:0 P ~n -cot 0 P ~n ) ]
+ ( : )" cos mtP [ ~ (~ ) ( nP ~n + cot 0 :0 P '; -Si:220 P '; ) ]
+ (:)" cos mtP [P(2) (nan + PIt )P'; -a" Si:220 P'; + an cot 0 :0 p,;)].
Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1, No.1, January 1989 R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon (9)
40
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38As in the case of the velocity field, the negative orders
are found by replacing n with -(n + 1). This completes
the specification of the velocity, pressure, and stress fields.
III. GEOMETRY SPECIFICATION AND BOUNDARY
CONDITIONS
A three-dimensional periodic lattice is characterized by
a set of three independent base vectors Si' In standard nota
tion, we specify the base vectors, the center-to-center dis
tance d, and the volume of the unit cell Vo for the three
classic lattices:
(a) simple cubic (SC),
s, = d( 1,0,0), S2 = d(O,I,O),
S3 = d(O,O,1), Vo = d3
;
(b) body centered cubic (BCC),
SI = 3-1/2d(1,I, -1), S2 = 3-1/2d( -1,1,1),
S3 = 3-1/2d(1, -1,1), Vo = p-1/2d3;
(c) face centered cubic (FCC),
SI = 2-1/2d(1,1,0), S2 = 2-1I2d(0,1,1),
S3 = 2-1/2d(1,0,1), Vo = 2-1/2d3• (10)
(11)
(12)
For spheres of radius a centered on the lattice points, the
volume fraction of solids is given by c = ~1Ta3 / Vo. For over
lapping spheres, the volume fraction is given by a slightly
more complicated expression that accounts for the volume
of the spherical caps in the overlapping region.
The optimal choice for the origin of the coordinate sys
tem and the boundaries of the unit cell requires some careful
consideration. The primary concern is to minimize the num
ber of surfaces on which the boundary conditions must be
enforced. With the origin at the center of a spherical inclu
sion, the no-slip boundary condition on that sphere may be
satisfied implicitly as shown below. The obvious choice for
cell boundaries is the parallelepiped corresponding to a unit
lattice cell centered on the origin. This is indeed the best
choice for a SC lattice and is illustrated in Fig. 1. Unfortu
nately, for BCC and FCC lattices, this choice leads to addi
tional solid surfaces intruding into the domain. This occurs
because the FCC spheres have 12 nearest neighbors-six
along lattice vectors and six additional neighbors at the same
distance corresponding to combinations oflattice vectors. A
sphere in the BCC lattice has eight nearest neighbors. The
additional solid surfaces that intrude in each case would re
quire additional collocation points to enforce the no-slip
condition, and hence would increase the computational ef
fort required. To avoid this problem, we consider vectors
drawn to the 12 nearest neighbors in the FCC case and to the
eight nearest and six next nearest neighbors in the BCC case.
Planes perpendicular to these vectors at the midpoint
between sphere centers form the periodic boundaries of the
unit cell. The unit cells thus defined are polyhedrons with 12
faces for the FCC lattice and 14 faces for the BCC lattice.
While this choice of geometry may appear obtuse, it proves
the most efficient from a computational point of view.
Having specified the geometry of oui' system, we tum to
the question of boundary conditions. The no-slip condition
on the sphere r = a requires the three velocity components
41 Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1, No.1, January 1989 (7) to be zero. As noted earlier, this condition is equivalent
to the requirement that the three expressions (8) equal zero.
Comparing spherical harmonics of positive and negative or
der, it is easy to show that this condition is satisfied identical
ly if the negative orders are chosen as
(13)
A comment is in order. In exterior flow problems, such
as flow around a single particle, only harmonics of negative
order may be employed, or else the velocity will become un
bounded at infinity. Conversely, for interior flows, only posi
tive orders may be employed if the origin lies in the fluid
domain, or else the velocity will be unbounded at r = O. In
the present case, neither r = 0 nor r = 00 in the fluid do
main, and there is a degree of redundancy. This redundancy
is exploited as shown above to satisfy the boundary condi
tion on the sphere r = a implicitly.
With the no-slip condition on the sphere satisfied, we
require only that the velocity and stress satisfy the periodic
ity conditions at the cell boundaries. Specifically, assuming a
mean pressure gradient Vp through the medium, the velocity
and stress at points A and B on cell boundaries must satisfy
and (14)
fA + fB = Vp·(XAOA + XBOB),
where points A and B are related by a linear, integral combi
nation of lattice vectors. Here 0A and 0B are unit normal
vectors pointing out of the unit cell.
For certain faces perpendicular to a coordinate axis,
these conditions may be further simplified owing to symme
try. Without loss of generality, assume that the mean pres
sure gradient lies along the z axis. On a surface normal to the
z axis, the simplified boundary conditions are
u -(u·o)o = 0
and (15)
foo = -Vp·x = const.
This applies to the top and bottom surfaces in the SC and
BCC lattices.
On a surface perpendicular to the x or y axis, the bound
ary conditions become
uoo = 0
and (16)
f -(foo)o = O.
This applies to all four side surfaces in the SC lattice and
the four vertical side faces in the BCC lattice.
Finally, note that all lattices possess 16-fold symmetry
with all quantities being either symmetric or antisymmetric
about the planes z = 0, x = 0, y = 0, and x = y. This greatly
reduces the number and area of the surfaces that must be
covered by collocation points. There is a proportionate de-
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 41
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38TOP VIEW
SC
FRONT VIEW
(a) ::.~::'::.: .. TOP VIEW
. . '" .' ... . . ..... : ..
· '"
: :::' . :-:
: .'. . ......... .
· .... . .. . : .. : .. <.~::': .' : : .
..... .... . " ." ., .' .' . · .
'.'
' .. BCC
FRONT VIEW
(b)
crease in the number of basis functions in each harmonic
expansion. Careful consideration of these symmetries leads
to the result that each of the harmonic functions contain
only the following terms:
Xm,n: r;: sin me, n = 4,6,8,10, ... ,
m = 4,8,12, ... , n>m; (17)
ct> m.n: P';: cos mt/J, n = 1,3,5,7, ... ,
m = 0,4,8,12, ... , n>m; (18)
Pm.n: P';:cosmt/J, n = 1,3,5,7, ... ,
m = 0,4,8,12, ... , n>m. (19)
With these specifications, the solution for the velocity
field reduces to the problem of solving a linear system of
equations for the unknown coefficients of the basis func
tions. The equations consist of the boundary conditions ( 14 )
or ( 15) and (16) applied at discrete collocation points. As
noted earlier, the solution of such a system is often sensitive
to the layout of the collocation points. To avoid this prob
lem, we overspecify the problem by including an excess num
ber of collocation points and seek a least squares solution. A
few examples of the distribution of collocation points are
shown in Fig. 2.
SC BCC FCC
FIG. 3. Layout of collocation points for numerical computations: (a) SC,
(b) BCC, and (c) FCC.
42 Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1, No.1, January 1989 '. TOP VIEW
FCC
FRONT VIEW
(e) FIG. 2. Channel cross sections for
use in asymptotic theory; length
scale I as defined in Eq. (22).
The least squares solution of a system oflinear equations
Ax = b consists of a solution vector x*, which minimizes the
sum of the residuals r = b -Ax*. For an overconstrained
system, A is an M X N matrix with M > N. The solution of the
least squares problem is simply the solution of the modified
linear system A TAx = A Tb. The direct solution of this sys
tem is sensitive to roundoff error owing to the poor condition
of the matrix AT A. To avoid such problems, we follow the
standard procedure of finding the QR decomposition of A
and solving the right triangular system Rx = QTb. The QR
decomposition was computed via a modified Gram
Schmidt routine run on a SUN 3/160 workstation or using
the UNPACK routine LLSIA on a Cray XMP-48. This latter
routine effects the QR decomposition by Householder trans
formations.
IV. ASYMPTOTIC THEORY
As the concentration of solids increases toward the
maximum concentration for which the fluid may flow, the
resistance to flow is dominated by the resistance in the small
constrictions where the fluid cross section reaches its mini
mum. Near the maximum concentration, these constrictions
are of simple shape whose size changes slowly on a length
scale based on a characteristic diameter. Thus it is possible to
predict the resistance in these channels by a lubrication-type
theory based on the resistance of a straight channel with the
same cross section.
In the lubrication limit, the cross section of the SC con
strictions is simply a square, while the BCC limit is an isos
celes triangle with height v2 times its base, and the FCC
limit is an equilateral triangle. These cross-sectional shapes
are illustrated in Fig. 3. For flow in a straight channel of
fixed cross section the pressure drop may be related to the
volume rate Q by an expression of the form
R. E. Larson and J. J. l. Higdon 42
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38(20)
where /3 is a dimensionless numerical constant and I is a
characteristic length scale for the cross section. Values for
the three channel shapes in the lattices are given below. For a
channel of slowly varying cross section with I(s), sbeing the
distance measured along the channel, this equation may be
used to find an integral for the pressure drop in the form
t:.. -fLQ + fL, ds
P -/3 - -L, [I(S)]4 . (21)
The limits of the integral L.,L2 are determined by the
lattice geometry and are representative of the length of the
constriction. With this integral expression for the pressure
drop through a constriction, we may estimate the pressure
drop associated with a given volume flow rate and calculate
the friction coefficient or permeability for the lattice.
For the lattice and channel geometries required here, we
have the following geometric expressions:
SC: /3 = 0.5623 = (111/2) d -~,
L. = -d /2, L2 = d /2;
BCC: /3=0.85651 = (V6/4)d-~,
L. = -(1I2V6)d, L2 = (1I2V6)d;
FCC: /3 = 0.77942 = (lIv3) d -~,
L. = ( -lIv6)d, L2 = (1I2V6)d. (22)
The definition of the length scale 1 in each case is indicat
ed on Fig. 3. The values of /3 for the square (SC) and for the
equilateral triangle (FCC) may be found in Happel and
BrennerlO (see pp. 38 and 39). The value for the BCC case
was found by solving the channel flow problem using a sim
ple collocation method.
V.RESULTS
In this section, we present the numerical results for the
calculation offriction coefficients and permeabilities for the
SC, BCC, and FCC lattices. Following previous authors and
consistent with Zick and Homsy,7 we define the friction co
efficient K as
K = F /61TfLaU, (23)
where Fis the force on a single inclusion, a is the radius of the
sphere, U is the superficial velocity through the lattice, and fL
is the fluid viscosity. This definition is quite useful for
spheres because it has the value 1.0 in the limit as concentra
tion approaches zero. It is somewhat artificial for overlap
ping spheres, but we retain it for convenience.
To demonstrate the convergence of the numerical meth
od, Table I gives the values of the friction factor for two
concentrations for each of the three lattices. The higher con
centration corresponds to the close touching limit for
spheres, while the lower concentration corresponds to the
value used by Zick and Homsy in their convergence tests.
Excellent accuracy is achieved in all cases; the results agree
with those of Zick and Homsy to within the stated accuracy
43 Phys. Fluids A. Vol. 1, No.1. January 1989 TABLE I. Friction coefficient K as a function of concentration for different
lattices. Order indicates highest-order harmonic used in expansion. Higher
concentration for each lattice represents close touching limit.
Lattice se Bee FCC se Bee FCC
c 0.027 0.125 0.216 0.5236 0.6802 0.7405
Order
14 2.0044 4.442 7.766 38.825 124.9 127.7
20 2.0074 4.446 7.758 40.369 144.0 315.0
28 2.0077 41.357 158.4 385.8
38 2.0077 42.388
42 41.951 162.3 428.7
50 41.995 162.6 430.7
of those earlier results. The order number in the first column
refers to the highest -order harmonic appearing in the expan
sion. As an example, a computation up to 28th order would
have 49 basis functions for each variable with a total of
3 ( 49) = 147 total unknowns; 100 collocation points were
used for a total of 300 equations. Typical Cray XMP-48
computation times would be under 1 sec for the SC lattice,
about 12 sec for the BCC, and 5 sec for the FCC lattice. For
an order 50 computation, there would be 468 total un
knowns with approximately 1000 equations. Cray CPU
times were of order 11 sec, 42 sec, and 22 sec for the SC,
BeC, and FCC lattices, respectively.
Table II presents similar convergence tests for consoli
dated media with overlapping spheres. As before, excellent
accuracy was achieved for all lattices. The higher concentra
tion in each case was the maximum for which three or four
figure accuracy was achieved. Slightly higher concentra
tions could be run at somewhat higher computational ex
pense. Such calculations were unnecessary owing to the ex
cellent performance of the asymptotic model developed in
Sec. IV. This behavior is described below.
Having demonstrated the reliability of the numerical
method for a few selected concentrations, we present in Ta
ble III, a comprehensive listing of the friction coefficients for
the entire range of concentrations covering both sphere lat
tices and consolidated media. At the highest concentrations,
TABLE II. Friction coefficient K as a function of concentration of various
lattices of consolidated media of overlapping spheres. Order indicates high-
est-order harmonic used in expansion. Highest concentration for each lat-
tice type is the highest concentration for which three or four significant
figure accuracy was confirmed.
Lattice se Bee FCC SC BCC FCC
c 0.70 0.85 0.85 0.90 0.94 0.92
Order
20 1178 8648
28 1395 1076 1192 3186 9404 2267
42 1398 1074 2170 4096 11400 17640
50 1398 1073 2209 4291 11450 24180
58 2210 24670
64 2210 24810
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 43
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:38TABLE III. Friction coefficient as a function of concentration for lattices of
spheres and overlapping spheres. All numbers are accurate to within ± I in
the last place, except where the last digit is underlined in which case the
uncertainty is ± 2 in that place. Values indicated by * are those predicted
by the asymptotic theory in Sec. IV. Concentrations for which the resistance
becomes infinite are SC: C = 0.965 069, BCC: c = 0.994 500, FCC:
c = 0.964 103.
Concentration SC BCC FCC
0.000 125 1.096 1.098 1.098
0.001 1.212 1.217 1.217
0.008 1.5247 1.539 1.539
0.027 2.0077 2.044 2.044
0.064 2.8102 2.889 2.889
0.125 4.292 4.446 4.446
0.216 7.4423 7.739 7.758
0.343 15.402 16.34 16.64
0.450 28.09 31.7 33.39
0.5236 41.99 51.7 57.38
0.53 43.6
0.55 48.8
0.60 66.10 88.87 108.0
0.65 93.36
0.68018 162.6 229.5
0.70 139.8 191.0
0.72 346.0
0.74048 431.0
0.75 228.3 299.2 480.0
0.80 426.9 520.5 913.8
0.85 1.020 X 10' 1.0i3x IO' 2.210X IO'
0.90 4.29X 10' 3.05X 10' 9.343 X 10'
4.22X 10'*
0.92 1.20 X 10" 5.47 X 104 2.48 X 104
1.114 X 10"* 2.523 X 10"*
0.94 5.726X 104* 1.14 X 104 1.5 X 10-'
1.23 X 104* 1.307 X 105*
0.95 2.583X 105* 6.189X 105*
0.96 1.447 X 10"· 3.2X 10' 3.06x 107*
3.425 X 10'*
0.98 2.6X 105
2.667 X 105.
0.99 5.944X 10"·
predictions based on the asymptotic theory are indicated by
*. Examining the results for c = 0.92 for the SC and FCC
lattices and 0.94 for the BCC lattice, we see that the comput
ed results mesh smoothly with the asymptotics at these high
concentrations. In fact, the asymptotic results provide a
quite adequate model over the entire range of concentrations
for the consolidated media. This is seen clearly in Figs. 4 (a)-
4( c), where the friction coefficients are plotted as a function
of concentration. The dashed lines show the results of the
asymptotic theory; the agreement is good even down to the
close touching limit. Figure 5 shows the friction factors for
all three lattices on a single graph. We note the qualitative
similarity among all three curves. The fact that the simple
cubic ° crosses over the body centered!:::" at high concentra
tion is due to the fact that it will reach its maximum concen
tration for flow at a smaller value than the other lattice.
Finally, we note the smooth behavior of the curves in cross
ing the limit of close touching spheres, marked by the sym
bols O,!:::", and 0 for SC, BCC, and FCC, respectively. There
is no qualitative change in the slope or curvature at this
point. In fact, the location of the crossover point would be
44 Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1, No.1, January 1989 12.0
(a)
SC
g 10.0
3
I-8.0 z w U u: u.. 6.0 w 8
z Q 4.0
b a: u.. 2.0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
12.0
(b)
BCC
10.0 g
3
8.0
I-z
W /. U , /.
u:: 6.0 , /.
u.. , ,
w 0 ()
Z 4.0
0
i= () a: 2.0 u..
0.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
12.0
(e)
FCC g 10.0
z ...J
!Z 8.0
w U
u:: 6.0 u.. w 0 ()
z 4.0 Q Q
a: u.. 2.0
0.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
FIG. 4. Dimensionless friction coefficient K as a function of concentration
c. Vertical lines mark the close touching limit for spheres and maximum
concentration. (a) SC, (b) BCC, and (c) FCC.
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 44
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:383
ffi
s;2
u. u. w 8
~ 5 if u.
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
FIG. 5. Combined friction coefficient figures for the three lattices. Symbols
identify the individual curves and mark the concentration at which the
spheres reach the close touching limit. SC: 0, BCC: £:,., and FCC: D.
quite indistinguishable on the curves if it w~re not explicitly
marked.
Although the data presented on friction coefficients
completely specify the medium's resistance to flow, it is
sometimes more convenient to examine the permeability k,
defined in Darcy's law,
flU = -kVp. (24)
The permeability thus defined has units of length squared.
For a given superficial velocity U, we need to know the mean
pressure gradient Vp. This is simply given by the force on an
inclusion divided by the volume of the unit cell containing
the inclusion, F / Vo. With the force defined in terms of the
friction coefficient K, this leads to
k= Vo/61TaK. (25)
With this relationship, the nondimensional permeabil
ity (61Tak / Vo) is simply the reciprocal of the friction coeffi
cient. This definition is not the best choice because the factor
a/ Vo changes as a function of concentration. A more natural
scaling is to nondimensionalize k with respect to d 2, where d
is the interparticle distance in the lattice. The nondimen
sional permeability may then be written
(26)
The permeability thus ca1culated is presented in Figs.
6(a)-6(c) for each of the three lattices. The curves for all
three lattices are plotted in Fig. 7 for comparison. The ap
pearance of these curves is exactly as one would infer from
the previously shown results for friction coefficients.
45 Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1. No.1. January 1989 2.0
(al SC
0.0
1 -2.0
z -4.0 -I
5 -6.0
iii < -8.0 w
::i a: w
~ -10.0
-12.0 \
\
-14.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
2.0
(b)
0.0 BCC
,.. -2.0
I
3 -4.0
5 -6.0
iii
~ -8.0
:::E , , a: , , w -10.0 ~
-12.0
-14.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
2.0
(el FCC
0.0
1 -2.0
3 -4.0
5 -6.0
~ w -8.0 ::i a: w
~ -10.0
-12.0
-14.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 O.S 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
FI G. 6. Dimensionless permeability kid' as a function of concentration c.
Vertical lines mark the close touching limit for spheres and maximum con
centration. (al SC, (b) BCC, and (c) FCC.
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 45
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129.100.58.76 On: Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:59:382.0 r------------------,
0.0
,..
I
3 -4.0
~
::::i -6.0 iii
~ ::t -8.0 a: w
!l.. -10.0
-12.0
-14.0'--__ .L-. __ -'-__ -'-__ --.l._---'J...LJ
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
CONCENTRATION c
FIG. 7. Combined permeability figures for the three lattices. Symbols iden
tify the individual curves and mark the concentration at which the spheres
reach the close touching limit. SC: 0, BCC: 6, and FCC: D.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank L. Schwartzi 4, 15 and D.
Johnson ofSchlumberger-Doll for suggesting this problem
46 Phys. Fluids A, Vol. 1, No.1, January 1989 in connection with acoustic propagation in porous media.
This problem has been studied by P. Shen of Exxon Corpora
tion with a collocation method based on a different set of
expansion functions. Computations were performed on the
Cray XMP-48 at the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications at the Unversity of Illinois.
This work was supported by the National Science Foun
dation.
'A. S. Sangani and A. Acrivos, Int. J. Multiphase Flow 8,193 (1982).
2R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon, J. Fluid Mech. 166,449 (1986).
'R. E. Larson and J. 1. L. Higdon, 1. Fluid Mech. 178, 119 (1987).
4H. Hasimoto, J. Fluid Mech. 5, 317 (1959).
'L. J. Snyder and W. E. Stewart, AIChEJ.12, 167 (1966).
oJ. P. Sorensen and W. E. Stewart, Chern. Eng. Sci. 29, 819 (1974).
7A. A. Zick and G. M. Homsy, J. Fluid Mech. 115,13 (1982).
KA. S. Sangani and A. Acrivos, Int. J. Multiphase Flow 8,343 (1982).
"G. K. Youngren and A. Acrivos, J. Fluid Mech. 69, 377 (1975).
IOJ. Happel and H. Brenner, Low Reynolds Number Hydrodynamics (Pren-
tice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1975).
"P. Ganatos, R. Pfeffer, and S. Weinbaum, J. Fluid Mech. 84, 79 (1978).
12p. Ganatos, R. Pfeffer, and S. Weinbaum, 99, 755 (1980).
IJZ._Y. Yan, S. Weinbaum, P. Ganatos, and R. Pfeffer, 1. Fluid Mech. 174,
39 (1987).
14J. N. Roberts and L. M. Schwartz, Phys. Rev. B 31, 5990 (1985).
"L. W. Schwartz and S. Kimminau, Geophys. 52,1402 (1987).
R. E. Larson and J. J. L. Higdon 46
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1.342804.pdf | Continuous Al5 Nb3Ge superconducting tapes via the amorphous state
Tariq Manzur and Mireille Treuil Clapp
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 2384 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.342804
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.342804
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 13:34:48Continuous AI5 Nb3Ge superconducting tapes via the amorphous state
Tariq Manzur
Metallurgy Depanment, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06268
Mireiile Treuii Clapp
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universiiy oJIVlassachusetts, Amherst, Massachuseits 01003
(Received 6 October 1988; accepted for publication 22 November 1988)
Alloys of Nb75Ge24.5 Bo.s were rapidly solidified into amorphous ribbons using the melt
spinning technique. After annealing continuous A15 tapes were obtained with an average grain
size of 30 nm. It was not possible to form a continuous tape by melt spinning directly into the
Al5 structure since only brittle fragments were obtained. The amorphous annealed A15 phase
was close to stoichiometry with a lattice parameter of 0.514 nm and a superconducting
transition temperature of 18 K. The critical current densities were 5 X lO\() and 8 X 10M A/m2 at
magnetic fields of a and 15 T, respectively. This processing technique could be the initial step
in the fabrication of multifilamentary Nb3Ge superconducting composites.
I. INTRODUCTION
Large-scale applications of superconductivity require
the use of multifilamentary composites consisting of thin
superconducting filaments embedded in a Cu matrix. A15's
have the highest critical current densities at high magnetic
fields, but since they are extremely brittle, unusual tech
niques have had to be devised for their fabrication, such as
the bronze route for Nb3Sn, and in situ and powder metal
lurgy. Stoichiometric Nb3Ge is one of the AlS's with the
highest superconducting critical parameters, but it is diffi
cult to synthesize. Sputtering1,2 and chemical vapor depo
sition} have been successful in forming thin films. If this
material is to be used for large-scale applications, a method
must be found for forming continuous filaments of A15
Nb3Ge near stoichiometry. A novel processing technique
has been discovered recently4-6 that has been successful in
forming thin Al5 tapes with improved superconducting and
mechanical properties, The basic approach was to melt spin
the desired Al5 compound into an amorphous ribbon and
then to anneal to form an ultrafine-grained A15 tape. This
was very successful in the processing of Nb3(AlSiB) alloys,
In this study the same processing technique has been applied
to Nb3Ge,
It EXPERIMENT
Samples of Nb3Ge1 _ x Ex were prepared from high-pu
rity elemental powders: Nb 99.8, Ge 99.99, and B 99.9 wt. %
metallic purity. The powders were weighed out stoichiome
trically on a microbalance; the total weights of the samples
were between 1.5 and 2 g. The samples were compacted un
der high pressure (100 MPa) with a hydraulic press to form
pellets. They were then arc melted for 10 s in a water-cooled
copper hearth with a titanium getter under an argon atmo
sphere ( -17 kPa) using a nonconsumable tungsten elec
trode. To ensure homogeneity, the samples were turned over
and remelted for the same amount of time. A Nb wire 1.0
mm diam was attached to one end of the pellets during melt
ing, for reasons to be described shortly. Different composi.
tions of Nb and Ge were chosen ranging from Nb73Ge27 to
Nb79Ge21• Boron (2-0.5 at. %) was added to replace Ge and
promote glass formation. A. Melt spinning
The melt-spinning machine consisted of six essential
components (Fig, 1): (1) a vacuum chamber with a gas inlet
allowing the quenching to take place in a controlled atmo
sphere; (2) a three-way solenoid valve; (3) an induction coil
for melting the sample; (4) a sample holder to suspend the
sample inside the quartz crucible and to adjust the position
of the crucible inside the chamber; (5) an infrared detector
to measure the relative temperature of the sample and to
activate the solenoid valve for ejection of the melt through
the orifice ofthe crucible; and (6) a solid 17 -cm -diam copper
disk capable of rotating at over 10 000 rpm. A ferrofiuidic
coupling was used for sealing between the wheel shaft and
the chamber, and for minimizing vibration at high wheel
velocities. The chamber argon pressure was adjusted and
kept between 34 and 68 kPa. The ejection pressure was set
between 7 to 35 kPa. After melting, a stream of molten alloy
was ejected from the orifice of the crucible onto the surface
of the wheel rotating with a tangential velocity up to 75 m/s.
The velocity of the ejecting melt depended on the difference
between ejection and chamber pressure, An individual regu
lator valve was set and monitored in both the pressure and
2
2
0) heat up
2
-Ci-.
_-1._ ..
b) eject;on
FIG. 1. Melt-spinning apparatus consisting of (1) vacuum chamber, (2)
solenoid valve, (3) induction heating coil, (4) sample and crucible holder,
(5) temperature sensor, and (6) ell wheel.
2384 J. Appl. Phys, 65 (6), 15 March 1989 0021-8979/89/062354-05$02.40 © 1989 American Institute of Physics 2364
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 13:34:48vacuum gauges with an accuracy of 3 kPa. During heat-up
the sample out-gassed and a pressure built up in the crucible.
Since there was no outlet for this entrapped gas, premature
ejection of the melt could occur. To prevent this unregulated
ejection of the melt and also to control the exact melt jet
velocity a three-way solenoid valve was used (Fig. 1). The
valve kept the pressure in the crucible and the chamber equal
during heat-up (a); this prevented pressure buildup in the
crucible and premature ejection of the melt. At ejection (b),
the three-way valve was activated, isolating the vacuum
chamber from the crucible and pressurizing the crucible for
ejecting the melt. This solenoid valve was activated by a tem
perature control detector. A LepeI 25-kW rf generator was
used to induction heat the Nb-based alloys. The A-gauge o.d.
copper tubing was used to make the induction coil which had
five turns and a 22 mm o.d. When the sample approached its
melting temperature (~2000 CC), radiation heating of the
quartz crucible began to occur. This resulted in two side
effects, one bad and one good. If the sample was too close to
the crucible side wall it could melt the crucible. On the other
hand, the tip of the crucible was heated, which made it easier
for the molten alloy to flow through the orifice without so
lidifying. It was found that a 16-mm-i.d. crucible worked
best to avoid the side-wall melting and to provide optimum
heating of the tip. To control the temperature of the crucible
tip, the position of the sample inside the quartz crucible and
the induction heating coil and also the time of each heating
step was accurately recorded. The sample was suspended
vertically by means of the attached Nb wire and was con
tained within a quartz crucible with an orifice 0.8-0.4 mm in
diameter. The sample was suspended towards the top of the
induction coils, thus ensuring that the wire did not melt be
fore the sample. Since there was no contact between the sam
ple and the crucible, the sample remained free of contamina
ti.on from the crucible. The sample suspension device was
capable of moving horizontally and vertically, and had a
rotation in the y-z plane to adjust the melt jet inclination
angle and the distance from the crucible tip to the wheel
surface. Temperature measurement for purposes of monitor
ing and control was done by an infrared detector, which
measured the relative temperature of the melt. The output
voltage of the detector corresponded to the relative melting
temperature. When a preset voltage was reached, the detec
tor activated the three-way solenoid valve and the molten
sample dropped due to the applied ejection pressure. By in
troducing this system it was possible to keep the melt super
heat under control and the reproducibility rate of good-qual
ity ribbons was increased from 20% to 80%.
B.Annealing
The samples of melt-spun ribbons were cleaned in ace
tone, wrapped in Nb foil, and placed inside a vacuum-sealed
(1 flPa) quartz tubeo These were then annealed, at tempera
tures between 650 and 730 ·C, in a temperature-controlled
furnace for 12 to 24 h.
C. Mechanical test
The flexibility of the sample was determined by a simple
bend test. The annealed ribbons were attached between the
2385 J. API'\. Phys., Vol. 65, No.6, 15 March 1989 two jaws of a micrometer with a very small amount of epoxy
so that the sample remained fixed. The micrometer was
slowly closed and when the sample fractured the distance
between the two jaws was measured. It was assumed that the
ribbon bent in a semicircle with a diameter equal to the dis
tance between the two jaws. The bend strain to fracture was
calculated from the equation t I(d -t}, where t is the sam
ple thickness.
D. Crystal structure
An x-ray diffractometer and a Gandolfi camera with
CuKa radiation were used to determine the phases present
before and after annealing. The lattice parameter ao of the
Al5 Nb3Ge phase was calculated by plotting Qo values for the
individual diffraction planes as a function of cos2 e and ex
trapolating to cos2 9 = O. Grain size was estimated from
broadening of the x-ray peaks and the Scherrer formula.
E. Superconducting properties
A four-point probe resistive technique was used to mea
sure the superconducting transition temperature. The tran
sition was characterized by recording the temperatures at
which the transition started (Tc onset) and at which it was
half completed (Tc midpoint).
Sample preparation for the critical current density mea
surement by transport current is very critical. Values of Jc
are limited by the heating problem due to contact resistance
Rc between the sample and the current leads. To achieve a
better contact between the sample and the current leads,
samples -2 em long were gold or copper electroplated, with
platings -20 flrn thick. The sample was then coated with a
thin layer of indium, and placed in the sample holder on a
thin copper strip which acted as a shunt and supported the
sample mechanicaHy. The Cu strip was then soldered to the
two thick current leads. Two thin Au voltage leads were
soldered to the sample. The critical currents were measured
at 4.2 K as a function of applied transverse magnetic field up
to 15 T. The critical current was defined as the current at
which a voltage of 2 fJ'v appeared across 1 cm of the super
conductor at a specific value of a magnetic field. When the
samples were plated prior to annealing, Rc was very low and
was estimated from the slope of the V-I curves to be less than
10-8 n. For calculating current density, the cross-sectional
areas of the samples were measured by means of an optical
microscope with an accuracy of 1 f.lm.
l!IoRESULTS
The initial meltospinning tests on Nb75 ± x Gezs ± x al
loys, where x = 0-3, resulted primarily in brittle fragments<
However, for the Nb7SGe25 aHoy, some very ductile shiny
pieces were formed. Although the quantity of ductile frag
ments was small, it was a clear indication of the possibility of
forming amorphous ribbons. To make a continuous ribbon
boron had to be added to enhance the glass forming tenden
cy; 0.5 at. % B was found to be optimum. A simple test of
amorphousness was to see if the ribbons survived the 180·
bend test without breaking. Optimization of the melt-spino
ning parameters was essential, and to increase the reproduc-
T. Manzur and M. T. Clapp 2385
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I .,.
FIG. 2. Critical melt-spinning parameters: (a) position of the induction
coil; (b) position of the sample; (c) distance between the tip of the crucible
and the wheel surface; (P,) chamber pressure; (Pe) ejection pressure; and
(a) ejection angle.
ducibiHty rate it was necessary to accurately control the melt
super heat temperature, the crucible shape and orifice diam
eter, the position of the induction coil (a) and of the sample
inside the coil (b), the distance between the tip of the cruci
ble and the wheel surface (c), the chamber Pc and ejection
pressure P,", and the ejection angle (a) (Fig. 2), Increased
cooling rates were possible by reducing the orifice diameter
and the ejection pressure, i.e., by controlling the melt flow
through the orifice. Increasing the orifice diameter from
0.36 to 0.52 mm with an ejection pressure of 14 kPa in
creased the thickness from 10 to 20 {lm. Thickness is inverse
ly proportional to cooling rate. The thinner ribbon was com
pletely amorphous whereas the thicker one was a
combination of amorphous plus crystalline. Quartz was used
as the crucible material and different nozzle geometries were
tried. For longer nose crucibles, there were problems of
solidification of the molten alloy inside the crucible. For fiat
crucibles, the melt jet was not stable. To have continuous
amorphous ribbons, short-nose crucibles gave the best re
sults with orifice diameters of 0.36-0,52 mm. Ribbon thick
ness varied inversely with substrate speed. As the wheel
speed increased from 4000 to 7000 rpm (37 to 65 m/s) the
thickness of the ribbons decreased from 50 to 10 pm and the
cooling rates increased from ~ 2 X 104 to 106 "Cis. 7 The ver
tical position of the sample within the crucible had to be
controlled to ± 0.1 cm for good reproducibility. As the an
gle of ejection of the melt (a) increased, the length of the
melt puddle increased due to the larger tangential momen
tum, and thus thicker ribbons were formed. At O· the ejected
melt did not have enough surface area to spread on to, and it
solidified in the gap. For a more than 10°, instability of the
melt puddle occurred. In the NbGe alloys the optimum a
was found to be g •. To obtain good-quality smooth-edged
ribbons, the chamber pressure was optimized at -50 kPa.
Before annealing, all the melt-spun ribbons that were
suspected of being amorphous were x-ray analyzed by using
2386 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.6, 15 March 1989 44 42 40 38 36 34
DIFFRACTION ANGLE ( 2 e }
FIG. 3. Portions of x-ray diffraction patterns of (a) amorphous
Nb75GC24.5 EO<5' (b) annealed at 700 OC for 24 h, (c) annealed at 730 'C for
24h.
the x-ray diffractometer or the Gandolfi camera, and no evi
dence of crystallinity was found. The ribbons were then an
nealed. The x-ray diffraction patterns of amorphous Nb3Ge
annealed at different temperatures and times are shown in
Fig. 3. The intensity is plotted as a function of 2e, the dif
fracted angle. Figure 3(a) shows the melt-spun completely
amorphous structure. After annealing at 675·C for 12 h
there was no crystallization. Figure 3 (b) shows that after
annealing at 700 °C for 24 h, partial crystallization occurred.
The x-ray peaks were broad and low, and the samples were
amorphous + A15. Figure 3(c) shows that after annealing
at 730·C for 24 h the A15 peaks intensified. From the Gan
dolfi camera films, it appeared that small amounts of second
phases began to precipitate out at this temperature, The sec
ond phases were identified as tetragonal and hexagonal
NbsGe3. After annealing at 730°C the lattice parameter of
the A15 was 0.514 nm and the average grain size was -30
nm.
The amorphous ribbons could be bent 180· without
breaking. After annealing at 730 ·C the average bend strain
to fracture was -1 %, Material that was melt spun directly
into the A15 structure was extremely brittle, very fragment
ed, and had a bend strain to fracture ofless than 0.1 %
No superconducting transition above 4.2 K was ob
served for the samples annealed at 675 ·C for 12 h. As an
nealing temperatures and times increased from 700 to 730 ·C
and 12 to 24 h, Tc onset increased from 9 to 18 K and To
midpoint from 10 to 16 K. The transiti.on increased with
annealing temperature and became sharper, no doubt due to
further crystallization of the A15 phase. It should be noted
that not all samples annealed at 700°C showed transitions,
indicating that there was a fair variety in crystallization be
havior from sample to sample.
A plot of critical current density as a function of applied
T. Manzur and M. T. Clapp 2386
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f-
U5
Z
W
Cl
I-~ ZN wE 0::, 11::«
a~
..J «
2 f
iE u
APPliED MAGNETIC FIELD (Teslo)
FIG. 4, Critical current density as a function of applied magnetic field for
amorphous Nb75Ge245 B05 annealed at 730 'C for 24 h.
transverse magnetic field can be seen in Fig. 4 for a sample
eu plated before annealing at 730 ·e, 24 h. At 0 T, Je was
5 X 1010 A/m2 and at 15.2 T, Jc was 8 X lOR A/m2• Although
theJc 's of most samples were consistently high at 0 T, Jc 's at
15 T varied by an order ofmagnit1.lde. This is further indica
tion that the crystallization and microstructure varied from
sample to sample for a given annealing condition.
IV. DISCUSSION
Amorphous ribbons of Nb7sGe24.5 Bo.s were made by
optimizing and accurately controlling the melt-spinning pa
rameters. According to the NbGe phase diagram, the eutec
tic trough occurs near the stoichiometric composition
Nb3Ge and eutectics promote the glass forming tendency
because the melting temperature is lower. However, it was
found that the addition of 0.5 at. % B was necessary to form
an amorphous ribbon. This is consistent with the empirical
rule for glass forming tendencies in ternary alloys based on
the relative size of the atomic constituents8; the rule
(where ra, rh, and Yc are the radii ofr-.;'b, Ge, and B, Cb is the
concentration of Ge, and C ~ill is the minimum concentra
tion of B required to fonn a glass) predicts C~in to be 0.5
at. % B.
Annealing produced continuous tapes of A15 Nb3Ge.
According to the NbGe phase diagram at 25 at. % Ge, the
stable phases are Al5 Nbs1Ge19 and tetragonal or hexagonal
NbsGe3' Stoichiometric Nb3Ge is highly metastable. The
lattice parameter of the AI5 decreases from 0.520 to 0.513
nm as the Ge content increases from 19 to 25 at. %.9 In this
study the lattice parameter was 0.514 nrn corresponding to
24 at. % Ge. Hence the initial A15 that crystallized out of the
amorphous matrix was the highly metastable "stoichiome
tric" phase. This polymorpholls transformation required no
long-range diffusion. As the annealing times and tempera
tures increased a sman amount of the NhsGe) phase formed.
It would be very interesting and informative to do a detailed
microstructural analysis of the crystallization process dur
ing the entire transformation.
It was not possible to form a continuous tape by melt
2387 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No, 6, 15 March 1989 spinning directly into the Al.5 structure, since only brittle
fragments were obtained, The bend strain to fracture of the
A 15 annealed from the amorphous state was a factor of 10
higher. eu plating of the ductile amorphous ribbons prior to
annealing not only decreased the contact resistance in Jc
measurements but further enhanced the flexibility of the Al5
tape. This processing technique could therefore be the initial
step in the fabrication. of multi filamentary ~b3Ge supercon
ducting composites.
The highest Tc measured was 18 K T" of A15 Nb3Ge
increases rapidly as the Ge content approaches stoichiome
trylO and is strongly correlated to lattice parameter, increas
ing from 8 to 23 K as ao decreases from 0.518 to 0.513 nm.
For our samples ao was 0.514, which corresponds to a Tc of
19 K. This is consistent with our observed value and is
further proof that our samples were close to stoichiometry.
The B which is a small interstitial atom no doubt had a role
in expanding the lattice and decreasing Tc. The addition of
0.5 at. % B has been shown to decrease Tc to 19 K.lI
The values of critical current densities as a function of
magnetic field were consistent with those of other research
ers,3,12-1n who have observed that flux pinning in Nb3Ge
alloys is due to grain boundaries and second-phase precipi
tates. It has been proposed that to have the highest Jc 's an
optimum amount of the NbsGe3 0' phase is required. For
example, Thompson et ai, 14 reported Je values at 18 T and
found that as the amount of Nb5Ge3 phase in.creased the
critical current density initially increased, went through a
peak, and then decreased. Braginski and co-workers 12 re
ported that for single-phase Al5 the critical current density
was very low and that the optimum concentration of NbsGe3
waS -5 vol % for a Je of ~ 1010 A/m2 at 6 T. Jc is also a
function of precipitate configuration and should increase as
the dispersion becomes finer. It should be possible with our
processing technique to accurately control the amount and
distribution of the a phase. Furthermore, our samples exhib
ited a very high Je at 0 T followed by a sharp drop at very low
magnetic fields which is thought to be due to incomplete
crystallization of the amorphous phase. For these reasons a
detailed microstructural study of the crystallization process
is required, after which we believe it may well be possible to
further increase J" of our samples.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors gratefully acknowledge the Francis Bitter
National Magnet Laboratory for providing the facilities for
measuring the critical current densities and magnet fields.
They are very grateful to L. Rubin for his advice and help
throughout. This work was sponsored by the National
Science Foundation under Grant No. MSM-8610814.
'I. R. Gavaler, M. A. Jancko, A. I. Braginski, and O. W. Roland, IEEE
Trans. Magn. MAG·ll, 192 (1977).
2J. R. Gavaler, M. A. Janocko, and Co K. Jones, J. App!. Phys. 45, 3009
(1974).
'A. I. Braginski, I. R, Gavaler, G. W. Roland, M. R. Daniel. M. A. Jan
ocko, and A. T. Sanathanam, IEEE Trans. Magn. MAG·13, 300 (1977).
4M. T. Clapp and D. Shi, J. App!. Phys. 57,4672 (1985).
'M. T. Clapp and D. Shi, Adv. Cryog. Eng. Mater. 32,1067 (1986),
OM. T. Clapp and D. Shi, App!. Phys. Lett. 49, 1305 (1986).
T. Manzur and M. T. Clapp 2387
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 13:34:487H. Hillmann and H. R. Hi\zinger, in Rapidly Quenched Metals Ill, Third
International Conference, edited by B. Cantor (University of Sussex,
Brighton, 1978), Vol. 1.
"E. J. Kabel, Jr., in Metal Progress [Research Institute of Mineral Dressing
and Metallurgy (SENKEN) Sendai, Japan], p. 61, May 1986.
9B, Letellier and J. C. Renard, IEEE Trans. Magn. MAG.IS, 498 (1979).
lOR. F!ukiger, in Superconductor MaTerials Science, edited by S. Foner and
B. Schwartz (Plenum, New York, 1(81), p. 576.
"J. D. Thompson, M. P. Maley, L. R. Newkirk, F. A. Valencia, and K. C.
Kim, Physica l07B, 267 (1981).
2388 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No.6, 15 March 1989 [2 A.!, Braginski, G. W. Roland, and A. T. Santhanam, IEEE Trans. Magn.
MAG-iS, 505 (1979).
DR. T. Kamwirth, IEEE Trans. Magn. MAG-IS, 502 (1979).
'4J. D. Thompson, M. P. Maley, L. R. Newkirk, and R. V. Carlson, IEEE
Trans. Magn. MAG· is, 516 (1979).
ISS. A. Alterovitz, J. A. Woollam, J. J. Engelhardt, and G. W. Webb, IEEE
Trans. Magn. MAG.IS, 512 (1979).
"J. D. Thompson, M. P. Maley, L. R. Newkirk, F. A. Valencia, R. J. Bart·
lett, and R. V. Carlson, Solid State Commun. 28, 729 (1978).
T. Manzur and M. T. Clapp 2386
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1.343970.pdf | Absorption peaks at 2663 and 2692 cm− 1 observed in neutrontransmutationdoped
silicon
Lei Zhong, Zhanguo Wang, Shouke Wan, and Lanying Lin
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 66, 4275 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343970
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343970
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/66/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 08:24:49Absorption peaks at 2663 and 2692 em -1 observed in neutron .. transmutation ...
doped silicon
Lei Zhong, Zhanguo Wang. Shouke Wan, and Lanying Lin
Institute a/Semiconductors, Chinese Academy a/Sciences, Beijing, People's Republic a/China
(Received 13 March 1989; accepted for publication 26 July 1989)
Two absorption peaks at 2663 and 2692 cm-I are reported which were observed by Fourier
transform infrared at a temperature below 77 K in aU fast-neutron-irradiated samples
investigated. These peaks are very weak and obscured by the nearby divacancy 3.61-,um band
in most cases. However, they are obviously enhanced by the presence of impurity hydrogen.
They anneal out at about 200 'C. It is proposed that a single defect center, whi.ch may be the
di-interstitial, gives rise to the two peaks.
iNTRODUCTION
Many radiation-induced infrared absorption bands
have been observed in silicon for the past three decadeso 1-9 In
Ref. 8, as many as 114 bands known to exist in silicon irra
diated by neutrons, hydrogen ions, and electrons of energy
> 2 MeV were listed. These bands could be produced in one
of two ways: First, the pairing of an impurity atom with
vacancies and/or interstitials or a high degree of lattice dis
order; in these cases one observes predominantly the vibra
tional modes ofthe defect in the infrared wavelength region.
Second, defects that give rise to transitions which are purely
electronic in nature and whose energies are in the infrared
region of the spectrum. Of these bands, the well-known 3.3-
/-tm band has been unambiguously identified with the diva
caney. 1-7 The 3.3-,um band in fact consists of a broadband
with two distinguishable sharp subbands at 3.45 and 3061
,um.2-7 However the 3.45-and 3.61-pm sharp bands were
observed only at low temperature ( < 150 K) and only if the
Fermi level position is above Ee -0.21 eV.1-7 In addition,
while the knowledge of electronic levels and atomic configu
rations for the divacancy is quite complete, the mechanism
of divacancy formation is still under discussion.9
On the other hand, recent demonstrations of the ability
of atomic hydrogen to bond to and passivate electrically ac
tive deep-level centers such as transition-metal impurities,
lattice defects, and even group-III acceptors in silicon have
created considerable interest. 10-13 Thanks to the pioneering
work of Stein, 14 a large body of absorption bands associated
with hydrogen in silicon has been brought to light roughly
spread over the spectral range from 1600 to 2500 em -1.
These absorption bands arise from the local-mode vibration
of the hydrogen-silicon bond. 14.15 A number of calculations
have been devoted to the determination of the position of
hydrogen atoms in the silicon crystal. 16-18 All calculations
show that hydrogen atom does interact and form a complex
with the vacancy, although there are still arguments about
its exact position in the crystal. In this work, for the first time
two new absorption peaks are reported, which were seen in
aU our silicon samples irradiated with fast neutrons. In most
cases, the two new peaks are very weak when compared with
the nearby divacancy 3.61-llm band and are obscured by this
bando However, we found that the new peaks are obviously
enhanced by the presence of hydrogen impurity. EXPERIMENTS AND RESULTS
Crystals used in this work are described in Table I. The
concentration of oxygen and carbon were estimated from the
absorption bands at 9 and 16 pm measured at liquid-nitro
gen temperature, No crystals used here had received heat
treatment before irradiation. The crystals were irradiated at
a temperature of about 40°C with a total fast-neutron flux of
4.0X 1018 n/cm2• After irradiation, an extensive isochronal
annealing study was done in the range from room tempera
ture to 400 "C. Samples were optically polished on both sides
with thickness 2.00 ± 0.01 mm. The infrared absorption of
the samples was studied with a Nicolet 170SX Fourier trans
form spectrometero Detailed measurements of temperature
dependence of the absorption bands were performed from 10
K to room temperature with an Air Products heIitran dewar.
We display part of the IR spectra in Fig. 1 for sample B
irradiated with fast neutrons which were recorded at 10 K
and liquid-nitrogen temperature. A broadband at 3022
em-1 (33 pm) together with two sharp bands at 2891 em-1
(3.45 pm) and 2766 em-I (3.61 ,um) was observed at both
temperatures. The earlier reported 3.9-,um bandl.? was never
observed in this work. It is noticeable that two new absorp
tion peaks located at 2692 cm-l (3.715 !-lm) and 2663 cm-I
(3.755 pm) have been discovered at 10 K, although the in
tensity of both new peaks is much weaker than that of the
nearby divacancy 3.61-,um band. The half-width of peak
2663 em-I (FWHM = 6 cm-I) and 2692 cm-~I
(FWHM = 4 cm -1) are much narrower than that of the
divacancy 3.61-,um band (18 cm-~l) or 3.45-,u.m band (54
cm -1 ). The two new absorption peaks completely disappear
at liquid-nitrogen temperature.
These two new peaks were present in all types of samples
measured in this work which are listed in Table I. Their
respective IR spectra are shown in Fig. 2 on an expanded
scak Comparison of the spectrum of control sample A with
that of sample D and E leads us to suggest that impurity
oxygen or the presence of the A center (oxygen vacancy,
with its absorption peak located at 829 cm ~-l) tends to anni
hilate the defect center, giving rise to the peaks at 2663 and
2692 cm-I. The dependence upon the impurity oxygen of
the new peaks is totally different from that of the 3.61-!-lm
divacancy band. We have also observed in our work that the
presence ofinterstitiaI oxygen and the A center enhances the
4275 J. Appl. Phys. 66 (9). 1 November 1989 0021-8979/89/214275-04$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 4275
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 08:24:49TABLE I. Parameters of samples used.
[0] Resistivity
Sample Growth Ambient (1017 cm-3) [C] Type (Hem)
A FZ Ar I" I P >1000
B FZ H G.lb I P 400
C FZ H 0.2 I N 250
D CZ Ar 16 I P 100
E CZ Ar II I P 12
a Below the detection limit.
bEstimated with ASTM Fl2!-79, VoL 43.
formation of the divacancy, which is consistent with the
findings of Oehrlein et al. 9 The possible mechanism for the
enhancement in the production ofthe divacancy by intersti
tial oxygen suggested by Oehrlein et al.9 is that interstitial
oxygen prevents interstitial-vacancy recombination by the
capture of silicon self-interstitials and therefore increases the
steady-state vacancy concentration for the formation of the
divacancy via an agglomeration of two single vacancies.
The presence of hydrogen in samples Band C was sug
gested by the fact that both crystals had been grown in am
bient hydrogen and was further proved by our IR data
between 1600 and 2500 em -1, which revealed hydrogen vi
brational peaks at 1838 em -I, 1986 cm -I, etc. Therefore,
comparing the spectrum data of samples Band C with that
of control sample A, as seen from Fig. 2, we arrive at the
conclusion that the two new absorption peaks are obviously
enhanced by the presence of impurity hydrogen. The absorp
tion intensity of the crystal grown in ambient hydrogen is
-" .. ..
w
U
Z
<:(
a:l
Il: )111
0
(/)
II!
<:(
x2
3300 3100 . 2900 2700
WAVENUMBER (e",-l)
FIG. L Infrared spectra of sample B after neutron bombardment with a
dose of 4.0X 10'8 em--2, measured at 10 K (above) and liquid-nitrogen
temperature (below).
4276 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 66, No.9, 1 November 1989 2710 2690 2670 2650 2630
FIG. 2. Infrared spectra at 10 K from samples A, B, C, D, and E after
neutron bombardment with a dose of 4.0X lOtS cm·2•
about eight times larger than that ofthe control sample. This
result was surprising as it is generally considered that hydro
gen should passivate lattice defects. We conclude, however,
that impurity hydrogen does not participate directly in the
defect center responsible for the new peaks at 2663 and 2692
em -1 since the two new peaks do appear in samples contain
ing no hydrogen such as control sample A and samples D
andE.
One-hour isochronal-annealing experiments have been
run on the new 2663-and 2692-cm _0 I peaks together with
the 3.3-,um band. The results are shown in Fig. 3. The an-
100 X !IIi ..
X
Z 80
0
f-
0.. ex: 60 0 X (f)
II! .. «
IJJ 40
>
I-«
...J
~ 20 X
..
0 " »
0 100 200 300 400
TEMPERATURE ("C)
FIG. 30 The plot for sample B of relative absorption measured at 10 K vs
isochronally annealing temperature. (III) peak 2663 cm-t and (X) diva
caney 3. 61-ttm band. The annealing time interval is j h.
Zhongetal. 4276
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 08:24:49nealing behavior of the two new peaks is about the same.
Their recovery is similar to but faster than that of the 3.61-
{-tm divacancy band. The amplitude of each ofthe new peaks
starts to decrease sharply when the annealing temperature is
about 150·e and completely anneals out at about 200 ·C,
whereas the amplitude of the 3.61-,um divacancy band de
creases more slowly and disappears at a temperature of
about 300 "e, which is in agreement with the results reported
in Ref. 3.
Detailed measurements of the temperature dependence
of the intensity have been made for the two new peaks in the
region from 10 K to room temperature. A line-shape change
or frequency shift of the peaks has not been observed. Such
changes frequently occur in the vibrational modes of a defect
in the infrared wavelength region due to the thermal occupa
tion of closely spaced levels that comprise the vibrational
ground state. The transition involved in the two new peaks
are therefore temporarily supposed to be electronic in nature
just like most irradiation-induced IR absorption bands and
secondary bands (such as the wen-known high-order
bands).8 The variation of absorption with measurement
temperature is plotted i.n Fig. 4 for the peaks at 2663 and
2692 cm-i• The two new peaks could be observed only if the
temperature was less than 70 K. In addition, the absorption
of the two new peaks exhibited an exponential rather than a
linear temperature dependence. The thermal deactivation
energy was estimated to be about 34 me V for the 2663-cm-1
peak and 20 me V for 2692-cm -I peak. From their annealing
TEMPERATURE (K l
10-1 7050 30 10 ,
II III I!II
iii II
III
III
If
II
I!II • • • •
II •
II
Z • 0 III
fi: 102
II • IX:
0 (j) II m
..:( •
III •
•
10-3
0.2 0.4 0.6 008 1.0 1.2
1/KT PYlllv-1,
FIG, 4. The plot for sample B of absorption vs measurement temperature.
(III) 2663-cm- I peak and (+) 2692-cm -1 peak.
4277 J. App!. Phys" Vol. 66, Noo 9, 1 November 19S9 behavior and impurity dependence discussed above, the two
new peaks may be associated with same defect center. But
the temperature dependence of the ratio ofthe relative inten
sity of the 2663-cm- I peak to 2692-cm --1 peak rules out the
possibility of a single ground-state to various excited-state
transitions. The investigation of the nature of the transitions
giving rise to these peaks is still in progress.
DISCUSSIONS
Now, we could give a possible explanation for the reason
why the two absorption peaks have not been found by earlier
workers. First, although the two new peaks do occur in all
NTD-silicon samples, they are very weak in most cases and
obscured by the nearby strong divacancy 3.61-,um band. In
fact, it was in the samples containing hydrogen that we
found for the first time the existence of the peaks at 2663 and
2692 cm -'. And second, most measurements were done by
the earlier authors at temperatures above 70 K.
Finally, we would like to discuss the possible identifica
tion of the defect center responsible for the two new peakso
The observation of the two peaks in widely different sample
types argues that no impurity is involved in the defect center
responsible for these absorptions. We also conclude that the
new peaks at 2692 and 2663 cm--I cannot be associated with
a divacancy, as evidenced by the difference in the annealing
behavior and the different dependence upon the impurities
hydrogen and oxygen for the 3.61-pm di.vacancy band and
the two new peaks. The impurity dependence of the two
peaks suggests that they may be attributed to a self-intersti
Hal-related defect. If that is so, the enhancement of the new
peaks by hydrogen may result from the capture of vacancies
by hydrogen,'6-18 which prevents the recombination of in
terstitials and vacancies, and therefore increases the concen
tration of interstitials. On the contrary, interstitial oxygen
captures interstitial atoms9 and decreases the intensity ofthe
two peaks.
It is generaUy believed that interstitial silicon atoms are
unstable and migrate until trapped at impurities even at tem~
perature as low as 4.2 K.19 Theoretical calculations have
shown that the lowest energy configuration of an interstitia!
is not found with an atom in the normal tetrahedral intersti
tial site but rather in bonded interstitial configurations. 19
Lee, Gerasimenko, and Corbett20 and Brower2! have studied
an EPR spectrum (Si-P 6) which has been suggested to in
volve di-i~terstitia!s with < 100) dumbbell configurations .
The P 6 center together with the four-vacancy P 3 center and
the divacancy center dominate what can be seen immediate
ly after irradiation.22 P 6 anneals at 170°C, 20 with a similar
annealing behavior to that of our new absorption peaks, as
can be seen from Fig. 3 .
SUMMARY
New absorption peaks located at 2663 and 2692 em-o
'
are reported for silicon after fast-neutron irradiation. It is
demonstrated that the presence of hydrogen obviously en
hances the new absorption peaks. The annealing behavior
and temperature dependence of the peaks have been studied.
We tentatively propose that a single defect center, which
may be the di-interstitial, gives rise to the two peaks.
Zhong etal. 4277
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 08:24:49'H. Y. Fan and A. K. Ramdas, J. App!. Phys. 30,1127 (l959),
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Zhong eta/. 4278
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1.344004.pdf | ntype (Pb)Te doping of GaAs and Al x Ga1−x Sb grown by molecularbeam epitaxy
S. M. Newstead, T. M. Kerr, and C. E. C. Wood
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 66, 4184 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.344004
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.344004
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137.189.170.231 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 10:42:34n .. type (Pb)Te doping of GaAs and AlxGa1_XSb grown by
molecular .. beam epitaxy
s. M. N ewstead ,a) T. M. Kerr, and C. E. C. Wood b)
GEC Hirst Research Center, East Lane, Wembley, Middlesex HA9 7PP, United Kingdom
(Received 29 June 1988; accepted for publication 10 July 1989)
A PbTe flux has been used for n-type (Te) doping of GaAs, GaSb, and AIGaSb. The effects of
surface accumulation and Te desorption were noticeable in secondary-ion mass spectroscopy
profiles of GaAs layers grown at temperatures in excess of 54O·C. Te accumulation was not
apparent in GaSb layers grown at temperatures up to 630 ·C, but Te desorption occurred from
GaSb at temperatures above 540"C. The donor ionization energy of Te in At Gal _ x Sb is 44
meV for 0.4 <X < 0.5, i.e., significantly lower than the ionization energies of S or Se in similar
material.
iNTRODUCTION
The alloys of GaSh with AI, Ga, and As offer consider
able potential for use in long-wavelength optoelectronic de
vices. 1,2 Unfortunately, the conventional GaAs molecuiar~
beam epitaxy (MEE) donors Si and Sn are essentially
amphoteric in GaSb and AIGaSb,3,4 and so cannot be used to
produce p-n junctions or to dope laser cladding layers. The
group-VI chalcogens S, Se, and Te are reasonably effective as
MBE donors in GaSb,4-7 with carrier concentrations of up to
5X 1017 cm--3 (Se doping)6 and 2.5X 1018 cm-3 (Te dop
ing) 7 having been reported. Producing n-type AIGaSb by
MBE is more difficult, with heavy S doping yielding highly
compensated n~ of p-type materiaL 8 However, it has been
reported that Te is a viable MBE donor for AISb (Ref, 7)
and AIGaSb, \,2,7 although only limited information is avail
able on the incorporation behavior of Te or the electrical
properties of the doped layers.
This paper reports preliminary results on the use of Te
as a donor in GaSb and AlGaSb. Te-doped GaAs was also
grown. Dopant volatility problems were avoided by the use
of a PbTe "captive doping source.,,9 The effect of growth
temperature on the incorporation of Te from PbTe was in
vestigated by using secondary ion mass spectroscopy
(SIMS) to profile abrupt changes in the doping level in
GaAs and GaSh. The Hall properties of several GaSh and
AIGaSb epilayers are also presented.
EXPERIMENT
GaSh and AIGaSb epilayers were deposited on semi
insulating undoped GaAs substrates (for Hall measure~
ments) or n+ Te-doped GaSh substrates [for capacitance~
voltage (CV) analysis] in a VG V80H MBE system. The use
ofindium bonding allowed simultaneous deposition on both
types of substrate when required, The GaAs substrates were
precleaned in 7H2S04:1HzOz:IH20, and the GaSb sub
strates in a 1 % solution ofbromille in methanol. On heating
a) Present address: Department of Physics, University of Warwick, Coven
try CV 4 7 AL, United Kingdom.
b) Present address: North East Semiconductors, Inc" 134 Lexington Drive,
Itacha, New York 14850, to 580·C under an Sb flux of 1 X 1015 to 1 X 1016
atoms cm -2 S -\ a diffuse (2 X 4) reconstruction was ob
tained from the GaAs substrates and bulk streaks or, less
commonly, a (3 Xl) reconstruction from the GaSb sub~
strates. Growth was initiated under Sb4:Ga flux ratios of
between 3:1 and 5:1, these being close to minimum permit
ting stoichiometric growth at the temperatures of interest.
The growth rates used centered on 1 jimlh. A clear (3 Xl)
reconstruction was usually obtained within the first 300 A of
GaSh overgrowth on both GaAs and GaSb substrates,
PbTe FLUX CALIBRATION
The interpretation of Hall data for n~type GaSb and
GaAISb is complicated by the effects of two valley conduc
tion,7,1O.1l Therefore, the PbTe cell was calibrated by C-V
profiling a doping staircase grown in a GaAs epilayer depos
ited at 54O·C (negligible Te desorption occurs at this tem
perature). In addition Hall measurements were made on
uniformly doped GaAs epilayers grown under similar condi
tions. The results of these calibrations are presented in Fig. 1.
EFFECTS OF Ts ON Te INCORPORATION IN GaAs
Te incorporation in GaAs was investigated by growing
two O.5~,um~thick doping spikes (corresponding to doping
r. cell temperature I·C)
PIG, I. PbTe doping cell calibration in GaAs: (0): SIMS secondary-ion
yields from GaAs epilayers grown at T, < 570 ·C; (e): c-V derived carrier
concentrations; ( + ): SIMS secondary-ion yields in GaSh.
4184 J, Appl. Phys, 66 (9),1 November 1989 0021 -8979/89/214164-04$02.40 © 1989 American Institute of PhySics 4184
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137.189.170.231 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 10:42:34levels of 1 X 1016 cm-·3 and 5 X 1017 em ·-3 at 540 'C) into an
epilayer at each of three growth temperatures (570,600, and
630 ·C). These spikes were separated by O.25~llm-thick
nominally undoped layers. The Te doped layers were co
doped with Si to facilitate identification when profiling. Im
mediately after growth the epilayer was cleaved into two
pieces. One piece was reloaded into the MBE system and
annealed at 680 ·C for 30 min to investigate the eirects of Te
diffusion at elevated processing temperatures. SIMS profil
ing failed to reveal any differences betwen the annealed and
nonannealed pieces, indicating that the phenomena de
scribed below may be attributed to incorporation effects.
Figure 2 is a SIMS profile through the (nonannealed)
GaAs epilayer. Note that identical Te secondary-ion yields
were obtained in layers 5 and 13, indicating that any pertur
bation of the data by SIMS depth effects was negligible to a
depth of about 3.5 f-lm. However, a slight loss in depth reso
lution may have occurred in the deeper layers, as indicated
by the apparent diminution of the Si doping spikes in layers 3
and 1, and the inexact coincidence of the 8i and Te dOpng
spikes at the interface between layers 4 and 5.
Some asymmetrical smearing is apparent in the layers
grown at Ts = 570°C (layers5-7,12,13). However, the effect
of severe surface accumulation only become noticeable in
the profiles of the layers grown at 6OO·C and above. Signifi-
T Sub @C 570 600 510 i 630
T Te ·C ~IO 3131~ 0 0 0 0
6 F 369 F 313 F 369 F 313 F 369
9:F F F F F r Lay~r 13112 11 po 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
As
5i
n
r1 i ! , j Te
o 50 100 150 200 250
Depth (Arb. uniul
FIG. 2, SIMS profile through a 5-,um-thick GaAs epllayer doped with Te
and Si steps.
4185 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 66, No.9, 1 November 1989 cant Te desorption is also apparent at 600 and 630°C. In
creased Te desorption is probably responsible for the de
crease in doping level on closing the PbTe shutter being more
rapid at 630 than 6OO·C (Fig. 1), whereas incorporation!
segregation modelsl2 predict the opposite behavior.
The steady-state secondary-ion yields obtained (with
extrapolation) from layers 1,5,9, and 13 are plotted in Fig. 3
as a function of reciprocal substrate temperature (curve d).
Representative data from other studies into the desorption
ofS (curve C),B Se (curve a),14 and Te (curve b)'5 from
GaAs are included for comparison. Within experimental er
ror, an activation energy of 70 kcallmol (3.0 e V) character
izes the desorption of each of the three chalcogens. This be
havior has been attributed 14 to the formation and immediate
sublimation of Ga2S, Ga2Se, and Gaz Te at high growth tem
peratures (the availability offree gallium, controlled by the
sublimation of arsenic, being the dopant-indepenent rate~
limiting step).
EFFECTS OF T" ON Te INCORPORATION IN GaSb
Figure 4 is a SIMS profile through a GaSb epilayer
doped from a constant PbTe flux at a series of substrate tem
peratures in the range 540-627 ·C. O.25-Jlm-thick undoped
layers were grown between the doping spikes. Identical
steady-state secondary-ion counts were obtained from the
doping spikes grown at Ts = 540 ·C at the beginning and end
of the epilayer, indicating that SIMS depth effects did not
significantly convolute the data. It is apparent that little if
any accumulation of Te occurred on the GaSb surface at
540 < T, < 627°C. Loss of stoichiometry above 627°C made
estimation of the activation energy of desorption difficult to
quantify. However, Te loss became significant at 570·C and
above. The effects of surface accumulation and Te desorp~
Hon were not noticeable in any GaSb epilayers grown at tem
peratures below 550 "C.
The increase in the Te secondary-ion yield in the
Alo.ls GaO.85 Sb layer in Fig. 4 is possibly a SIMS artifact due
to matrix effects. It is also possible that a higher incorpora
tion efficiency may be achieved on AIGaSb than GaSb due to
CQ:qft<eS c(!(tt!1nldl!
10'932_~_~ _W-3!Q ____ 6_~-,Z5 .6~O. -E1
!", .. , ,. ,. -//~ 'l:::,
1""1 g:~-. j"'~
l ""r /;/" 1'",j
10150";;--- ~_.--' ___ l-___ -----L....-. ____ J101 , to U 1.2 U 1.4
Re-ciprccal substrate hm;>eratur€ x ~O:s.
FIG. 3. Arrhenius plot of the rate ofloss of (a) Se (Ref. 14), (h) Te (Ref.
15), (e) S (Ref. 13), and (d) Te (this work). (el shows the loss ofTefrom
GaSb measured in this study.
Newstead, Kerr, and Wood 4185
.•.• -•.••• -.-. -•.• ,., ••••••• s.~-.; •••••• ·.·.·.·.·.--.·;-.·.·.·.·.·.-.·.-. -•.• :.:.:.: •.••• ;, ••••••••••••••••• <;<; •••••••••••••• ~ ........ , ••••••• o:.:.~ •.• ;.;.;.; •.•.•.•••.••.•.•••••••••• ; •••• :.:.~.:.~.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: ... "... •...• . ... ,., .•. , ••• "" T •• _T • -~ ',", .-.".-.-.-.-.- ••••••• ' ••••••••••••••••• : ••• :.~.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:--:.:.;.;.; ••• ;.: ••••••••••••• ~.:.:.;.:.:.:.;.-='~.:.:;;:.:.:.-;O:.;.;.:-; •.• ; •.••••••••••••• ; •••••• :.:.:;:-••• ;.:.;.;-:-.;.:.;.;.;.; •. ' .• ; •.•.•...•••.• ;.... . .•....••••.•.• ;.-.;.:.;.;.; •.•.•.•.•.•.•.• ;0 ••••••••••• v;".T ••••••• _ .... ;-••••••• "._. > .-.
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137.189.170.231 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 10:42:34!05r---------------------------~I~Th~OO-Pe~d~G~Q7Snb
substrate
54\ 627101101590 101510 1 01540 10FFtTe
F F F F
F F F f
102~--~---L----~--~--~----~--~--~ o 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Depth (Arb. units!
FIG, 4. SIMS profile through a 5-ftm-thick GaSb epilayer doped with Te
steps.
a decrease in the influence of the Gaz Te desorption mecha
nism previously described,14
Pb was sought in the GaSb and GaAs epilayers using
SIMS, but was not unambiguously detected due to matrix
interferences at mle = 204, 206, 207, and 208.
ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES OF Te DOPED AIGaSb
EPILAYERS
Several uniformly doped GaSb and AlxGal _xSb epi
layers were grown for electrical assessment (Table I, Fig, 5).
All were deposited onto 300-A.-thick undoped GaSh buffer
layers (unintentionally doped GaSb and AIGaSb grown in
parallel experiments were p type with NA -N D 5 X 1016
cm-J), The Hall samples were contacted by alloying in Sn
beads in a reducing atmosphere, as indium contacts became
highly resistive at temperatures below 200 K.
The layers included in Table I were all doped to nominal
2X 1018 cm-3, i.e., this would be the free-electron concen
tration obtained in GaAs grown at 540°C under the same
doping fiux and at the same growth rate. However, Hall
carrier concentrations of2 X 10 17 cm .-:> or less were obtained
from the AIGaSb epilayers, This can largely be attributed to
the effects of two valley conduction resulting from the small
energy separation of the r -L minima in the AI, Gal _ x Sb
alloy systems.7,lO,ll Indeed, Poole has shown that a single
valley Hall analysis can underestimate the true free carrier
TABLE I. 300-K Hall properties of MBE-grown Alx Gal _ xSb.
Growth Thickness
Material No, X (/Lm)
GaSb MB1076 0.00 3.0
AlxGa, xSb MBI078 0.42 2.4
AlxGa, xSb MBlO80 0.42 3.7
AlxGa, xSb MB1082 0.48 5.0
AtGa'_x Sb MB1090 0.70 g,O
4186 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, NO.9, i November 1989 ! ! ! It! I l ;
2_0 4.0 6.0 B.O 10.0 12.0 14!l 16.0 18.0 20.0 22.0 24.0 26.0
Reciprocal temperctllr~ )( 103
FIG. 5. Hall-derived electron concentrations of the AIGaSb epilayers de
scribed in Table I as a function of reciprocal temperature.
concentration by up to an order of magnitude in GaSb, in
agreement with the results presented here. The exceptionally
low carrier concentration obtained in the high Al content
layer MB 1090 is consistent with close compensation or
deep-level formation.
Table J shows the Han mobilities of the epilayers to fall
with an increasing Al content. In part, this behavior refiects
the influence of increased aHoy scattering, higher effective
masses, and different r-L valley distributions. Nonetheless,
these mobilities are much lower than calculated lattice mo
bilities,? indicating that optimization of the MBE growth
conditions is required.
The donor ionization energies derived from the near
room-temperature freeze-out data for layers MB1078,
MSW80, and MB1082 (Fig. 5) range from 35 to 53 meV.
These ionization energies are lower than those of S in
AIGaSb.8 The apparent increase in the free-carrier concen
tration at temperatures below 150 K in MB 1078 is not incon
sistent with the onset of hopping conduction which, al
though usually observed at lower temperatures, is to be
expected in a heavily compensated semiconductor having
relatively deep impurities.
Growth
temperature N,300K 300-K mobility Symbol in
(Ge) (ern -3X 1016) (cm2;V-1 S-') Fig.S
580 10 1950
610 11 193 X
560 15 212 +
560 20 130 • 560 0.3 59 D.
Newstead, Kerr, and Wood 4186
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137.189.170.231 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 10:42:34SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION
The incorporation ofTe from PhTe in GaAs is severely
affected by both surface accumulation and desorption at
growth temperatures in excess of 570 ·C. Conversely, little if
any surface accumulation occurs on GaSh up to a tempera
ture of at least 627 ·C, although appreciable Te loss occurs
from this compound at temperatures in excess of 540 ·Co The
differing accumulation behavior ofTe on GaAs and GaSh is
most probably related to atomic size effects. 16 The neutral
atomic radiusl7 of Te (1.37 A.) is larger than those of Ga
(1.25 .A) and As (1,21 A.), and strain effects will provide a
driving force for Te segregation on GaAs. However, the neu
tral atomic radii ofTe and Sb (1.41 A) are closely similar so
that it is reasonable to assume that the Te atom can occupy a
group V lattice site on GaSb without causing excessive
strain,
In practical terms, PbTe derived Te has been shown to
be an effective MBE donor in GaSb and, even though the 77-
K activation is limited, the shallowest donor thus far identi
fied in Alx Gal .. "Sb,
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We would like to thank R. Nichols for performing the
Han measurements,
4187 J, AppL Phys,. Vol. 66. No.9, 1 November 1989 'w. T. Tsang and N, A. Olsson, App!. Phys, Lett. 43, 8 (1983),
2T. H. Chui, W. T, Tsang. J. A. Ditzenberger, and J. van dey Zeil, Appl.
Phys. Lett 49,1051 (1986),
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759 (1977).
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Fukushima, and M. Kimita, Jpn. J, Appl. Phys. 20, L893 (1981).
5M. Yano, y, Suzuki, T. Ishii, y, Matsushima, and M, Kimita, Jpn. J.
App!. Phys. 17,2091 (1978).
"T. D. McClean, T. M. Kerr. D. I. Westwood, C. E. Co Wood, and D. E J.
Howell, J. Vae. Sci, Techno!. B 4.601 (1986).
7S. Subbanna. G. Tutie, and H. Kraemer, Presented at the 1987 Electronic
Materials Conference, University of California Santa Barbara, June 24-
26.
81. Poole, M. Lee, K. Singer, J. Frost, T. M. Kerr, C. E. C. Wood, D. An
drews, W. J. M. Rothwell,andG.J. Davies,I. AppLPhys.63, 396 (1988).
9C. E. C. Wood, Appl. Phys. Lett. 33, 770 (1978).
BOA. Sagar, Phys. Rev. 117,93 (1960).
1II. B. Poole, Ph.D. thesis, University of Manchester. 1989.
I2A. Rockett, T. J. Drummond, J. E. Greene, and II, MorkOf, J. Appl.
Phys, 53, 7085 (1982),
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lSD, M. Collins, Appl. Phys. Lett, 35, 67 09i9).
16G. Patel, R. A. A. Kubiak. S. M. Newstead, and P. Woodruff (unpub
lished).
17The atomic radii are quoted from J. A. Dean, Ed., Lange's Handbook of
Physical Chemistry, 13th ed. (McGraw-Hili, New York, 1985).
Newstead, Kerr. and Wood 4187
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1.576136.pdf | Adsorption of CO, O2, and H2O on GaAs(100): Photoreflectance studies
E. G. Seebauer
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A 7, 3279 (1989); doi: 10.1116/1.576136
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.576136
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Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 155.33.120.209 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:32:01Adsorption of CO, O2, and H20 on GaAs{1 00): Photoreflectance studies
E. G. Seebauef"l>
Laser and Atomic Physics Division. Sandia National Laboratories. Albuquerque. New Mexico 87185
(Received 11 May 1989; accepted 13June 1989)
Adsorption of CO, O2, and H20 on semi-insulating GaAs( 1(0) has been examined with
photoreflectance (PR). This work represents the first use of PR for quantitative adsorption
measurements on semiconductors. In PR, the laser-induced change in surface reflectance is
monitored as a function of wavelength. The resulting spectra are sensitive to changes in both the
surface potential and the nature of surface states. Results at the EI (3.0 eV) and Eo (1.4 eV)
transitions are complementary to each other. Sticking coefficients S were obtained from EI data
for these gases, and S at low coverage was found to increase in the order CO.( O2 < H20. S
decreases by at least four orders of magnitude for all the gases as saturation is approached. The
results suggest that oxygen has two binding states that fill sequentially. Gas adsorption generally
improves the communication between isolated surface states and the bulk.
I. INTRODUCTION
Photoreflectance (PR) is one of a class of modulation spec
troscopies in which a semiconductor sample is periodically
perturbed, and the resulting change in dielectric constant is
detected by reflectance. 1.2 PR accomplishes the modulation
with a chopped laser beam having hv>Eg, where Eg is the
fundamental band gap energy.3 Photogenerated minority
carriers migrate through the space-charge region (SCR)
and recombine with charge in surface states. The resulting
change in the built-in surface field changes the reflectance.
To date, PR has been used primarily as a probe of bulk band
structure, with emphasis most recently on the characteriza
tion of superlattices. Scant attention has been paid to the fact
that since PR is a con tactless technique, the interaction of a
free semiconductor surface with gases (and with transparent
liquids) may be investigated.
That PR is sensitive to adsorption seems to have been re
cognized only in early work in the late 1960s by Wang et 01.2,
who briefly examined the effects of air, wet O2, and dry O2 on
the PR spectra of CdS. Major changes in line shape were
observed by changing the ambient gas, but little explanation
was attempted, and the changes were not further quantified.
However, semiconductor growth and processing by direct
gas-surface reaction has become widespread in recent years.
The associated surface chemistry is understood quite poorly,
particularly for compound semiconductors such as GaAs.
The presence in the substrate of two elements (Ga and As)
having different chemical reactivities complicates matters
considerably.
It has become clear that the interactions between semicon
ductor surfaces and many gases are often quite weak or in
volve activated adsorption, so that relatively high ambient
pressures (10-3 to 103 Torr) are sometimes needed to pro
duce significant surface coverages. At these pressures, tradi
tional electron or ion-based spectroscopies such as low-ener
gy electron diffraction and Auger spectroscopy, which have
been quite useful in studies of surface chemistry on metals,
cannot be applied. Transfer of the adsorbate-covered surface
from high pressure to ultrahigh vacuum for analysis risks
desorption of the weakly bound species characteristic of gas-semiconductor systems. A few optical methods such as Ra
man spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and ellipsometry
may be used successfully, but they focus only on a limited set
of surface characteristics. More techniques are needed to
provide a complete and coherent picture.
In this paper, PR of CO, O2, and H20 adsorption on the
Ga-rich (4 X 6) GaAs ( 1(0) surface is described. Results for
exposure sequences at 200 K are presented for both the E I
(3.0 eV) and Eo (1.4 eV) transitions. Sticking coefficient
data are extracted from the EI data for all three adsorbates.
II. EXPERIMENTAL
The apparatus was similar to that used for clean surface
studies on GaAs( 1(0)4 and is shown in Fig. 1. The main
components were a small ultrahigh vacuum chamber in
which the samples were mounted, and the various optics and
detection electronics used for PR. The optics were arranged
to direct tunable monochromatic light and a laser beam of
uniform intensity onto the same spot on the sample surface.
Ar+ loser beam
I
'" , ,
-[Chopper
t
, , :
I
Monochromator ~Lamp
Monochromator
I
I r---
I I L _________ ...J
FIG. 1. Schematic diagram of the apparatus for photorefiectance.
3279 J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 7 (6), NovlDec 1989 0734-2101/89/063279-08$01.00 © 1989 American Vacuum Society 3279
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In particular, white light from a quartz-halogen lamp (for
Eo spectra near 1.4 eV) or a xenon arc lamp (for EI spectra
near 3.0 eV) passed through a ~-m monochrometer and a
lens system onto the sample at a 45° angle of incidence. This
monochromatic light was reflected from the sample at 90° to
the incident beam through another lens system into an iden
tical monochromator that scanned coincidently with the
first. For Eo spectra, color glass filters were placed in the
incident and reflected beams to remove second-order violet
light that the source monochromator transmitted and to
block stray laser radiation which sometimes interfered with
long-wavelength measurements. The spot size on the sample
was -0.16 X 8 mm for the Eo transition and 0.32 X 8 mm for
EI•
The signal was detected with a Si photodiode, amplified,
and analyzed with a lock-in amplifier at the chopping fre
quency of the laser (326 Hz). The output of the lock-in was
divided by the amplified input signal using an analog voltage
divider, so that the quantity t::.R / R was given directly; varia
tions in source intensity and absolute reflectance canceled
out. The spectra of t::.R / R vs A. were processed and stored by
a computer. Typical resolutions in these experiments were
1.40 meV for Eo spectra and 1.64 meV for EI spectra.
The modulating laser light was obtained from a chopped
and expanded argon ion laser beam operating at 5145 A.
Upon reaching the sample, the laser beam had an essentially
uniform intensity of 25 mW /cm2 over the entire reflection
spot. The laser was polarized parallel to [110]; the probe
beam was unpolarized.
The sample was suspended in a small turbomolecularly
pumped ultrahigh vacuum chamber. The system consisted
primarily of an optical cube with Pyrex windows and was
equipped with an ionization gauge and with two capacitance
manometers for pressure readings between 1 X 10-4 and
1000 Torr. Both the ionization gauge and the pump could be
valved off from the main chamber, which had a total volume
of -1.5 1. The sample was tightly mounted by clips onto a
piece of tantalum or stainless-steel foil (0.051 mm), which
was in turn spot welded to an electrical feed through and
liquid-nitrogen cryostat. Heating was accomplished by pass
ing electrical current through the mounting foil, while tem
peratures as low as 90 K could be attained by using liquid
nitrogen in the cryostat. Temperatures were monitored with
a chromel,...alumel thermocouple spot welded to the mount
ing foil.
In the constant-temperature experiments described here,
the sample temperature could be determined independently
through analysis of the Eo PR spectra as discussed in Sec. III
below. Precise band-gap energies Eg could be obtained this
way. The temperature dependence of Eg for GaAs is well
known.5 With Eg measurable to within ± 1.5 meV in these
experiments, the temperature could be calculated to within
± 3 K. The temperatures obtained from the thermocouple
and from the PR spectra agreed to within this precision at
temperatures between 90 and -500 K. Between 500 and 600
K the PR spectra gave readings 5 to 7 K higher than the
thermocouple. Above 600 K the PR spectra became unmea
surably small, so that no calibration was possible. Since the
temperatures derived from PR were considered most reli-
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 3280
able, the difference between the two methods was extrapOlat
ed to correct the thermocouple readings above 600 K.
Experiments were performed on several GaAs ( 1(0) sam
ples cut from undoped, (LEC) -grown wafers obtained from
Cominco Electronic Materials. The wafers were n type with
a resistivity of 8.4 X 107 n cm and room-temperatutre mobil
ity of 6100 cm2 IV s. The calculated carrier density was
1.2x 107 carriers/cm3• The samples were rectangles -12
mm long X 5 mm wide by 0.5 mm thick, and were oriented 2°
toward [110] . Before being mounted in the vacuum
chamber, the samples were degreased with hot trichloroeth
ylene and then rinsed with acetone and methanol. Subse
quently, an acid etch was performed for 30 s in a 10:1:1
mixture ofH2S04:H202:H20 at -40 °c, followed by rinsing
with running deionized water and drying with a stream of
dry nitrogen. This procedure appears to minimize the forma
tion of excessively thick oxide layers.6 No HCI etch was em
ployed because Massies et al. have shown 7-9 that the above
procedure leaves essentially no oxide on the surface; oxida
tion takes place during subsequent handling in air. The sam
ples were mounted and the chamber pumped down within 5
min after drying.
After system bakeout, the samples were annealed in vacu
um for 10 min at 845 K to remove any residual oxide. This
treatment has been shown to reliably yield a Ga-rich surface
with a (4 X 6) electron diffraction pattern,10-12 with a Ga
coverage (J Ga of -O. 7 monolayers (ML). It should be noted
that Auger spectroscopy and electron diffraction were not
available in the present experiments, so that the nature of the
GaAs surfaces could not be verified directly.
The gases were research grade (02: 99.9995%, CO:
99.99%) and were further purified by passing them through
a trap filled with zeolite at 100-120 K. The H20 used for
adsorption experiments was deionized and then subjected to
between five and eight freeze-pump-thaw cycles to remove
dissolved gases.
Exposure sequences were performed at 200 K by admit
ting a fixed gas pressure into the system for specified periods
of time. Illumination of the surface with the chopped laser
beam during dosing had no detectable effect on subsequent
PR spectra. During exposure, pressures were monitored
with the capacitance manometers; the ion gauge was turned
off. For the highest exposures used, the dosing pressure ap
proached 300 Torr. PR spectra were taken after the residual
gas had been pumped away. Successive spectra taken after
gas shutoff and spectra taken during adsorption both
showed that desorption subsequent to system pumpdown
was negligible on a time scale of2-5 min for all adsorbates at
the doses used in these experiments. However, for H20
above 3 X 106 L (1 L = 10-6 Torr s), tbe dosing pressure
and the delay time between pumpdown and recording of
spectra did influence the results. Isothermal desorption was
indeed important in these cases, so that the data presented
here are confined to exposures < 3 X 106 L.
It must be emphasized that the system pumpdown was
employed only to shorten the time required for the overall
experiment, not to eliminate spurious effects associated with
PR itself. Since -2 min were required to take a PR spec
trum, excessively high pressure would cause the total dose to
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change substantially while a spectrum was being taken.
Lower pressure would solve the problem but also require
long waiting times for a given dose. At high exposures
(P:::::300 Torr) where the coverage changed only slightly
with increasing exposure, experiments performed with sys
tem pumpdown and with the gas left running gave identical
results for all adsorbates (except for H20 as noted above).
It was found that adsorption as manifested in the PR spec
tra was drastically altered when the ion gauge was on, even
when the gauge was throttled and highly baffled from the
main chamber. The hot filament appeared to speed adsorp
tion, consistent with previous studies of oxygen on
GaAs( 110).13
Preliminary studies of the equilibrium of H20 with
GaAs ( 1(0) were also performed. PR spectra were taken in
the presence of between 10-6 and 1 Torr of H20. The results
showed that turning on the filament of the ion gauge in
creased the equilibrium surface coverage 0 at a fixed pres
sure and surface temperature. However, the effects were re
versible; shutting the filament off would cause 0 to revert
(after -10 min) to its unperturbed value.
In all adsorption studies, the spectrum of the clean surface
could always be recovered by flashing the sample to -840 K
in vacuum for a few seconds.
III. RESULTS
All spectra for thejth transition were analyzed in terms of
the third derivative functional form (TDFF) given by
Aspnes' application of Franz-Keldysh theory to modulation
spectral4:
Il.R (E) = Re{c.i8j[E _ E. + IT.] -n} R J J J
(1)
where Cj is an amplitude factor, OJ is a phase factor, rj is a
phenomenological broadening parameter, and Ej is the ener
gy ofthejth transition. Cj is proportional to Vs for PR spec
tra,4,14 although Cj also depends on other physical quantities
(such as momentum matrix elements) that are not known
precisely. Hence, only relative values of Vs may be extracted
from PR spectra. The parameter n depends on the local elec
tronic band structure and, following conventional theory, 14
was set equal to 3 for the MI transition at E1• The Eo transi
tion at the fundamental band edge is known to be Mo, corre
sponding to n = 5/2. However, it was found in these experi
ments that setting n = 3 produced narrower structures that
generally gave more satisfactory fits to the data.
Aspnes and Rowe have developed a curve-fitting
schemel5 to obtain Cj, OJ, rj, and Ej from experimental
spectra. The scheme is essentially a three-point fit to the
absolute maximum and minimum in a spectrum, together
with the baseline at Il.R / R = O. This procedure was em
ployed to obtain many of the parameters described in the
next section.
Typical spectra at 200 K are shown with theoretical fits
for a clean GaAs( 100) surface in Figs. 2 and 3, respectively.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 -4
IxlO
t.R If 0.5
-0.5 GaAs (100)
EI
T =200K
--Experimental + Res.
---Theoretical Franz-Keldysh 3281
-----
FIG. 2. TypicalEt PR spectrum of clean GaAs( 1(0) at 200 K with theoreti
cal line shape according to Eq. (1).
For EI spectra, the three-point method yielded simulations
that were notably asymmetric because of the shallowness of
the negative lobes. Much better fits could be obtained by
setting 01 ~ -90· and then using Eq. (1) to obtain the re
maining parameters. This could be done easily because the
energy of the transition EI depends on the position of the
peak center, Cion the peak amplitude, and r 1 on the full
width at half-maximum. Near 01 = -90·, the other param
eters are largely independent of 01 so that small asymmetries
in the line shape are of little consequence.
The Eo line shape is strongly modified by an interference
phenomenon between reflections from the surface, where ex
citons are quenched by the electric field, and the interface
between SCR and the bulk, where excitons appear. Often it is
still adequate to model the experimental spectra phenom
enologically with a single line shape given by Eq. (1). How
ever, Co is then no longer easily related to Vs' EI spectra do
not show interference because of a lack of substantial exci
tonic effects. See Ref. 4 for a more detailed discussion of
these phenomena.
Another noteworthy effect was observed in these mea
surements that involved the phase difference between the
t.R
R 2 GaAs(IOO)
Eo
T = 200K
-Experimental
- -Theoretical Franz-Keldysh
Or-~----~------
-I --II--Res.
-2~--~~----~~--~~--~~----~ 1.40 1.42 1.44 1.46 1.48 1.50
E(eV)
FIG. 3. Typical Eo PR spectrum of clean GaAs( 1(0) at 200 K with theoreti
cal line shape according to Eq. (I).
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reflectance signal I:!.R / R and the reference signal from the
laser chopper. One would normally expect these signals to be
perfectly in phase. However, adjustment of the phase control
on the lock-in amplifier to maximize the output showed that
I:!.R /R at both E, and Eo generally lagged the reference sig
nal. At E, the delay was roughly 10°, but for Eo it was as
much as 40°. Previous work in this laboratory has shown that
the phase lag depends on temperature as well.4 The exact
phase delay 0 was determined by centering the wavelength
on the spectral maximum (always the positive lobe), adjust
ing the phase control to null out the signal, and then shifting
by exactly 90°.
The phase lag arises from poor communication between
surface states and the bulk.4 Thus, Vs and the electric field ~
do not attain their equilibrium values instantaneously after
the laser is turned on or off. The time variation in ~ gives rise
to a concurrent variation in I:!.R. Demodulation with a
sinewave reference in the lock-in amplifier then yields non
zero values for O. At Eo, 0 is magnified by the interference
effect described above.
A.CO
As might be expected, the interaction of CO with
GaAs(lOO) was rather weak, and exposures> lOS L were
required to see substantial effects. Above lOS L, however, the
spectra began to narrow gradually, as indicated by the de
crease in r, for the E, transition in Fig. 4. By 1010 L, r,
decreased from a clean surface value of 60 to 54 meV.
The amplitude C1 also decreased by -15% in this range,
as shown in Fig. 5. The phase factor 01 varied slightly from
-93 to -87° with increasing exposure, and the delay 01
decreased by 1°_2°. E, remained constant.
Sticking coefficients S as a function of the relative change
in C1 are shown in Fig. 6. The quantity C * is defined here as
the ratio of the actual change in C1 to the maximum change
C1,max; C1,max for CO was approached at 1011 L. Equivalent
ly, C * represents the fractional change in Vs relative to satu
ration. How C * varies with absolute surface coverage 0 is
unknown without independent calibration, since adsorp
tion-induced changes in the density of surface states may be
important. However, in this work C1 was assumed to be lin-
65
60 CO
>
] 55
~ O2
50 GoAs (100)
EI
T = 200K
45
101 103 105 107 109 lO"
Exposure (L)
FIG. ~'. Variation of the broadening parameter r, with exposure for the E,
transitIOn.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 3282
2.0
1.8 • CO • . .
1.6
<.> ~" .... =' )( 1.4
"Q
1.2 H20 •
GoAs(IOO)
1.0 EI
T=200K
0.8 1
10 10 10 lO"
Exposure( L)
~IG. 5. VariationoftheamplitudefactorC, with exposure for the E, transi
tIon.
ear in O. The sticking coefficients were then obtained by dif
ferentiating the data in Fig. 5 with an assumed saturation
coverage equal to the surface atom density of the unrecon
structed substrate (6.26X 1014 atom/cm2). These satura
tion coverages have evidently never been measured on
GaAs(lOO) , although data for 0217,18 and H20'9 on
GaAs( 110) indicate that one adsorbate molecule per sur
face atom is a good approximation on that surface. For CO,
it appears that no such data exist, so that this assumption is
made primarily for convenience. For CO, S decreases mono
tonically from a low-coverage value of 2 X 10-8 to near
3 X 10-12 at saturation.
It should be noted that although Eo spectra are larger and
have better signal-to-noise ratios than EI spectra, the extrac
tion of even relative values of Vs from Eo spectra is not
straightforward. Hence, Eo spectra are presented and inter
preted here in a qualitative fashion only. Changes in Eo spec
tra were rather slight. Eo and 00 were unaffected, while the
spectra narrowed from 5.6 to 4.6 meV as shown in Fig. 7.
Figure 8 shows how the amplitUde Co first increased slightly
and then decreased. The phase delay 00 decreased from 43 to
38°, as shown in Fig. 9.
s
GoAs(IOO)
T = 200K
1012'------'-_--'--_.L........l._--1 o 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
C· FIG. 6. Sticking coefficient vs
fractional change in ampli
tude C· = C,/C ',max at the
E, transition.
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6
5
4
> ., 3 E
~ GaAs(iOO) 2
Eo
T = 200K
Exposure (L)
FIG. 7. Variation of the broadening parameter ro with exposure for the Eo
transition.
8.02
E) spectra displayed a stronger dependence on O2 adsorp
tion, with r) beginning to decline at exposures of only 103 L
as shown in Fig. 4. The amplitude C) decreased rapidly at
first, but then much more slowly at large exposures until
_107 L, where it decreased more quickly again. The exact
exposure where this dropoff took place varied somewhat
from sample to sample, but it was generally within a factor of
2 of 107 L. Typical results are given in Fig. 5. The phase
factor varied slowly from -93° at low doses to -86° at the
highest doses, while D) decreased by 3°-4°. E) was not signifi
cantly affected by adsorption.
Sis shown in Fig. 6. Again, the saturation value for C) was
taken to be near 1011 L. At low coverage, S was roughly
constant at 4 X 10-4, which is several orders of magnitude
higher than for CO. However, S decreased precipitously
near C * = 0.5 until reaching 3 X 10-9 at C * = 0.6. From
this point, S decreased much more slowly until near
C * = 0.9, where it began to decline more sharply again to
near 10-)2.
Eo spectra were drastically affected by oxygen adsorption,
with measurable effects beginning near 103 L. Experimental
spectra are shown in Fig. 11, while numerical parameters are
exhibited in Figs. 7-10. For exposures < 107 L, the spectra
6
5
4
u
)( 3
=0
2 GaAs(lOO)
Eo
T = 200K
0
10' 103
Exposure (L)
~IG. 8. Variation of the amplitude factor Co with exposure for the Eo transi
tIon.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 -20"
-40·
-60·
B
-80·
-100·
-120·
-140"
101 GoAs (i00)
Eo
T = 200K
10
Exposure(L) 3283
10 lOll
FIG. ~ .. Variation ofthe line shape phase factor eo with exposure for the Eo
transitIOn.
narrowed from 6 to 4 meV, and eo decreased (in absolute
value) from -137° to -100°. Co decreased by a factor of5
in this range, while Do decreased from 43° to 35°. Experimen
tal spectra for this exposure range are shown in the top three
drawings in Fig. 11.
At exposures of 2-4 X 107 L, the (TDFF) ceased to be a
good representation of the experimental spectra, which are
shown as the next two drawings in Fig. 11. The linewidth
varied unpredictably and sometimes irreproducibly in this
regime so that few data for r 0 are shown in Fig. 7. Likewise,
few reliable eo data could be obtained. However, Do and Co
(using interpolated values of ro) were reproducible, and
both quantities went through minima in this regime.
At exposures above 108 L, the bottom two spectra in Fig.
11 show how the spectra inverted nearly completely from
their original shape, and grew to be large. The inversion is
shown quantitatively in Fig. 9 for eo; eo reached -10° from
a starting point of -138° fOf the clean surface. Figure 8
shows how Co became large again, while Fig. 7 shows a COf
responding increase in r o' The phase delay Do also increased
(Fig. 10) but did not reach the clean surface value of 43°.
For both E) and Eo spectra, annealing the oxygen-covered
surface for up to 60 s did not affect the 200 K PR spectra
unless the annealing temperature exceeded 420 K. Above
this temperature, the spectra began to revert to that of the
clean surface. However, evidence of oxygen adsorption re
mained until the surface was heated to at least 620 K.
500
400 CO
300 O2
8
20° GaAs(lOO)
Eo
10° T = 200K
101 lO"
Exposure (L)
FIG. 10. Variation of the phase delay tio with exposure for the Eo transition.
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1lli
R 1.5 x 107 L
(x 2.5)
lAO 1.44
E (eV)
C.H20 1.48 FIG. 11. Line shape variation of Eo
spectra after various exposures of
02' H20 spectra followed the same
pattern at lower exposures.
Photorefiectance spectra at both EI and Eo indicated that
H20 interacted most strongly with GaAs( 1(0). EI results
for r 1 and C1 in Figs. 4 and 5 show substantial decreases in
both parameters even at 100 L. Lower exposures could not
be obtained reliably with the capacitance manometers used
in this experiment, and as mentioned above, the ion gauge
modified adsorption substantially. Thus, 100 L was the low
est exposure achievable.
The rate of adsorption leveled off near 3 X 106 L (five or
ders of magnitude lower than for O2 and CO). However, the
saturation value of C1 depended not just on the exposure
(product of pressure and time), but on the pressure as well.
That is, even at 200 K the adsorption was measurably rever
sible at P> 10-3 Torr. Experiments showed that _10-1
Torr was required for saturation, and the value of C1
(1.18 X 10-8) at this pressure was used as the saturation
value.
Both (JI and 81 decreased slightly over the coverage range
much as they did for O2, while EI was constant. Figure 6
shows that S for H20 at the lowest measured C * (-0.45)
was near 1 X 1O-2-quitehigh. S decreased to -5 X 10-7 as
saturation was approached, but remained several orders of
magnitude higher than for O2 or CO.
Eo spectra for H20 evolved through a sequence of shapes
and amplitudes similar to that of O2, although much lower
exposures of H20 were required to achieve a given line
shape. Likewise, the various parameters in Eq. (1) mirrored
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 3284
the behavior of O2, as shown in Figs. 7-10. However, for
H20 the "critical" dose where Co, r 0' (Jo, and 80 underwent
strong variations was at about 5 X 105 L instead of 2 X 107 L
as for O2,
IV. DISCUSSION
A.CO
CO adsorption on GaAs( 1(0) apparently has been exam
ined only by Dvoryankin et ai.,2o who employed LEED,
AES, and soft x-ray spectroscopy. The CO was admitted
into the vacuum system though a "heated" leak valve and
was probably thermally activated. Although the interaction
seemed to be weak, several ordered and partly ordered struc
tures were observed between 300 and 600 K. Pretzer and
Hagstrom21 determined only that the initial sticking coeffi
cient was very small on (111), (III), and (110) surfaces.
Frankel et ai. 22 have physisorbed CO on GaAs ( 110) at 50 K
with up to 2 L exposures, but found that desorption was
complete by 100 K.
The present experiments appear to confirm the general
notion that the interaction of GaAs with CO is weak in the
absence of activation. However, once the CO adsorbs, it in
teracts strongly enough to remain on the surface for at least
several minutes at 200 K.
The narrowing of both EI and Eo spectra upon adsorption
is noteworthy. The CO evidently removes surface states that
are responsible for rapid trapping and therefore decreased
carrier lifetime.
The Eo spectra were not very sensitive to CO adsorption,
and Co actually increased instead of decreasing as for the
other adsorbates. This increase does not necessarily imply
that CO behaves in a way fundamentally different from H20
and O2, however. The results for H20 and O2 suggest that for
these adsorbates, PR does not distinguish between species;
the effects of adsorption on Vs and surface states were simi
lar. In both cases, as (J increased from zero, Co increased. If
the effects of CO on the surface resemble those of H20 and
O2, then the PR spectra for CO should follow a similar pat
tern with increasing exposure. The weakness of the CO-sur
face interaction might make these spectra mirror over the
entire exposure range the behavior of H20 and O2 below 100
L. Such exposures were below the possible range of the pres
ent experiments, so direct verification of this behavior was
impossible.
8.02
The sticking coefficient data presented in Fig. 6 strongly
suggest the presence of two binding states for oxygen. The
first saturates near C * = 0.6 while the second state fills se
quentially at higher coverages.
UPS evidence for two binding states of oxygen on
GaAs( 1(0) has been presented by Ranke and Jacobi.23 O2
was postulated to adsorb molecularly on a Ga-deficiency
site. Oxygen in this state could dissociate (under unknown
conditions), thus freeing the deficiency site for more molec
ular adsorption. The net result would be a Ga-depleted sur
face covered with both molecular and atomic oxygen. These
workers found that O2 adsorbed more readily on Ga-rich
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(100) surfaces than on As-rich, with So-1.5 X 10-5. Lu
deke and Koma observed the same trend,24 although they
placed So at -1.5 X 10 -4. Furthermore, they considered the
surface to be saturated at () = 0.5, corresponding to an expo
sure of -106 L. This finding does not disagree with the pres
ent work because S was quite low at 106 L. At least 1011 L
were required to reach saturation, consistent with more re
cent work on GaAs( 110).25 Moreover, ()sat for O2 on
GaAs( 110) seems to be > 0.5.17.18 The results shown here
cannot unambiguously distinguish molecular and atomic
oxygen. However, the fact that annealing to 420 K is re
quired to change the PR spectra suggests that the species
responsible is adsorbed fairly strongly and is therefore prob
ably atomic.
The large line shape variations for Eo spectra constitute
the spectral "rotation" referred to in Sec. III. This rotation
has been observed by PR for GaAs as the temperature in
creases,4 although in that case C1 in El spectra and therefore
V. appeared constant over much of the temperature range.
Rotation was attributed to the small (as low as 4.5%)
change in Vs required to induce full spectral rotation, and to
the additional effect of the smearing out of the excitons in the
bulk by thermal quenching.
In the present constant-temperature experiments, rota
tion akin to that in Ref. 4 was observed, but only in the
presence of a fairly large (15%-20%) change in CI and
hence Vs. Thus, the importance of thermal quenching of
excitons in the experiments of Ref. 4 is confirmed.
C.H20
The results presented here show that H20 interacts far
more strongly with GaAs( 100) than CO or O2. Substantial
effects were observed even for 100 L exposures, and satura
tion effects became apparent at -3 X 106 L. Both r I and r 0
decreased upon adsorption, following the behavior of the
other two gases.
The behavior of the Eo spectra for H20 follows that of O2
fairly closely, indicating that the primary cause for rotation
is the reduction in Vs. Small deviations may be observed,
however. For example, ~o decreases more for H20 than for
O2, and for H20 the "critical" exposure where the Eo spectra
undergo rapid changes corresponds to a different CI than for
O2. These effects probably reflect differences in the way the
two adsorbates modify the surface states, but additional
techniques such as surface photovoltage or photoemission
will be required for a more definitive interpretation. H20
adsorption on GaAs( 100) does not appear to have been
studied previously. However, Buchel and Luth have exam
ined H20 adsorption on cleaved GaAs( 110) by photoemis
sion.26 At 180 K they detected a single physisorbed molecu
lar phase. Effects were seen for doses as small as 10-2 L. At
300 K additional features corresponding to chemisorption
through the oxygen lone pair were observed. At high cover
age, the room-temperature spectrum showed evidence of the
physisorbed H20 seen at 180 K. Both phases reduced the
band bending from its clean surface value, although the ex
act results depended on whether Vs was obtained from the
widths of the spectra or the position of the valence band
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.6, Nov/Dec 1989 3285
onset. This reduced band bending corresponds to the de
crease in CI observed in the present experiments.
Evidence for two adsorption phases of H20 on
GaAs( 110) also comes from the photovoltage measure
ments of Liehr and Luth.27 These workers suggested that
H20 induces creation of extrinsic surface states 0.18 e V be
low the conduction band edge. Webb and Lichtensteiger28
have observed the two states and in addition have seen by
XPS and UPS the formation of Ga-OH bonds from H20
dissociation above 109 L. The dissociation was further con
firmed by SIMS.
Mokwa et al.19 have examined H20 on GaAs(1lO) by
thermal desorption and LEED, and determined a low-cover
age sticking coefficient of 1.3 X 10-3. S decreased to
7 X 10-5 near 0.1 ML, but increased sharply by at least two
orders of magnitude near () = 0.4 before returning to the
10-5 range at high coverage. The singularity at () = 0.4 was
attributed to substrate reconstruction to the unrelaxed con
figuration.
No such singularities in S are evident in the present data,
although the GaAs( 1(0) surface may be expected to behave
in a manner entirely different from GaAs (110). Multiple
binding states are not discernible either, although low cover
ages could not be investigated here.
V. CONCLUSION
The results presented here show that PR is quite sensitive
to adsorption, even when the interaction is rather weak as it
is for CO on GaAs. Because PR is an optical technique,
adsorption measurements could be made even in the pres
ence of several hundred Torr of ambient gas without diffi
culty. Such measurements at high pressure were critical for
obtaining equilibrium results and may be crucial to the study
of adsorption/desorption/reaction of gases on semiconduc
tors in general, since such interactions are usually weak. PR
showed little species specificity for the adsorbates studied,
however.
The data obtained at the El (3.0 eV) and Eo (1.4 eV)
transitions are complementary. Spectra at both transitions
respond to changes in the surface potential Vs; however, the
nature of this response is quite different. Adsorption serves
to change the amplitude of El spectra in direct proportion to
Vs. Relative (not absolute) spectral amplitudes can be ade
quately described with standard Franz-Keldysh theory. For
Eo spectra the line shape changes as well because of varia
tions in the width of the SCR that cause optical interference
effects between the surface and excitons at the edge of the
SCR. Eo spectra are larger than E 1 spectra and therefore
have better signal-to-noise ratios, but the line shape changes
make unambiguous interpretation more difficult because of
the complexity of the interference effects.
PR also responds to adsorption-induced changes in the
nature of surface states. The widths of both E I and Eo spectra
decrease upon adsorption, indicating increased carrier life
time and therefore a reduction in recombination rate at the
surface. Moreover, adsorption changes the phase lag
between AR / R and the reference signal from the laser chop
per. This phase lag results from slow equilibration of carriers
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 155.33.120.209 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 07:32:013286 E. G. Saebauer: Adsorption of CO, O2, and H20 on GaAs(100)
in the space-charge region with the surface states. Gas ad
sorption generally improves this communication.
Low-coverage sticking coefficients on GaAs( 1(0) in
crease in the order CO<02 < H20. The data show evidence
for two binding states of O2 on this surface. In all cases, S
decreases by at least four orders of magnitude as saturation is
approached.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department
of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC04-76DP00789.
a) Present address: University of Illinois, Department of Chemical Engi-
neering, Urbana, IL 61801.
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Technol. 19, 335 (1981).
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16V. A. Kiselev, Phys. Status. Solidi B 111, 461 (1982).
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Vac. Sci. Technol. B2, 351 (1984).
18F. Bartels and W. Monch, Surf. Sci. 143, 315 (1984).
I~. Mokwa, D. Kohl, and G. Heiland, Surf. Sci. B 9,98 (1984).
2"V. F. Dvoryankin, A. Yu. Mitayagin, and T. O. Uustare, Sov. Phys. Solid
State 22, 1000 (1980).
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A I, 679 (1983).
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24R. Ludeke and A. Korna, Phys. Rev. Lett. 34, 817 (1973).
2'W. E. Spicer, P. W. Chye, C. M. Gamer, I. Lindau, and P. Pianetta, Surf.
Sci. 86, 763 (1979).
26M. Biichel and H. Liith, Surf. Sci. 87, 285 (1979).
27M. Liehr and H. Liith, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. 16, 1200 (1979).
28C. Webb and M. Lichtensteiger, J. Vac. Sci. Technol.21, 659 (1982).
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1.1139685.pdf | Simple balance technique for determining the transition temperature of high T c
superconducting powders
Takeshi Takamori and Derek B. Dove
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 59, 1430 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.1139685
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1139685
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/59/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.18.123.11 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 23:02:39mating surfaces of the metals were sanded with 2000 Japa
nese rate emery paper which corresponded to a roughness of
10 p. Maximum torques which did not break threads were
applied to make each joint. When a 5~mm-diam stainless
steel socket head cap screw was used for fastening two pieces
with a torque of 12 N m, the best result of 0.005 lIn was
obtained for the contact. A joint with a 5~mm-diam hexag
onal brass bolt had a resistance of 0.011 /-in. When a pair of
smaller screws of 3 mm in diameter were used for the same
contact area with smaller torques, the electrical resistance
increased to 0.26 pO for stainless-steel bolts and 0.087 pn
for brass bolts, respectively. The electrical resistance, the
size of screws, and the applied torques concerning the con
tact between the different kinds of materials are summarized
in Table I for convenience, together with typical values for
the contact between the same kinds of materials. Only the
electrical resistances at 4.2 K are shown for other workers.
The electrical resistance is in rough inverse proportion to the
applied torque. One can easily apply larger torques to larger
bolts. From these measurements it is concluded that fasten
ing two pieces with bolts as large as 5 mm in diameter is very effective and satisfactory for good thermal contact, which is
comparable to contact between the same materials.
Incidentally an EB (electron beam) welded joint ofsil
ver rods having a diameter of 10 mm and welding cross sec
tion of 0.5 X 31 mm showed a resistance of 0.018 pD.. This
value is of the same order of magnitude as copper-to-copper
TIO welding and the best values of threaded joints.
We thank the Technical Division of the Institute of PI as
rna Physics, Nagoya University for EB welding.
'M. C. Veura, Ph. D. thesis, Helsinki University of Techuology, Finland,
1978.
2K. M. Lau and W. Zimmermann, Jr .• Rev. Sci. lustrum. 50, 254 (1979).
'K. Muething, G. G. Ihas, and J. Landau, Rev. Sci. lostrum. 48, 906
(1977).
4R. 1. Boughton, N. R. Brubaker, and R. J. Sarwinski, Rev. Sci. lustrum.
38, li77 (1967).
'M. Suomi. A. C. Anderson, and B. Holmstrom, Physica 38,67 (1968).
OM. Manninen and W. Zimmermann, Jr., Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 48, 1710
(1977).
7D.I. Bradley, A. M. Guenault, V. Keith, C. J. Kennedy, I. E. Miller, S. G.
Mussett, G. R. Pickett, and W. P. Pratt, Jr., J. Low Temp. Phys. 57, 359
(1984).
Simple balance technique for determining the transition temperature
of high Tc superconducting powders
Takeshi Takamori and Derek B. Dove
IBM Research Divisiofl, T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York 10598
(Received 2S January 1987; accepted for pUblication 29 April 1988)
A simple technique is described that permits the measurement of the transition temperature of
high Tc superconductors in powder form. The method employs a modification of a single-pan
balance and has sensitivity for measurements on powder amounts as low as a few mg.
High Tc superconductors have been the subject of intensive
study, foHowing the report by Bednarz and Muller on the
La-Ba-Cu oxide system. I A wide range of structural and
compositional modification has been explored through the
past year in a search for superconductors with even higher
Tc.2-4 Because these polycrystalline superconductors are
prepared through typical ceramic powder processing tech
niques, characterization of the as-prepared powder is as im
portant as that of sintered or pressed material. 5 For example,
by determining the transition temperature of the powder, it
is possible to follow development of the superconducting
property from the starting powder mixture through the fir
ing process and other processing steps. Since it is exceedingly
difficult to make electrical conductivity measurements on
typical powder samples, we have set up a simple balance
utilizing the Meissner effect in order to determine the transi
tion temperature. This method is sensitive, nondestructive,
and readily permits measurements on powder amounts as
low as a few mg.
The arrangement, shown in Fig. 1, consists of a single
hanging-pan balance,6 so-called student balance, to which is
attached a small permanent magnet in place of the pan. The powder sample to be measured is placed in a copper cup
arrangement that allows easy cooling and heating between
room temperature and liquid-nitrogen temperature, and the
copper cup is placed in dose proximity beneath the magnet.
As the sample is cooled through the superconducting transi
tion, a repulsive force is exerted on the magnet due to the
Meissner exclusion of magnetic nux from the sample. It has
been found convenient to measure the small displacement
from the equilibrium position of the magnet by means of a
linear variable differential transformer (L VDT) .7 As shown
in Fig. 1, the core of a differential transformer is attached to
the suspension carrying the magnet and the windings were
securely located relative to the balance. Any small motion of
the magnet displaces the core resulting in a signal from the
differential transformer. An electrical signal obtained by this
means is proportional to the displacement of the magnet
and, hence, to the force exerted on the magnet as the sample
becomes superconducting. Details of the sample holder are
shown schematically in Fig. 2. The sample holder consists of
three layers of copper cups with good thermal contact to
each other. A typical size of the outer cup is 25 mm deep and
25 mm in diameter with a wall thickness of 1.6 mm. The size
1430 Rev. Sci. Instrum. 59 (3), August 1988 0034·6748/88/081430-03$0 1.30 @ 1938 American institute of Physics 1430
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130.18.123.11 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 23:02:39Balance
-1----- LVDT
-+-+-+--- COfe
\
\:::::==~g To Recorder
--t----- Compensating Weight
/ Magnet
To Recorder
Sam pie Powder
-+--++- Sample Holder
~~~~~~~, +-----Liquid Nitrogen
~============~====~ Container
FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the present technique.
and number of cups used should be adjusted depending on
the measurement condition desired. For example, if a heat
ing or cooling rate slower than actually measured is desired,
an additional outer cylinder with a good thermal contact is
used. The outer cup also prevents the sample and the magnet
from wetting by the liquid nitrogen in the cooling bath, so
that the balance is not disturbed by the buoyancy. The mid
dle cup holds the sample container with a thermocouple hole
at the bottom, and a slot on the outside wall to guide the
thermocouple. The sample container can be made of any
nonmagnetic materials, such as the alumina containers sup-
Somple
Powder Thermoeouple
FIG. 2. Details of the sample holder. ++t<~<'+--- Inner Cup
t+f?~?!--- Middle Cup
\W<\l--- Outer Cup
=EfI#~(IN--- No..,mo9~etic
Thermal
Insulation Container
1431 Rev. Sci. instrumo, Vel. 59, No.8, August 1988 plied with commercial DT A instruments. The inner cup is a
cover for the sample to ensure thermal uniformity across the
sample. Its bottom should be thin enough to retain the de
sired sensitivity, however. The thickness ofthe bottom of the
inner cup we use is 0.6 mm. When the magnet is close to the
bottom of the inner cup and the sample container is filled
with the powder, the magnetic field exerted on the top of the
sample is found to be 2500 G. At this maximum field of the
present arrangement, flux may penetrate the sample if the
applied field is greater than Hcl. 8 Even at this field, however,
we did not find any difficulty in determining the transition
temperature. Since the present arrangement is designed pri
marily to provide a convenient method for measuring the
superconducting transition temperature of powder samples,
the magnetic field applied to the sample is kept relatively
low, typically 1000 G, to avoid appreciable influence of the
field upon the transition temperature.9
The measurement can be performed in room atmo
sphere without difficulty. To minimize frosting, however, it
would be preferable to use a dry box. A typical operation is as
follows. First, the sample powder is loaded as shown in Fig.
2, and the sample holder sitting in the cooling bath is lifted
up toward the magnet, until the magnet is slightly above the
bottom of the inner cup, and is hanging freely so that the
balance is free from frictional disturbance. Then liquid nitro
gen is carefully poured into the cooling bath until the surface
of the liquid reaches a level just short ofthe top of the sample
holder. After the temperature of the sample reaches close to
that of the liquid nitrogen, the liquid is drained off or evapo
rated. If the sample powder is cooled through a supercon
dueting transition, the magnet is pushed upwards and the
displacement is recorded via the L VDT signal. It is possible
to determine the Tc of the sample during cooling, but with
the present arrangement it is preferable to measure it during
heating since control of the heating rate is usually easier to
achieve than control of the cooling rate. After the liquid
nitrogen is drained off, the sample wanns up by exposure to
the room atmosphere. Because of the large heat capacity of
the sample holder, the heating occurs gradually enough to
determine the Tc with a reasonable accuracy< As the super
conducting state disappears, the magnet comes down to its
FIG. 30 Typical displacement-temperature curves for two samples.
Notes 1431
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130.18.123.11 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 23:02:39biJ r.----,-----.-----' --,-~~-.-, ~ .. ~-, S ::6
iJ:I
...
C) ,
"0
~ o (,_,
P-. "
:> •
..0
C)
~ i~li
;;... ... // .. /.
'00 /' -;: ~/
~ l ./y
~ ~.~I ____ ~ __ ~ ____ -L ____ L-__ ~ ____ ~ __ --u
4U 120 lUI
I'owd(~r B in Mixture' (mg)
FIG. 4. Repulsive force vs weight of powder B dispersed in alumina.
original position. This motion of the magnet is recorded to
gether with the sample temperature. The present arrange
ment has been found to provide a simple alternative to the
use of more elaborate cryostat systems.
Figure 3 shows results obtained by the present tech
nique on superconducting powders ofYBa2Cu30x prepared
by two preparation procedures. Subtle differences in shape
of the curves at the onset of T,. were quite reproducible,
indicating that this technique may also be useful for moni
toring such difference in transition in sample-to-sample
comparison. Even though the strength of the magnetic field
exerted upon the sample depends upon the relative distance
between magnet and sample, little difference was seen in the
transition curves obtained with the magnet placed at heights
ranging from 1 to 3 mm above the sample. As shown in Fig.
3, about 1.2-1.3-mm displacement of the magnet by the
Meissner effect (corresponding to 60-65 mg of the force)
was recorded for sample powders of 120-160 mg in weight.
One of the advantages of the present technique over the
direct conductivity measurement is that the material to be
measured does not have to be in a form that ensures electrical
continuity. Powder particles can also be measured when dis
persed in an inert matrix without contacting each other. This
is demonstrated in Fig. 4. The powder B in Fig. 3 was diluted
by fine alumina powder (0.5 ?lm) over a wide range of
weight ratios, and subjected to the same measurement. Be
cause of the density difference between alumina and
YBa2Cu30x, the weight of the mixture filling the sample
container varied from 44 mg for the 9.9 weight % mixture to
160 mg for the powder B only. This resulted in the recorded
displacement varying by more than an order of magnitude.
It was found that the observed variation of the magnitude of
1432 Rev. ScLlnstrum., Vol. 59, No.8, August 1988 displacement was proportional to the weight of supercon
ducting powder in each mixture measured. In Fig. 4, the
repulsive force due to powder B is plotted versus weight of
powder B in the mixtures. The least amount of powder B in
Fig. 4, 4.4 mg in the 9.9 weight % mixture, is less than one
half the nominal sensitivity limit (10 mg) of the balance
used.
In conclusion, a simple arrangement has been described
that provides a convenient method for determining the tran
sition temperature of high Tc superconductors that are in
powder form. It has been found that the method permits
measurements on a few mg of powder and for a given powder
it is at least semiquantitative in estimating the superconduct
ing fraction. We may note, however, that the interaction
between magnetic field and sample is such as to make truly
quantitative measurements very difficult, since the effective
field acting on the sample is due both to the applied field and
to the field exclusion due to the sample itself. For measure
ments on powders, however, semiquantitative comparative
measurements can be made as shown in the present work.
Magnetic field penetration depth, particle size effects, and
interaction with the applied field need to be considered, how
ever, if more quantitative estimates of super conducting vol
ume fraction are to be obtained.
We thank M. W. Shafer and J. J. Cuomo for supplying
the high Tc superconducting materials used in developing
the present technique.
'I. G. Bednorz and K. A. Muller, Z. Phys. B 64,189 (1986).
2M. K. Wu, J. R. Ashburn, C. 1. Torng, P. H. Hor, R. L Meng, L. Gao, Z. J.
Huang, Y. Q. Wang, and C. W. Chu, Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 908 (1987); P. H.
Hor, L. Gao, R. L. Mcng, Z. J. Huang, Y. Q. Wang, K. Forster, J. Vassi
lious, C. W. Chu, M. K. Wu, J. R. Ashburn, and C. T. Torng, ibid. 911.
'X.-D. Chen, S. Y. Lee, J. P. Golben, S.-I. Lee, R. D. McMichael, Y. Song,
T. W. Noh, and J. R. Gaines, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 58, 1565 (1987).
4Several proceedings are available, see for example, Current Research on
Ceramic Superconductors (Am. Ceram. Soc., 1987); Chemistry of High
Temperature Superconductors, Am. Chern. Soc. Symposium Series 351, 85
(1987).
SR. A. Hein, Phys. Rev. B 33,7539 (1986).
"DIAL-O-GRAM, OHAUS, Florham Park, NJ 07932.
7Type 500HR, Schaevitz Eng., Pennsauken, NJ 081l0.
BF. Hellman, E. M. Gyorgy, D. W. Johnson, Jr., H. M. O'Bryan, and R. C.
Sherwood, J. App\. Phys. 63, 447 (1988).
9S. S. P. Parkin, V. Y. Lee, and E. M. Engler, Chemtronics 2, 105 (1987).
Notes 1432
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1.344302.pdf | Trapdominated breakdown processes in an insulator bridged vacuum gap
R. G. Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan
Citation: J. Appl. Phys. 66, 2091 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.344302
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.344302
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Additional information on J. Appl. Phys.
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Downloaded 07 Sep 2013 to 131.211.208.19. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsTrap .. dominated breakdown processes in an insulator bridged vacuum gap
R. G, Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. University of South Carolina, Columbia,
South Carolina 29208
(Received 13 February 1989; accepted for publication 16 May 1989)
Measurements of coordinated, time-resolved breakdown current and luminosity phenomena
associated with a pulsed surface flashover event in an insulator bridged vacuum gap are
presented. It was observed that the luminosity and current waveforms differ vastly in their
temporal character. The luminosity profile has a sharp pulse with no counterpart in the
current waveform. A significant afterglow activity is also observed after the cessation of the
breakdown current. Further, the profiles of the luminosity and current waveforms changed
with successive breakdowns, The rise times and decay times of the luminosity waveform, the
time delay between the onset of the luminosity and current waveforms, and the rise time of the
current waveform changed with successive breakdowns showing regular trends. The above
modifications in the temporal profiles of luminosity with successive breakdowns are analyzed
on the basis of carrier trapping and recombination processes within the localized levels of the
forbidden gap associated with the insulator-vacuum interface. The experimental results
reported here qualitatively support the surface flashover model based on carrier trapping for
low mobility, large band-gap insulators. The analysis ofthe results is suggestive of a
breakdown model in which hot-electron generation culminates in impact ionization-induced
breakdown in the subsurface layers of the insulator.
I. INTRODIJCTION
The degradation of the excellent voltage hoidoffproper
ties of a plain vacuum gap due to the insertion of an insulator
has been researched extensively for over three decades. Var
ious models based on prebreakdown and breakdown investi
gations have been proposed to explain the physics of pulsed
surface flashover phenomena. 1 The principal elements of the
models proposed earlier incorporate electron emission from
the cathode triple junction, cascade multiplication on the
insulator surface, and ionization of gas desorbed from the
insulator surface, Recent models, however, suggest that the
surface flashover phenomena can be explained using an en
ergy-band perspective. Insulator surface charge generation
and neutralization has been experimentally demonstrated to
be due to recombination processes in the localized levels in
the forbidden gap of the insulator.2 An electronic cascade
within the surface layers of an insulator where the defects are
concentrated has been proposed as the cause of surface
flashover in bridged vacuum gaps.3 Based on detailed pre
breakdown and breakdown measurements on a wide range
of ceramic and polymer materials with varying surface and
bulk properties, a model invoking the energy-band structure
at the insulator-vacuum interface has been proposed for de
surface flashover. 4 The model proposes that the breakdown
occurs in a thin surface sublayer within the insulator by a
process of collision-ionization of trap emptied charge carri
ers from defect sites within the forbidden band. The validity
of these new models for pulsed surface flashover is being
examined in our present investigations.
The focus of this paper is the description and interpreta
tion of time coordinated breakdown luminosity and current
measurements of the pulsed surface flashover event in a
bridged vacuum gap. The observation of predischarge and
discharge luminosity associated with the surface flashover event using high~speed camera techniques has been the sub
ject of past investigations.5-7 However, these techniques do
not provide quantitative information pertaining to the spa
tially integrated, temporal evolution of the luminosity ava
lanche, essential for understanding the electron and photon
generation processes and their consequent roles in the sur
face flashover process, The luminosity diagnostics employed
in our studies offer quantitative data with nanosecond tem~
poral resolution and an extended spectral response not pre
viously reported. The application of time coordinated stud
ies of breakdown luminosity and current with these
enhanced diagnostic capabilities, to an insulator which has
not been prestressed, has led to severa] novel experimental
observations. It was observed, for instance, that not only do
the current and luminosity profiles differ vastly from each
other, but that both waveforms undergo significant modifi
cations with successive breakdown. Also, while the luminos
ity avalanche precedes the breakdown current avalanche,
the time delay between the two is not constant, contrary to
earlier reports.5 The time delay is actually found to decrease
steadily within the first few breakdowns. These and other
results described later are suggestive of changes in the details
of the flashover process with successive breakdowns. As a
coronary, the study of preconditioned insulators, assuming
the breakdown event to be amenable to statistical analysis,
seems questionable.
Additionally, the emphasis in the earlier studiesS-s was
to comprehend the evolution of the breakdown phase from
prebreakdown events such as gas desorption and secondary
electron emission. An analysis of our data does not, how~
ever, require any assumptions regarding gas desorption or
secondary emission prebreakdown processes. In the present
report, the observed changes in the temporal profiles of lu
minosity with repeated voltage breakdowns are examined by
taking into consideration carrier recombination and trap-
2091 J. Appl. Phys. 66 (5). 1 September 1989 0021-6979/89/172091-09$02.40 @ 1989 American Institute of PhYSics 2091
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dielectric-vacuum interface. The breakdown event is per
ceived as a perturbation of the thermal equilibrium distribu
tion of the electrons and holes in the localized levels of the
forbidden gap. The resultant nonequilibrium situation and
the final relaxation process towards the thermal equilibrium
are believed to be characteristic of the insulator-vacuum in
terface. The observed modifications in the luminosity pro
files with successive breakdowns are found to be adequately
described as manifestations of the relaxation and associated
trap dominated processes. Specifically, the dominant role of
the trapped carriers in influencing the luminosity rise times,
decay times, and afterglow behavior is emphasized. Experi
mental confirmation of physical processes influencing the
prebreakdown phase are beyond the scope of the currently
reported results. However, no unduly restrictive assump
tions regarding the prebreakdown processes culminating in
the flashover event are required excepting experimentally
well-established charge injection and transport phenomena
in low mobility, large band-gap insulators such as alumina.
A. Experimental setup
Figure 1 shows the overall schematic of the experimen
tal test arrangement. The voltage source for the experiments
is a six-stage Marx impulse generator with a nominal output
of 600 kY, 15 kJ. The output is a double exponential voltage
waveform. For the investigations reported here, a O.5/15-,us
wave was chosen. The Marx generator was enclosed in a
Faraday cage (using mesh screen) to ensure that the noisy
breakdown of the spark gaps do not interfere with the mea
sured signals at the test chamber. A high-voltage cable (rat
ed at 3OO-kV dc) with a surge impedance of 67 n connects
the output of the generator to the test chamber. The cable
sheath is grounded at the Faraday cage and at the test
chamber to retain the transmission line characteristics of the
Capaciliv6_
divider
~
Photo!ube Mechanical
and diffusion
pump system ~~~=~
Bottom electrode
manipulator
FIGo L Schematic of experimental setupo
2092 Jo AppL Physq Vol. 66, Noo 5, i September 1989 cable. The cable terminates at the vacuum chamber in a
high-voltage Delrin ™ bushing. The stainless-steel chamber
itself is 46 em tall and 31 em in diameter and is evacuated by
an oil diffusion pump backed by a mechanical pump. Apart
from the port connected to the diffusion pump, the chamber
is provided with several ports to enable optical diagnostics
and to facilitate the changing of samples. AU the ports are
provided with quartz windows, the useful optical frequency
response for which is 170 nm to 2.2 flm. The test samples are
held in a butt-contact between plane parallel stainless steel
electrodes with rounded edges providing a quasiuniform
field. The top electrode is mounted at the high-voltage feed
through end of the vacuum chamber while the bottom elec
trode is mounted on a linear motion feedthrough with a dial
gauge arrangement to measure the gap spacing to an accura
cy of 0.01 mm.
t. Electrical and optical diagnostics
The breakdown voltage across the test gap, the break
down current through the gap, and the luminosity of the
breakdown arc were aU recorded using a dual channel digi
tizing oscilliscope (2S0-MHz single-shot capability, and a
usable rise time of 1.5 ns). The breakdown voltage was mea
siued using a self-integrating coaxial capacitive divider in
Hne with the test gap. The linear sensitivity of this divider
was measured to be 3.87 mV/kV as calibrated against the
Tektronix P6015 high-voltage probe. The breakdown cur
rent was measured using a commercially available current
viewing resistor (T&M Research Products, model SSDN-
015,15 mn and a usable response time of I ns) in series with
the test gap on the ground side. The luminosity signal from
the breakdown arc was measured using a vacuum phototube
(Hamamatsu model R 1193U -02, useful spectral response of
185-650 nm with a peak at 340 nm, a usable rise time 270 ps
and a fall time lOOps). This signal was terminated with 50 a
at both ends while the voltage and current signals were
matched with 50 n at the oscilloscope alone. Low noise RG
223/U, 50-0 coaxial cables were used for aU signal measure
ments. Additionally, the cables were doubly shielded using
copper braid. All the cables were matched equal in length to
within 3 in. using a time domain refiectometer to ensure that
the temporal phase relationships between the measured sig
nals are always preserved.
2. Specimen and electrode preparation
The insulators studied were 99.9% pure polycrystaUine
alumina specimens procured from Frenchtown Alumina
(FA 7258-Bl) in the form of right circular cylinders, lOmm
thick, 25.4 mm diam. The samples were rinsed with analyti
cal grade methanol and placed in the test gap. The stainless
steel (No. 304) electrodes were polished after each test by
9. 5-pm alumina abrasive followed by 0.05-,um alumina abra
sive. The electrodes were subsequently ultrasonically
cleaned in Buehler Ultramet cleaning solution followed by
cleaning in hot distilled water for! h. The electrodes were
assemble.d in the test chamber after drying and rinsing with
methanol. All sample and electrode handling was done using
surgical gloves.
R Go Bommakanti and To So Sudarshan 2092
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.;::' 3
(f)
0 2 .-
E
:J
-.I
--I o 2 3 4 ~) 6 7 !3 CJ 10
TirrJe
FIG. 2. Typical osciHograms of breakdown current and luminosity. Ap
plied voltage = 35 kV, time = 500 ns/div. Sensitivity: current at 267 A/
div., luminosity at 45.3 lm/div.
3. Experimental procedure
The test chamber was pumped down for about 10 h to a
level of 5 X 10-6 Torr. The voltage was then applied begin
ning at 5 kV. The time interval between successive voltage
applications was about 15 min. Three voltage applications
were made at each voltage level and the voltage increased by
5 k V if none of the applications resulted in a breakdown. The
current-luminosity measurements reported here were all ob
tained at a 35-k V peak at which the sample flashed over first
and repeatedly thereafter on each successive voltage applica
tion at the same voltage. Data reported here pertain to ten
such voltage applications. Typical breakdown current and
luminosity data are shown in Fig. 2. The Marx generator
waveform is a 0.5/15 fl,s, provided the sample does not
breakdown on voltage application. In case of the occurrence
of a breakdown, the Marx generator is essentially a capacitor
bank discharging across a shorted gap. The voltage across
the bank collapses completely and in case the load matches
the source, only one pulse can be seen. However, since the
gap impedance during the flashover event is not matched to
the generator impedance, the breakdown current consists of
a train of reflections. The time for the current to decay to
zero would depend on the extent of the impedance mis
match. In the ensuing discussion, only the pulse correspond
ing to the first two-way transit time of the high-voltage (hv)
cable (-50 ns) is considered. AU the signal measurements
were made using external triggering of the oscilloscope with
the test gap voltage divider output as the trigger. Pretrigger
information of 100 ns was acquired in order to ensure that
the breakdown precursors were not missed.
II,RESULTS
Figures 3(a) and 3(b) show oscHIographs of the time
resolved data of breakdown current and the associated lumi
nosity for the second and tenth breakdowns, respectively.
The summarized results for a total of ten breakdowns are
presented in Fig. 4. The fonowing observations could be
made from Fig. 3 and 4.
( 1 ) The temporal structure ofthe luminosity waveform
2093 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 (bl Time
FIG. 3. (-a) Luminosity and breakdown current profiles for the second
breakdown. Applied voltage: 35 kV, time = 10 IIs/div. Sensitivity: current
at 105 A/div., luminosity at 3.8 Im/div. (b) Luminosity and breakdown
current profiles for the tenth breakdown. Applied voltage: 35 kV, time = 10
ns/div. Sensitivity: current at 103 A/div., luminosity at 11.81m/dlv.
20
15
c~ 10 (f)
C
<V
E 5 i--
0
No. of breakdowns
FIG. 4. Summary of observed modifications ill the luminosity and current
profiles with successive breakdowns. a, Rise time ofIuminosity pulse, b, rise
time of current pulse, and c, time delay between the onset of photonic and
electronic avalanches.
R. G. Bommakanti and T_ S. Sudarshsn 2093
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"
I 7
6 6
~ 5
~ 4
c 4 .;'>;>
Q) j " \..
:J
U 2 if)
3 c c
2 E
:~
_J
0 0
(hi lime
FIG. 5. (a) Oscillograms showing details of the slowly varying and expo
nential components of the luminosity profile for the second breakdown. Ap
plied voltage: 35 kV, time = 5 ns/div. Sensitivity: current at lOS A/div.,
luminosity at 3.8Im/div. (b) OscilIograms showing details of the slowly
varying and exponential components of the luminosity profile for the tenth
breakdown. Applied voltage: 35 kV, time = 5 us/div. Sensitivity: current at
103 A/div., luminosity at 11.8 Im/div.
is very different from that of the current waveform. It is
noted that while the current waveform matches the output of
a SPICE circuit simulation program for a short-circuited test
gap, the luminosity rise and faU times (10%-90%) do not
have any counterpart in the current waveform. The !uminos
ity rise time and the FWHM is short compared to the current
waveform.
(2) With successive breakdowns, the structure of the
luminosity is altered in terms of rise and fall times. The rise
and decay times of the luminosity decrease with successive
breakdowns (Fig. 4). The luminosity rise and decay profile
on the first few breakdowns can be divided into two por
tions-a slowly varying portion reaching a plateau and a
steeply lising portion. In Fig. 5(a), the slowly varying por
tion can be seen up to 8 ns for the rising profile and from 26
ns onwards for the decay profile. The plateau region extends
from 8 to 14 ns. The steeply varying portion can be seen in
Fig. 5(a) from 14 to 21 ns on the rising profile and from 22.5
to 26 ns on the decay profile. Wi.th successive breakdowns,
the slow portion shortens in time and almost disappears both
on the rising and falling edges of the luminosity pulse [Fig.
5(b)]. However, the current rise times increase with succes
sive breakdowns as can be seen from Fig. 4.
2094 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 (3) In the first breakdown event, the luminosity ava
lanche (photon avalanche) precedes the electronic ava
lanche by a few nanoseconds [Fig. 3(a)]. A quantitative
measurement of the time delay between the two signals is
nontrivial since both the signals have vastly differing fre
quency contents. Specifical1y, the luminosity signal consist
ed of two components, which varied significantly with
successive breakdowns, as described above. In view of this, a
choice was made to measure the time delay between the 0%
point on the luminosity rise and the 0% point on the current
rise. As can be seen from Fig. 4, this time delay decreases
from the second to the tenth breakdown. Other choices such
as measuring the time delay between the 10% point (of the
peak value) on the luminosity waveform and the 10% point
on the current waveform were explored. For instance, it was
found that the absolute value of the delay for the second
breakdown was 8 ns using the 10% measurement instead of
6 ns with the 0% measurement. However, it was found that
the delay decreases significantly after ten breakdowns, simi
lar to that of the 0% measurement. A similar trend was con
firmed using values corresponding to 20% of the peak value.
It was thus confirmed that the trend of decreasing time delay
with successive breakdowns is not a measurement artifact.
Also, it may be added that the true delay after ten break
downs may have been limited by the oscilloscope resolution
(1.5 ns).
It was also noticed that subsequent to the significant
decrease of the time delay between the luminosity and cur
rent avalanche inception, any breakdown would lead to sim
ilar luminosity waveforms in terms of rise times, fall times,
and delays (again within the resolution of the oscilloscope).
(4) A pronounced second peak, lower in magnitude
(about a third of the initial peak) and with a decay many
orders longer than the initial luminosity (several microse
conds) is observed (Fig. 2). This activity is similar to an
"afterglow" since it occurs after the cessation of the break
down current pulse train. It was observed that the duration
of afterglow decreased significantly with successive break
downs.
It is shown in the following that these experimental re
sults can be qualitatively accounted for, by elucidating the
role of the trapped charges within the discrete levels of the
forbidden gap. As a consequence, an explanation based on
the energy band-gap model is proposed, to account for the
observed trap-dominated breakdown processes.
IU, DISCUSSION
Figure 6 shows a conceptual energy-band diagram of a
wide band-gap insulator between two electrodesY The var
ious localized levels shown in the forbidden gap are due to
both the bulk and surface defects in the atomic structure of
alumina. The nature and distribution of these levels in the
bulk have been investigated for Czochralski-grown sap
phire. 10 The surface of alumina is an abrupt discontinuity of
the periodicity of the crystal structure and abounds in var
ious proportions of point, line, and 3D defects.11 In view of
this, the vacuum-dielectric interface is the largest solid-state
defect structure within the bridged vacuum gap and it is
logical that flashover occurs at the interface rather than in
R. G. Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2094
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METAL
eledrode INSULATOR
!C diffusion
trapping
rafter elaclronic injection
/, r belore elaclronic injection
EFI !
FIG. 6. Energy-band diagram showing the localized levels, trapping, and
associated space-charge effects (see Ref. 9).
the bulk, at a field which is a fraction of the bulk breakdown
strength of alumina. The distributed levels for holes and
electrons have been identified as trapping or recombination
states. 12 The occupancy of the recombination states is dictat
ed by the kinetics of recombination and that of the trapping
states by charge injection and trapping and detrapping
mechanisms, for insulators with long dielectric relaxation
times.
The nature of the charge injection and transport pro~
cesses in insulators has been studied extensively and is briefly
reviewed in the fonowing to emphasize the validity of the
energy~band model and the consequent dominance of the
trap-dictated processes operative during the surface
flashover process. On application of an electric field, the con
duction mechanism in alumina has been identified to be pri
marily electronic since the transport properties, as indicated
by the mobility lifetime product of the electrons, is many
times that of the holes. 10 Electrons are injected into the insu
lator conduction band from the cathode by Schottky barrier
reduction at moderately low fields and by Fowler-Nord
heim tunneling at high fields. 13 Nonmetallic injection asso
ciated with prebreakdown activity has also been reported. 14
Irrespective of the mode of injection, the injected electrons
are quickly trapped after a few scatterings because of the
short mean free path and large concentration of localized
states. The average distance It for electron trapping by emp
ty traps, of capture cross section ap and density Nt is given
by [l/(Nta,)]. In insulators I, is sman (-0.5-2 nm) and
smaller than Ii' the mean distance for impact ionization. The
magnitude of the trapped charge is a complex function of
field, temperature, trap density, insulator thickness, elec
trode material, and duration of charge injection.15 As a re
sult of the electron trapping, a macroscopic negative space
charge is generated near the cathode which tends to reduce
further electron injection from the cathode. Low-density re
gions are then formed by mechanisms which are still under
investigation.9•16 This permits a large electron mean free
2095 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 path (5-10 nm) for subsequently injected electrons to gain
energy from the field and cause impact ionization leading to
a local avalanche.
Bulk breakdown in alumina has been proposed to be due
to electron trapping succeeded by impact ionization-induced
current runaway.15 Spectroscopic studies of prebreakdown
luminescence for Lucalox alumina bridged vacuum gaps
have identified the emission as a result of transitions from
P+ defect centers. 17 Based on these observations, it has been
proposed for de stresses that the electrons in the subsurface
layer produced by the field emptying of traps cause positive
charge generation by internal ionization processes leading to
breakdown.4 It can thus be concluded that experimental evi
dence exists for analyzing the surface flashover as an elec
tronic cascade involving localized levels in the forbidden
gap.
More significantly, a11 the models mentioned above re
quire the trapping of electrons as a precursor, to produce a
space charge, for further impact ionization processes. The
method of determination of trap levels and densities are well
developed for insulators in photoconductor applications us~
iog the energy-band model. IB,19 The interpretation and anal
ysis ofthese concepts for determining occupational statistics
for complex polycrystalline insulators has been treated elo
quently, thereby justifying the use of the energy-band model
and the associated nonequilibrium Fermi levels even for dif
ferent classes of traps and trap densities.20 Consistent with
the above observations, the modifications in the temporal
profiles of breakdown luminosity, observed in our study, are
examined with emphasis on the electron trapping and de
trapping processes in the localized states within the forbid
den gap.
A. On the observed luminosity rise times, decay times,
afterglow, and the time deiay
The observed luminosity profile (Fig. 2) has three dis
tinct portions-a rising edge, a falling edge, and a relatively
longer afterglow. Physically, the rising edge corresponds to
the time during which there is a net increase in the radiative
recombination. This can be brought about in this short time
scale by an increase in the population densities in the higher
energy levels, due to the excitation processes. The decaying
edge corresponds to the regime in which there is a net de
crease in the radiative recombination. This regime also cor
responds to the system relaxation towards its equilibrium
position. Both these regimes occur in time scales on the order
of a few nanoseconds in contrast to the ensuing afterglow
which lasts for a few microseconds. As will be shown later,
the afterglow is a phenomenon dominated by the shallow
trapped carriers.
1. Rise times
While the current waveform profile is dictated primarily
by the discharge arc parameters, the luminosity signal is an
indicator of radiative recombination processes. It is known
that the chief effect of the shallow trapping states is to cause
the rise time afthe observed signal, in response to an applied
excitation, to exceed the free lifetime of the carriers. 18 Dur
ing recombination, the excited electrons are captured by the
R. G. Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2095
Downloaded 07 Sep 2013 to 131.211.208.19. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionstrap states thus clogging recombination processes. It has
been shown that'S
(1)
where robs is the observed luminosity rise time, 7 is the life
time in the absence of the traps, flte is the number density of
trapped carriers, and nf is the number density of free carri
ers. The observed rise time is therefore lengthened by the
ratio of the trapped to free carriers and is a multiple of 7. It is
emphasized that ntr and nf correspond to the carrier statis
tics in the particular breakdown under consideration as the
trapping and detrapping processes are dynamic and compete
with each other. Also, it is to be expected that in insulators
with long relaxation times, the trapping times are signifi
cantly longer than the detrapping times. Hence, ntr and nf
represent a snapshot of tile carrier statistics for each break
down event.
The theoretical determination of the free lifetime 7 is
intractable in this situation as the trap state densities and
occupation densities are not available for commercial poly
crystalline alumina. A decrease in the observed rise time in
the data reported here, however, indicates a decrease of the
ratio of trapped to free carriers with successive breakdowns
(Fig. 4). This implies either a decreasing density of trapped
carriers or an increasing density offrec carriers with succes
sive breakdowns. As discussed later, it is more likely that the
number of trapped carriers decrease, as the available traps
get filled, with successive breakdowns. The slowly rising
portion in Fig. 5(a) could be entirely due to the trapping of
electrons in the trap states at low free-carrier concentrations.
As the number offree carriers increases (due to the decrease
in the number of carriers trapped as compared to the pre
vious breakdown), the exponential rise dominates with
successive breakdowns. This is indicated by the observation
that from the fifth application, the luminosity profile does
not have the slowly varying portion at all on the rising edge.
Also, consistent with the reduction in the ratio of trapped to
free carriers with successive breakdown, the rise time on the
seventh voltage application is 1.4 ns. It may be noted that
subsequent decreases in the rise times may not have been
perceivable as the measurement would be limited by the us
able rise time of the oscilloscope.
Radiation-induced conductivity experiments (RIC)
have identified trap dominated conduction mechanisms in
sapphire. 10 An electron lifetime of about 2 ns was observed
subsequent to irradiation with x rays in experiments to deter
mine electron transport properties. An increase in the ob
served lifetime was found with increased electron trapping.
The observed electron mobility was also found to be trap
dominated. The induced conductivity, which is dominated
by the electron mobility-lifetime product had two por
tions-a prompt portion and a slow portion. It was addition
ally found that the slow portion was strongly temperature
dependent, disappearing at a low temperature of 110 K and
below, clearly indicating the role of the shallow trapping
states. The prompt portion, on the other hand, dependend
on temperature only weakly and was not trap dominated. It
is believed that the influence of shallow trapping states re
ported in this paper and in the above RIC experiments is
2096 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September i 989 Ul
~,
o ; 345 6 7 8
Time (ns)
FIG. 7. Modifications in the exponential component of the luminosity de
cay profile with successive breakdowns. Slopes on the second, fourth, and
seventh breakdowns are --0.09, -·0.17, and -0.29, respectively.
similar, for example, to that of modulating the mobility of
the electrons by the presence of the traps.
2.Decay times
The effect of the shallow trap states on the observed
decay time is phenomenologically similar to that of the rise
time. The decay portion of the luminosity profile com
mences on a net decrease in the rate of recombination. The
intensity of emission is proportional to the density N of excit
ed electrons available for recombination, 21
dN L=-= -aN.
d! (2)
Therefore, L = K exp( -at), where a is the rate con~
stant and K the constant deciding the initial condition. The
decay of luminosity is therefore exponential. As can be seen
in Fig. 7, the observed decay profile is exponential for the
first few nanoseconds. It is also to be noted that the exponent
a varies from 0.09 in the second voltage application to 0.29 in
the seventh voltage application. This implies that the ob
served decay time of the carriers (lie of the peak value) has
changed from 11.11 to 3.45 ns between the second and se
venth breakdown. The observed decay times are consider
ably longer than the free-electron lifetime, and are again
lengthened by the ratio of trapped to free carriers. A ratio of
106 has been reported previously for Vidicon-type television
pickup tubes.18 With successive breakdowns, there is a de
crease in the decay times. The decrease is again proportional
to the ratio of trapped to free carriers similar to the case of
rise times. It is interesting to note that the slow portion on
both the rise and decay profiles observed on the second vol
tage apPlication decreased significantly by the tenth voltage
application. Hence, with repeated breakdowns, it can be
conduded that there is a decreasing ratio of trapped to free
carriers consistent with the rise-time data.
R. G, Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2096
Downloaded 07 Sep 2013 to 131.211.208.19. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions3. Afterglow
The afterglow phenomenon is essentially due to ther
mal-trap-rei.ease processes from the shallow traps resulting
in a long tail oflow amplitude. 18 At room temperature, these
shallow trapped carriers are released relatively slowly lead
ing to an afterglow. An afterglow lasting up to 6 ps after the
cessation of the current signal has been observed here with a
pronounced peak as shown in the Fig. 2. This afterglow gen
erally decreases in duration with successive breakdowns. As
seen from Fig. 6, the trapped carriers induce a space charge
near the cathode, modifying the field distribution. It can be
noticed that after electron injection, the trap states are re
moved farther away from the bottom of the conduction
band. Stated differently, the electron Fermi level moves
towards the bottom of the conduction band with successive
breakdowns, thus relegating the previous shallow traps to
recombination centers. It can thus be concluded that, with
successive breakdowns, there is a decrease in the density of
carriers available for slow thermal release at room tempera
ture. The modification of the trap states is believed to be the
primary cause for the reduction in trapped carriers with
successive breakdowns as observed from 7 nbs for both the
rise and decay profiles as the rise and decay times are affect
ed only by shallow traps and not by deeper traps. In other
words, in the absence of the shallow traps within the forbid
den gap, no changes would have been observed from one
breakdown to another, as the shallow trapping effects, Le.,
rise and decay time lengthening, would not vary with succes
sive breakdowns.
4. TIme delay
The time delay between the inception of photonic and
electronic avalanches cannot be explained comprehensively
without invoking the specifics of carrier and photon genera
tion, which are, as already noted, beyond the scope of the
present investigations. An Auger-type process, which gener
ates hot electrons, has been proposed to be likely in wide
band-gap insulators2 as explained in the foHowing. Electrons
with energy greater than 3Eg (Eg is the band gap) partici
pate in a transition from a ground state in the valence band to
an ionized state in the conduction band leading to carrier
recombination (band to band), radiative or nonradiative.
Trap to band recombination could occur similarly. Either
type of recombination (trap to band or band to band), would
lead to emission of photons andlor electrons through an Au
ger-type process. Radiative transitions are relatively more
efficient compared to nonradiative transitions in crystalline
insulators.8,21 Figure 8 shows the SEM of the alumina sam
ples studied here, from which the polycrystalline structure is
evident. Hence the emitted photons could cause hot-electron
generation by an Auger-type energy transfer.2 The hot-elec
tron generation has been proposed to result in the creation of
low-density regions favoring impact ionization leading to an
electronic avalanche.9 Temporally, this would imply that
the recombination radiation precedes hot-electron genera
tion, which is the precursor for the impact ionization-in
duced breakdown. Stated differently, the photonic ava
lanche inception precedes the electronic avalanche inception
in time, in this model of hot-electron generation.
2097 J. AppJ. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 FIG. B. Scanning electron micrograph of FA 7258-JB1 alumina sample.
Figure 3(11.) which shows a delay of 6 ns in the second
voltage application between the photonic and electronic ava
lanche inceptions is supportive of this model for surface
flashover. With successive breakdowns, however, this delay
decreases from 6 to about 1 ns. Figure 9 shows the curves of
time-integrated luminosity for both the second and the tenth
breakdowns. Since, L = (dN Idt), the integrated luminosity
should correspond to N, the number of excited species in
volved in the radiative transitions. This should again be pro
portional to the number of photons generated. It can be seen
from Fig. 9 that in the second breakdown, there is a very
slow rise in the i.ntegrated Hght during the first few nanose
conds compared to the tenth breakdown, where there is a
sharp rise in the integrated light during the first few nanose
conds. Based on this, it appears as though there is a critical
t:
'---""
~.
if)
() c
~~
~,
"_"J bOU
:l[lO
400
Joe
700
1 DO
() f l3-BfHHl 1
" h~·r·l8kd(·Jwr"',
breakdmvn
Time (ns)
FIG. 9, Time-integrated luminosity for the second and tenth breakdown.
R. G, Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2097
Downloaded 07 Sep 2013 to 131.211.208.19. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsvalue of the integral required for the generation of hot elec
trons leading to electron avalanche processes. In the tenth
breakdown, this number was reached earlier whereas the
number was reached slowly in the second breakdown, thus
resulting in a significantly large time delay between the in
ception of photonic and electronic avalanches.
A possible explanation for the increasing luminosity
with successive breakdowns as seen in Fig. 9 is proposed
here. The hot-electron generation is dependent on the total
energy imparted to the cold electron,15 which is a strong
function of the photon energies and the number of photons
generated. It is possible that the transitions in the earlier
breakdowns being trap to band, require a greater number of
photons (since they are oflower energy) to reach the critical
value of the integrated luminosity. Since the traps initially
empty would fill up after several breakdowns, band to band
transitions are more probable in the later breakdowns. These
band-to-band transitions require a lesser number of photons
to reach the same critical value (since they are of higher
energy). It has been noted that the carrier lifetimes decrease
with increasing energy of transition. 2! As observed from the
rise time and decay time data, there is a definite decrease in
the lifetime of the carriers with successive breakdowns as
pointed out earlier. Thus an increase in the energy of trans i
tions or an increase in the number of such transitions with
successive breakdowns would result in an increased wave
length-integrated light activity with repeated breakdowns.
This would be consonant with the trends shown in Fig. 9.
This also lends additional support to the model ofhot-elec
tron generation as explained earlier. While spectroscopic in
vestigations would confirm this quantitatively, the prelimi
nary evidence presented here qualitatively supports the
Auger-type transfer of energy causative of hot-electron gen
eration.
The above discussion addresses the observed changes in
the luminosity profiles and the time delays between the pho
tonic and electronic avalanches. It has already been noted
that the discharge current rise time increases with successive
breakdowns (Fig. 4). The current rise time is determined by
the (L / R) ofthe breakdown are, where L is the inductance
of the arc and R is the resistance of the arc. An increase of the
rise time of the arc with successive breakdowns is thus indi
cative of an increasing L and/or a decreasing R. It was ob
served that flashover would occur at a voltage as low as 15
k V after ten breakdowns for the samples tested here. This
apparent "deconditioning' of the insulator is consistent with
the deterioration of the resistance offered by the insulator
surface with successive breakdowns.
The trends observed in Fig. 4 in the luminosity and cur
rent profiles and the luminosity-current delays with succes
sive breakdowns seem to suggest that the observed phenom
ena are independent of the precise location of the breakdown
around the sample periphery. It is not possible to ascertain in
this experiment whether this is indeed the case, since the
observed luminosity is spatially integrated and is detected
whenever the breakdown occurs within the solid angle of the
phototube. Since the observed trends in Figs. 4 and 9 reveal a
regular pattern with successive breakdowns, it is speculated
that the observations are not influenced by the spatialloca-
2098 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 tion of the breakdown arc. An explanation is offered here, if
it is indeed true that the observed trends are independent of
the arc location. It is possible that the observed luminosity
before the current inception is a spatially uniform glow in the
subsurface layers of the insulator leading to a local break
down at the surface at a statistically random point. This
would be coherent with the results reported for Lucalox alu
mina in which a uniform glow in the sample (visible to the
naked eye) would precede a local breakdown.4 This would
also explain the fact that the phototube detected luminosity
trends irrespective of the specific arc location. It may be
noted that such a possibility is supportive ofthe trap-domi
nated surface flashover model proposed earlier.2,3,4
In summary, it may be pointed out that the analysis
offered for the observed modifications associated with the
luminosity profiles was based on a band-gap model assuming
that the localized levels within the forbidden gap do not
change with repetitive breakdowns due to the x-ray, uv, and
electron bombardment of the sample surface. It is entirely
possible that new defects are, indeed, created with each
breakdown event and that the created defects play an impor
tant role in the carrier generation and multiplication pro
cesses. It is worthwhile pointing out that both cases (preex
isting or created defect structure) would provide the same
trends observed here and hence cannot be separated out in
our experiment. 22
It is known that an Auger-type process is inherently
inefficient compared to the competing mechanism of impact
ionization for producing an electronic cascade. Also, for in
sulators with several localized levels in the forbidden gap,
electron-phonon interactions cannot be ignored. Dielectric
polarization, due to the application of electric stress, leads to
electrostriction and changes in electron-phonon interac
tions. In imperfect insulators, this could alter the trapping!
release equilibrium at the defect sites. 3 The observed changes
in the luminosity profile reported here could also be inter
preted as a manifestation of the above phenomena, since the
resultant trapped charge varies with successive voltage ap
plications. Nevertheless, the results presented here highlight
the significance of the carrier trapping mechanisms in the
surface flashover process and of conducting experiments to
identify the trapping/ detrapping mechanisms in order to aid
the formulation of a comprehensive surface flashover model.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
The temporally resolved breakdown luminosity and
current measurements offer new insights into the physics of
the pulsed surface flashover process. It is observed that not
only are the temporal profiles ofluminosity and current vast
ly different, but that both change with successive break
downs. The luminosity profile has a sharp pulse which has
no counterpart in the current waveform. The rise times and
decay times of the pulse change dynamically in the first few
breakdowns. A significant afterglow activity is observed
after the cessation of the breakdown current, which de
creases in duration and magnitude with successive break
downs. Also, the luminosity pulse precedes the current pulse
by a few nanoseconds in the first few breakdowns, the delay
R. G. Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2098
Downloaded 07 Sep 2013 to 131.211.208.19. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsdecreasing with successive breakdowns. All the above obser
vations have been explained satisfactorily by invoking the
energy-band model at the dielectric vacuum interface, with
out making any assumptions about prebreakdown processes
regarding gas desorption or secondary electron emission
mechani.sms. The analysis of the experimental results pre
sented here emphasizes the dominant role of one carrier
trapping processes in the surface flashover of a vacuum gap
bridged by wide band-gap, low mobility insulators. The rise
times, decay times, and the delay between the onset of the
luminosity and the discharge currents are explained satisfac
torily by invoking the modifications in the ratio of the
trapped to free carriers, which is modified during successive
breakdowns.
Since most practical insulators are polycrystalline or
amorphous in nature, their performance in vacuum-based
applications would be strongly dependent on the band struc
ture as dictated by the defects at the dielectric vacuum inter
face. The findings of this work suggest that additional ex
periments are required to characterize the dominant
parameters in the different but interdependent processes of
carrier generation, trapping, multiplication, and annihila
tion, in order to formulate a quantitative model for the
pulsed surface flashover process i.n terms of the energy-band
model.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was sponsored by SDIO/IST and managed
by ONR. The authors wish to thank Dr. C. Le Gressus,
Commissariat a l' Energie Atomique, France, and Dr. H. C.
2099 J. AppL Phys., Vol. 66, No.5, 1 September 1989 Miller, Principal Physicist, GE Neutron Devices Dept., Lar
go, Florida for their careful scrutiny of the results and for the
suggestions offered.
1 H. C. Miller, in XIII International Symposium all Discharges alld Electri
cailnsulation in Vacuum, edited by J. M. Buzzi and A. Septier (Les Edi
tions de Physique, Paris, France, 1988), p, 27.
2J. P. Vigoroux, O. Lee-Deacon, C. 1£ Gressus, IEEE Trans. Electr, Insul.
EI-lS,287 (1983).
3e. Le Gressus, in XIII International Symposium on Discharges and Elec
ericallnsulation in Vacuum, edited by J. M. Buzzi and A. Septier (Les
Editions de Physique, Paris, France, 1988), p. 57.
'N. C. Jaitly and T. S. Sudarshan, J. App!. Phys. 64, 3411 (1988).
5S, P. Bugaev, A. M. Isko!'dskii, and G. A. Mesyats, Sov. Phys.-Tech.
Phys., 12, 1358 (1968).
6J. D. Cross &\'ld K. D. Srivastava, Appl. Phys. Lett. 21, 549 (1972).
7A. A. Avidenko and M. D. Malev. SOy. Phys.-Tech. Phys. 24, 581 (1979).
·P. H, G1eichauf. J. Appl. Phys 22,535 (1951).
oK. C. Kao, J. Appl. Phys. 55, 752 (1984).
lOR. C. Hughes, Phy. Rev. B 19,5318 (1979).
i IW. Hayes and A. M. Stoneham, Defects alld Defect Processes in Non-me
tallic Solids (Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1985).
i2A. Rose, Pmc. IRE 43, 1850 (1955).
i3N. C. Jaitly and T. S. Sudarsnan, IEEE Trans. Electr. IlIsu\. EI-23, 231
(1988).
14R. V. Latham, Vacuum 32, 137 (1982).
15N, Klein and M. Albert, J. Appl. Phys. 53, 5840 (1982).
16J. J. O'Dwyer, in Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phe-
nomena, Amherst, MA, 1982, IEEE Cat. No. 82CH1773-1.
I7N. C. Jaitly and T. S. SlIdarshan, J. Appl. Phys. 60, 3711 (l986).
!gA. Rose, Phys. Rev. 91,322 (1955).
!9R. C. Bube, Photoconductivity of Solids (Wiley, New York, 1960).
2QJ. G. Simmons and G. W. Taylor, Phys. Rev. B 4,502 (1971).
llH. W. Leverenz, An Introductioll to LuminescellceofSolids (Wiley, New
York, 1950).
nC. Le Gressus (private communication).
Fl. G. Bommakanti and T. S. Sudarshan 2099
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1.1139774.pdf | Null input current SQUID magnetometer for the measurement of the transition
temperature of highT c superconducting samples
S. Barbanera, M. G. Castellano, and V. Foglietti
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 59, 1031 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.1139774
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1139774
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 11:12:14Null input current SQUID magnetometer for the measurement of the
transition temperature of high~ Tc superconducting samples
s. 8arbanera
Istituta di Elettronica della Stato Solido del C.N.R., Via Cineto Romano 42,00156 Rama, Italy
M. G. Casteliano
Istituto di Fisica della Spazia I nterplanetario del C. N. R., P. O. Box 2 7, 00044 Frascati, Italy
V. FoglieUi
Istitutodi Elettronica della Stato Solido del CN.R., Via Cineto Romano 42, 00156Roma, Italy
(Received 1 February 1988; accepted for publication 28 March 1988)
In this article we describe a SQUID-based system used to measure the superconducting transition
temperature in the range 4.2-300 K. The apparatus has been tested using a high-critical
temperature single crystal ofYBa2 CU3 07 _ x (= 10 -I mm3 volume). The system is based on
mutual inductance variations measurements, performed in a low-frequency ac magnetic field of
2 X 10-5 T. A feedback loop is closed on the input circuit in order to null out the current flowing in
the pickup coil. This is achieved using an electronic scheme which does not involve any
modification of the commercial SQUID electronics. Our experiment is performed using a copper
wire pickup coil, but the scheme can also be used with a superconducting input circuit, thus
allowing measurements in a dc regime. The obtained sensitivity is 5 X 10-5lvHz. This figure can
be further improved by optimizing the circuit parameters.
INTRODUCTION
In order to investigate the magnetic properties of the new,
high-criticaI-temperature superconducting materials, it is
necessary to have an apparatus both sensitive and working at
about 100 K. For the first requirement, the use of supercon
ducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) is almost
mandatory, Using rfSQUIDs with a superconducting trans
former as the input circuit, the most sensitive commercial
susceptometers can measure the magnetic susceptibility of
tiny samples even at zero frequency. On the other hand, the
classical mutual inductance method, though simpler from
the experimental viewpoint, requires the use of alternating
magnetic fields, thus ruling out the possibility of performing
de measurements. Building in the laboratory a dc-SQUID
based superconducting susceptometer can pose some con
structive problems because of the requirement of varying the
sample temperature up to 100 K while keeping the SQUID
and the input superconducting transformer at liquid-helium
temperature and maintaining a high coupling coefficient be
tween the sample and the primary of the transformer. To test
the YBa2 CU3 07 _ x monocrystal samples grown at the lsH
tuto di Elettronica della Stato Solidol (CNR, Rome), we
developed an apparatus for measuring mutual inductance
changes by means of a SQUID and a nonsuperconducting
input circuit, using a feedback system to null the input cur
rent. The importance of this latest point has been recently
brought into evidence,2 especially when dealing with the
large susceptibility changes at the superconducting transi
tion point. Our apparatus has the further advantage that the
current nulling is obtained with a feedback system which
does not require any modification of the SQUID electronics,
which was a drawback of the system described in Ref. 2. In
our scheme, only the SQUID is held at liquid-helium tem-perature, while both the sample and the external coils of the
input circuit follow the temperature variations. The nonsu
perconducting input circuit imposes the limitation of using
only alternating magnetic fields; nevertheless the feedback
scheme can be applied to a superconducting input circuit,
which responds also to static flux variations, allowing true
Meissner effect measurements.
I. EXPERIMENTAL SYSTEM
In our experimental configuration we use a commercial
SHE rfSQUID to measure the changes in the mutual induc
tance M rn between the excitation and the pickup coil of the
input circuit, due to the superconducting transition of the
sample inserted in the pickup coil. The experimental setup is
shown in Fig. 1. The bottom end of the insert consists of a
vacuum chamber which can be easily dipped into a 2-in. neck
storage liquid-helium Dewar. The top end of the insert con
tains a vacuum gauge and a valve used to anow for exchange
gas into the experimental chamber as well as to pump it out.
Temperature is varied using a heater to warm up the sample
held in vacuum and exchange gas to cool it down. The heat
er, the silicon diode thermometer, and the circuitry are glued
onto a piece of "coil foil,,,3 using thermal GE 7031 varnish,
in order to provide thermal contact and stability. The piece
of "coil foil" is thermally detached from the liquid-helium
bath and its use ensures minimal temperature gradients over
the sample holder. The circuit is made of various coils. The
excitation coil (E) consists of 40 turns of copper wire, 24
mm inner diameter, The pickup coil (P), located concentri
cally with E is made of 50 turns of copper wire wound on a 5-
mm-diam form. The sample is put inside the coil P, in corre
spondence with the middle section and held in place by
1031 Rev. Sci.lnstrum. 59 (7), July 1988 0034-6148/83/071031-04$Oi .30 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 1031
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 11:12:141 em
] < vacuurn SL: ~~~ I r flange
I
vacuum _J
feed through -\wt=;eater
s
-p
"coil foil" -----sample
FIG. 1. Bottom end of the experimental insert. P is the pickup coil, E is the
excitation coil, F is the feedback coil, and S is the coil connected to the slave
generator (see text); R is the Evanohm wire resistance and TR is the match
ing transformer. T is the silicon diode thermometer. The sample is not
drawn to scale.
means ofCryocon, which also provides thermal contact. The
feedback coil (F) is made of a few turns of copper wire cou
pled to a larger coil (S) fed by an external generator. Coil F
can allocate a reference sample of known superconducting
transition temperature. The circuit terminals exit the vacu
um chamber via a feedthrough connector, reaching the
SQUID input by means of a superconducting matching
transformer T, with nominal transforming ratio 10: 1 and the
primary consisting of ISO turns Nb wire wound on a 6-mm
diam form. For practical purposes we introduced a resis
tance (R) of 1.5 0., made of Evanohm wire, serially connect
ed to the primary of the transformer and located inside the
liquid-helium bath.
Ii. CIRCUIT OPERATION
To operate the system as a null detector for the total
magnetic flux in the input circuit, a flux controlled by a feed
back loop is supplied to F. In this way the apparatus becomes
sensitive only to unbalances of the two fluxes due to mutual
inductance changes. In particular, this configuration is to
tany insensitive to resistance variations of the input circuit
due to temperature changes, and avoids eddy currents and
the resulting image fields. Figure 2 shows the schematic of
the circuit. An ac current im is supplied to coil E through a 1-
kn resistance using a Hewlett-Packard model 3325A syn
thesizer, producing a typical magnetic field of :::::2 X 10-5 T.
This results in a magnetic flux coupled into the SQUID and
proportional to the mutual inductance M m between E and P.
Similarly, a magnetic flux at the same frequency as the exci
tation fiux is coupled to the circuit by means of the mutual
inductance Msl between F and S, fed by an external gener
ator through resistance RF• The amplitude ofthis generator
1032 Rev. Sci.lnstrum., Vol. 59, No.7, July 1988 is controlled by the feedback loop to ensure the nulling of the
two fluxes. The two generators are phase locked to each oth
er; for simplicity we will call "master" the excitation gener
ator, "slave" the other. In the following, we will also call ¢Jm
the magnetic flux in the SQUID due to the excitation gener
ator, and ifJsl that due to the slave generator. Initially, one
works with the master alone and sets its amplitude to a con
venient value. Then, with the master turned off, one sets the
slave amplitude in such a way as to achieve roughly the same
SQUID output as in the previous step. With the two genera
tors turned on at the same time, the relative phase is carefully
adjusted in order to null out the two resulting fluxes ¢Jm and
¢JsJ in the SQUID. The feedback loop can now be closed: the
SQUID output is passed through a lock-in amplifier refer
enced at the working frequency (70-180 Hz in our case) and
the lock-in output is connected to the amplitude-modulation
input of the slave generator. As far as ¢Jm and ¢lsi are bal
anced, the lock-in output and then the feedback signal are
zero. Temperature is varied. At the point of the supercon
ducting transition, due to flux expulsion, there is a change in
1'4 m 0 The resulting unbalance between the fluxes in the input
circuit causes a signal to be detected by the lock in, and this is
used to adjust the slave amplitude to a new equilibrium val
ue. The output signal of the lock-in amplifier is also the out
put of the whole feedback system. The transfer function of
the system in closed-loop configuration is determined only
by the reverse transfer function due to the high value of the
open-loop gain
Vout/l1Mm = RFimlaM s1'
where Vout is the lock-in amplifier output; 11M m is the mutu
al inductance variation; a is the amplitude-modulation coef
ficient of the slave generator. The value of 1j,ls1 can be deter
mined, for example, at open loop, turning off the master
generator, measuring the amplitude of the slave generator
and the SQUID output; the same holds for Mm.
m. SENSITIVITY
The device sensitivity can be evaluated by recalling that
the system is sensitive to changes of the magnetic flux in the
pickup coil and that the minimum detectable variation is
master ref slave
osc. osc.
:j ! !
RF ~
: I
FIG. 2. Schematic of the circuit.
High-Tc superconductor from
temperature
controtier
amp].
mod, in -,
I I U X -Y r recorder
I
~ ou t ,..------,
--'--Ioc k--in
ref amplifier
1032
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitationnew.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 11:12:14related to the total flux noise at the SQUID input t:Ptot. This is
the result oftwo contributions, namely the SQUID intrinsic
noiset:Pn "",2 X 1O-4¢o/",Hz, t:Po being the flux quantum, and
the Johnson current noise of the input circuit, which can be
kept reasonably low by increasing either the resistance R, or
the superconducting transformer primary inductance. The
most convenient choice must be done on the basis of signal
to-noise ratio optimization. In our case taking out the Evan
ohm resistance in the input circuit would result in SQUID
operating performance degradation. Even if we did not make
special efforts to optimize the matching conditions, we were
able to achieve a value for t:Ptot ::::::;4 X 1O-4¢o/,{Hz.
The minimum detectable change in mutual inductance
is
With the experimental value of t:Pm ::::::: 10 t:Po, in a I-Hz band
width we have a sensitivity of = 4 X 10-5. The sensitivity of
the system can be increased by reducing the bandwidth, but a
reasonable tradeoff must be achieved between system perfor
mances and the time required for the measurement.
IV. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
A measurement was carried on without any sample and
the output of the system in the closed-loop configuration
recorded as a function of temperature. In this case we did not
take care of varying the temperature slowly. As a result the
curve was fiat from 300 down to 4,2 K, thus proving that
temperature dependencies of l'ifm and Msi' if any, do not
affect the system response.
Furthermore, we checked the appropriate response of
the system by inserting a tiny piece of lead (similarly shaped
to the YBa2 Cu] 07 _ x sample) in the pickup coil and ob
serving a sharp transition at 7.7 ± 0.5 K.
Figure 3 shows the system output as a function of tem
perature obtained for a YBa2 CU3 07 __ x single-crystal sam
ple, sized 1 mm2 area and 0.1 mm thickness. We take as the
reference level the high-temperature portion of the curve,
where the system has been initially balanced. Any deviation
from this level corresponds to mutual inductance variations
and, therefore, to susceptibility changes. The sensitivity for
these measurements was 5 X 10 -5 in a bandwidth of about 1
Hz, in agreement with the predicted value mentioned above.
This means that we do not have any interference from the
ambient magnetic noise, thanks also to a metglass shield
around the Dewar.
The temperature was varied cooling the sample by
means of a small quantity of exchange gas, starting from
room temperature and attaining 4.2 K in about 1 h. The
temperature was monitored using a Lake Shore Cryotronics
mode191C controller, with a O.l-K resolution.
The superconducting transition of the YBa2 CU3 07_ x
single crystal shown in Fig. 3 has an onset temperature of
=92 K. The transition width is very large (ranging from
=92 down to "",20K) as is not unusual in such compounds:
in fact this parameter as well as the transition temperature is
1033 Rev. Sci.lnstrum., Vol. 59, No.7, July 1988 80,
-40
-80 L--r---'I--r-~--~~, --.---r
20 40 60 80
T (K)
FIG. 3. System output vs temperature for a YB~ eu, 07. x single crystal.
The onset of the superconducting transition for this slllnple is = 92 K. The
sharp step at 7.7 K is due to the superconducting transition of a test lead
sample, located inside the feedback coil. The signals for Pb and
YBaz Cu, 07 x are in opposite directions due to the circuit configuration
(see text for details).
related critically to the oxygen content in the crystal struc
ture, which can be quite different depending on the anneal
ing treatment the samples have undergone."
Figure 3 also shows a sharp step at 7.7 ± 0.5 K. This was
due to the transition of the test lead sample that we inserted
in the feedback coil in order to make a rough comparison
between the two superconducting transitions. On the other
hand, making coils P and E exactly equal to F and Sand
comparing the amplitUde of the two steps at the transition
temperatures would provide a quantitative measurement of
the YBa2 CU3 07 __ x susceptibility variation with respect to
that oflead, which is well known. The fact that the two steps
are in opposite direction is a direct consequence of the sys
tem configuration. The agreement between the measured
value of the transition temperature oflead and that reported
in the literature for pure lead (7.23 K.) (Ref. 5), is within the
experimental error and indicates that temperature gradients
over the sample holder are not important.
It is also possible to calculate directly the susceptibility
variations of the sample from measurements of mutual in
ductance changes. However, the proportionality constant
between these two quantities depends critically on the de
magnetizing factor, which, due to the geometry of our
YBa2 Cu) 07 _ x monocrystaI (an irregular, thin platelet in
our case), can be evaluated only with heavy approximations.
Vo DISCUSSION
The SQUID-based system described can be used to mea
sure the superconducting transition temperature of very
sman samples ( ::::: 10 -2 mm 3). The apparatus can operate in
the temperature range 4.2-300 K. This range of operation is
particularly useful for the new high-critical-temperature su
per conducting materials. Furthermore, the obtained sensi
tivity of 5 X 10 -51 [Hi can be further improved by optimiz
ing the circuit parameters. The same feedback scheme can
also be applied to superconducting input circuits, allowing
de susceptibility measurements.
Hlgh-To superconductor 1033
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 11:12:14ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors wish to thank G. Balestrino, P. Carelli, P.
Paroli, and G. Paterno for helpful discussions. They are also
grateful to S. D'Angelo for his technical assistance and guid
ance in making the experimental insert.
1034 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 59, No.7, July 1988 'G. Balestrino, S. Barbanera, and P. Paroli, J. Cryst. Growth 85, 585
( 1987).
2D. Dummer and W. Weyhmann, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 58,1933 (1987).
3A. C. Anderson, G. L. Salinger, and J. C. Wheatley, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 32,
1110 (1961).
4A. Junod, A. Bezinge, T. Graf, J. L. Jorda, J. Muner, L. Antognazza, D.
Cattani, J. Cars, M. Decroux, 0. Fischer, M. Banovski, P. Genoud, L.
Hoffmann, A. A. Manuel, M. Peter, E. Walker, M. Frangois, and K. Yvon,
Europhys. Lett. 4, 247 (1987).
'G. Gladstone, M. A. Jensen, and J. R. Schrietfer, in Superconductivity,
edited by R. D. Parks (Marcel Dekker, New York, 1969).
High-Tc superconductor 1034
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1.1137330.pdf | Probe for studying wall charges in electrodeless discharges at 60 Hz
RuiLin Ma and F. L. Curzon
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 54, 1767 (1983); doi: 10.1063/1.1137330
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1137330
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128.83.63.20 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 11:58:11Probe for studying wall charges in electrodeless discharges at 60 Hz
Rui-Lin Maa) and F. L. Curzon
Physics Department, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1 W5
(Received 4 April 1983; accepted for publication 1 August 1983)
A probe is described, which together with a high-resistance b~ffer and ?ifferential amplifier, has
been used to study wall charge effects in a 60-Hz electrodeless dIscharge In neon at a pressure of ~ 0
Torr. The device makes use of the external fields produced by the wall charges and shows that, In
typical conditions, the wall charges take several milliseconds to come to an equilibrium after a
breakdown has occurred. A major feature of the device is the use ofthe small external electrodes
which localize the region where the wall charges tend to accumulate.
PACS numbers: 52.80.Dy; 51.50. + v
INTRODUCTION
The study of electrodeless breakdown of gas is of interest
because of its possible application in measuring environmen
tal electric field. 1,2 As is well known, wall charges tend to
create fields which oppose the applied field inside the bulb
and playa very important role in the electrodeless discharge.
The most popular method used to study the wall charges is
by integrating the current pulses which flow in the outside
circuit at the instant of breakdown.3,4 This method is only
sensitive near the breakdown interval when the field inside
the bulb and the wall charges change rapidly and hence, the
external current is large enough for measurement. It cannot
respond to the process of deionization, Since the deioniza
tion process lasts the order of a millisecond, the current in
duced in the external circuit is too small to measure and it is
obscured by the noise. Recent studies of wall charge effects,
relevant to plasma display panels, have been reported,5.6
Previous analyses of the electrodeless discharges tend
to neglect the variation of wall charges during the process of
deionization. However, to study the phenomena further in
low-frequency electrodeless discharges it would be desirable
to have an instrument which can indicate directly the time
dependence of wall charges and the field inside the bulb, The
above purpose has been achieved by means of a voltage mea
suring probe outside the bulb together with a high-input re
sistance buffer and a differential amplifier. The principle of
this method and the practical apparatus are reported in Secs.
I and II. Some new phenomena were found and a prelimi
nary discussion appears in Sec, III.
I. THE PRINCIPLE OF THE PROBE
The principle of the probe is shown in Fig, 1. The elec
trodeless discharge is produced in neon contained in a 40-
mm-diam Pyrex glass bulb by applying a 60-Hz alternating
field to two external spherical electrodes (6.4-mm diam). The
voltages applied to the electrodes are equal and opposite, so
that the equatorial plane of the bulb is a ground plane.
Charges produced by a breakdown in the gas will tend to
migrate towards the electrodes and are therefore deposited
in well defined locations. As shown in Fig. 1 a probe P and a
ground plate are placed outside the bulb. P is very small and
is close to the equatorial plane of the discharge gap, so that the influences of the probe and ground plate on the discharge
is small and can be neglected.
We study at first the case when there are no charges on
the inner surface of the glass, The charges on the upper exter
nal electrode produce an electric field which causes a poten
tial difference between the probe and the ground plate. The
influences from the lower electrode are screened by the
ground plate and can, therefore, be ignored.
The potential of the probe up is, therefore, given by the
following expressions:
Up = US C1/2(CI + C2), (1)
= AQ 12Co, (2)
A = CI/(CI + Cz), (3)
where Us is the electrode voltage, CI is the coupling capaci
tance as shown in Fig. 1, C2 is the total capacitance between
the probe and the ground, including the lead capacitance
and the input capacitance of the buffer, Co is the capacitance
between two external electrodes, Q is the amount of charge
on the external electrode. In our experiment CI is very small
(less than 0.01 pF). It is always true that Co> > CI, so that
the feedback from the probe to charges on the electrode can
be neglected, If Co, CI, and C2 remain constant the signal
picked by the probe is only determined by Q.
When there are charges ( -q) on the upper inner sur
face of the bulb (Fig. 1) and they are very close to the eIec-
FIG. I. Diagram illustrating the principle of the probe. u, = applied vol
tage; P = probe; Q = charges on the external electrode; q = charges on the
inner surface of glass.
1767 Rev. Scl.lnstrum. 54 (12), December 1983 0034-6748/83/121767-04$01.30 1767
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128.83.63.20 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 11:58:11Cg +Q r-Q
CG +(Q-q) r-(Q-q)
CG +(Q-q)
I-(Q-q)
Cg +Q
-Q
FIG. 2. Equivalent circuit of the discharge gap. Cg = capacitance between
the electrode and the charged inner surface; CG = capacitance between the
charged inner surface and the middle plane of the bulb.
trode, Up can be expressed approximately as
up = A (Q -q)l2Co. (4)
Since glass is a very good insulator, the leakage of -q in
about a 20-ms period of the applied field can be entirely ne
glected. This implies that once the charges have been placed
on the glass surface they stay there until they are neutralized
by charges of opposite sign coming from the discharge space.
If the wall charges -q are distributed in an equipotential
plane through which the most electric flux from the external
electrode passes, then Fig. 2 can be used as an equivalent
circuit for Fig. 1. It is a reasonable approximation in our
experiment.
In Fig. 2, Cg is the capacitance between the electrode
and the charged inner surface of the bulb, CG is the capaci
tance between charged inner surface and the middle plane of
the discharge gap, Cg > > CG•
It follows from the equivalent circuit (Fig. 2) that,
Us = 2(ug + uG) = Usm sin OJt, (5)
uG = (Q -q)lCG, (6)
ug = QICg, (7)
Co = 1/2[(l/C g) + (1/CG )], (8)
Q = Co [us + (2qICG )], (9)
Q -q = Co[us -(2qICg)], (10)
FIG. 3. Sketch of experimental apparatus. P = probe; G = ground plate; E
E' = external electrodes; B = bulb; F = optical fiber; d = distance of the
probe from the bulb.
1768 Rev. Scl.lnstrum., Vol. 54, No. 12, December 1983 4
3
2f-
Usm (400)2 Vl
I
1.0 1.5
FIG. 4. Plot of up vs u,. up = output of the buffer (signal picked by the
probe); u, = applied voltage.
where ug and UG are potential differences across the capaci
tances Cg and CG.
From Eqs. (4), (6), and (10) and using Co;::::; CG 12, we get,
Up =A(CGI2Co)uG,;::::;Au G,
(Au,l2) -Up = AqlC g• (11 )
( 12)
Two useful results can be derived from Eqs. (11) and
(12). (a) The signal up picked up by the probe directly indi
cates the potential difference and, hence, the electric field
inside the bulb. (b) If up and Aus 12 are fed into a differential
amplifier, then the output Ud directly indicates the amount
of charges placed on the upper inner surface of the bulb
Ud = BAqICg, (13)
where B is the gain of the differential amplifier.
I AO/A
L5i-
1.0-
I // / / /'
/ /
/
/
o Lo~~ -~ ------- .l ____ ~_ -20 -10 /
/
/
o
FIG. 5. Plot of A,IA vs Cr. Cr = capacitance connected additionally across
the input ofthe buffer; A = gain of the probe defined in Eq.(3);A" = value of
A when C, = O.
Electrodeless discharges 1768
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128.83.63.20 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 11:58:11~NWM
r~
I I 1 1 1 I a
b
c
d FIG. 6. Scope traces of Up (t ) and ud (t)
when U = 1130 V. Up = output of
the buff:'; ud = output of differen
tial amplifier; time base = 10 ms/
diy. a) up(t). 50 mV /diy. absence of
breakdown; b) Ud (t). 0.5 V /diy. ab
senceofbreakdown; c) up(t). 50 mV /
diy. two breakdowns per cycle; d)
Ud (t). 0.5 V /diy. two breakdowns per
cycle.
II. DESCRIPTION OF THE EXPERIMENTAL
APPARATUS
Figure 3 is a sketch of the experimental apparatus. The
details of the gas-filled bulb and external electrodes have
been given above. The electrodes are connected across the
secondary of a transformer which has a balanced output vol
tage. The primary is fed from an autotransformer which per
mits the voltage across the electrodes to be varied from 0 to 4
kV. A copper ground plate is placed on the equatorial plane
of the bulb. The probe is a copper wire with a diameter of 1.5
mm and a length of 20 mm. The distance between the probe
and the ground plate is 4.5 mm. The tip of the probe is nor
mally 7 mm from the bulb surface. The buffer is an integrat
ed circuit chip (LHOO33G) which has a high input resistance
(exceeding 1010 [}) and a voltage gain near one. The differen
tial amplifier is a 3626 integrated circuit with a voltage gain
of B = 9.6. A variable resistance is used to adjust the input of
the differential amplifier to ensure zero output when there is
no charge on the inner surface of glass.
All leads are screened in order to eliminate spurious
signals. The noise picked by the probe is less than 3 m V
which is less than 4% of the typical value of up'
In order to obtain more information we also observe the
flashes of light emitted from the gas when breakdowns oc
cur. The light pulses are conveyed to a photomultiplier by a
glass fiber bundle. More details of the system appear in Ref.
2.
III. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
Two experiments were performed to verify that the
probe operated as expected. In the first the probe, signal up
was measured as a function of Us when the breakdown is
f=
f\MNVV
I 1 II I I 1 I I I I a
b
c
d FIG. 7. Scope traces ofup(t land Ud (t)
when there are 4 and 6 breakdowns
in a cycle. Up = output of the buffer;
Ud = output of the differential am
plifier; time base = 10 ms/diy. a)
up(t). 100mV /diy.4breakdownsper
cycle; b) ud(t). I V /diy. 4 break
downs per cycle; c) up(t). 100 mV/
diy. 6 breakdowns per cycle; d) ud(t).
I V /diy. 6 breakdowns per cycle.
1769 Rev. Scl.lnstrum., Vol. 54, No. 12, December 1983 I I
1lJI-J'-.J
11 n 11'\ 1\11
WV a
b
c
d FIG. 8. Scope traces of Ud (t) simulta
neously with light pulses emitted by
the gas. Time base = 5 ms/diY. a)
light pulses. 2 breakdowns per cycle;
b) U d (t). 2 breakdowns per cycle; c)
light pulses. 4 breakdowns per cycle;
d) ud(t). 4 breakdowns per cycle.
absent. As Fig. 4 shows, the plot of Up vs Us is a very good
straight line with a slope of A = 1.54 X 10-4• In the second
experiment a variable capacitor C T was ~onnected acro~s the
input of the buffer, and A -1 was determmed as a functlOn. of
CT' The straight line plot (Fig. 5) is in good agreement wIth
Eq. (1) with C 1 = 4.2x 10-3 pF and C2 = 27 pF.
Figures 6(a) and 6(b) show the waveform of Up and u~
(the output of differential amplifier) when the breakdown IS
absent. Up is a sine wave while Ud is a horizontal line
(noise<4%). The typical wave form of Up and Ud when
breakdowns occur are shown in Figs. 6(c) and 6(d), where
Usm = 1130 V (peak value) and there are two breakdowns
per cycle of the applied voltage.
Since Up represents the electric field inside the, bulb
when breakdown occurs, up suddenly goes to zero then
tends to follow the Us waveform again.
The waveform for Ud is roughly rectangular in shape
and can be divided into three parts. First, a jump occurs in
the moment of breakdown. This results from space charges
which rapidly migrate to the inner surface of the glass. These
charges build up an opposite field and stop the discharge.
When breakdown occurs with up > 0, the jump is caused by
the accumulation of electrons near the upper electrode
0.8 Ji(,\0~ 6q/6ql . --0 ____
o X'A
~x~
I x~x 0.6
0.4
0.2
d (mm)
10 20 30
FIG. 9. Plot of .Jq/.Jq, and A/A, as the function of d. d = distance of the
probe from the bulb (see FIG. 3);.Jq = charges deliyered by one breakdown;
.Jq, = yalueof.Jq whendis 7 mm;A = gain factor of the probe; A, = yalue
of A when d is 7 mm.
Electrodeless discharges 1769
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128.83.63.20 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 11:58:11(q < 0). When Up < 0 ions accumulate near this electrode
(q > 0). The initial jump in Ud is larger if q < 0 than if q > O. In
the second part of the waveform, Ud changes continuously
but with a slower rate. The duration of this stage is about 2-3
ms. The slower rate of change of Ud means that wall charges
are still being altered for a rather long time after the break
down. The amplitude of this variation is about 20% ~ 30%
when q < 0 and 50% or more when q > O. The third portion
of the Ud waveform is flat and indicates that the wall charges
are constant and that the field inside the bulb follows the
applied field completely.
The total amount ofthe wall charges delivered by every
breakdown (Llq) can be determined by the difference between
two successive flat regions (Llud ).Llq = Llud Cg/(AB ).IfCg is
estimated as 1.6 pF the typical value of Llq is 1.1 X 10-9 C
and it is independent of the sign of the wall charge.
Figure 7 shows the waveforms of Up and Ud when there
are four and six breakdowns in a cycle.
In Fig. 8 the light pulses are shown simultaneously with
Ud. When the probe is at a distance (d, see Fig. 3) from the
bulb the corresponding values of A and Llq can be written as
A (d ) and..:::1q(d ). With this notation, one would expectLlq(d ) to
be constant irrespective of distance d. As d is increased from
7 to 30 mm, A (d) decreases by a factor of three, however,
Llq(d) decreases by 20%. If it is noted that spurious signals
greatly affect the accuracy of measurement in the case of
small values of A, then this result shows that the probe does
indeed give a good measure of Llq, the charges deposited by
1770 Rev. Scl.lnstrum., Vol. 54, No. 12, December 1983 successive breakdowns. Figure 9 shows a plot of Llq(d) and
A(d).
The above results indicate that the voltage probe and
differential detection system provides a convenient method
of studying the properties of wall charges generated in elec
trodeless discharges. The method is particularly beneficial if
the wall charges are localized by means of small external
electrodes. Finally, since the probe is remote from the
charged areas, it has very little influence on the properties of
the quantities being measured.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was financed by a grant from the National
Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada. The
authors are indebted to A. Cheuck, R. Keeler, and R. Mor
gan for their assistance in devising some of the apparatus.
"iCultural exchange visitor from South China Institute of Technology.
Guangzhou. China.
IF. L. Curzon. D. E. Friedmann. and M. Feeley. J. App\. Phys. 54. 86
(1983).
2D. E. Friedmann. F. L. Curzon. M. Feeley. J. F. Young. and G. Auchin
leck. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 53.1273 (1982).
'w. L. Harries and A. von Engel. Proc. R. Soc. London. Ser. B 64.951
(1951); and A 222. 491 (1954).
4J. M. El-Bakkal and L. B. Loeb. J. App\. Phys. 33,1567 (1962).
'E. Kindel and R. Arndt. Beitr. Plasmaphys. 21. 411 (1981).
6E. Kindel and R. Arndt, 13th International Conference on Phenomena in
Ionized Gases. Part I (Physics Society German Democratic RepUblic.
Leipzig. Berlin. 1977). p. 219.
Electrodeless discharges 1770
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128.83.63.20 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 11:58:11 |
1.94224.pdf | Propagation loss of the acoustic pseudosurface wave on (ZXt)45° GaAs
M. R. Melloch and R. S. Wagers
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 43, 1008 (1983); doi: 10.1063/1.94224
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.94224
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155.33.16.124 On: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 03:07:32Propagation loss of the acoustic pseudosurface wave on (ZXt)4S0 GaAs
M. R. Melloch and R. S. Wagers
Central Research Laboratories, Texas Instruments, Incorporated, Dallas, Texas 75265
(Received 22 August 1983; accepted for publication 12 September 1983)
Measurements of propagation loss for the leaky surface acoustic wave on (l(JO)-cut GaAs with
< 110) propagation direction are reported. The measurements were made in the frequency range
200-900 MHz. The propagation loss was determined with a novel technique using a delay line
with four interdigital transducers. The effect of a hydrogen implant of dose 1014 cm -2 and energy
120 keY (technique for producing high resistivity isolation regions in GaAs) on propagation loss
and macroscopic piezoelecticity are reported.
PACS numbers: 43.35.Cg, 61.70.Tm, 61.80.Jh, 77.60. + v
In efforts to develop monolithic surface acoustic wave
(SA W) devices which incorporate semiconductors in the de
vice structure sputtered ZnO on an oxidized silicon wafer
has attracted much attention. 1-4 With a semiconductor in
corporated in the device structure, interactions of the SAW
with the semiconductor and fabrication of other electronic
components on the same chip with the SAW device are now
possible. In recent years SAW structures employing GaAs
with ZnO overlays5-7 and without ZnOX-IO have been inves
tigated as candidates for monolithic SAW devices. The
structures using the piezoelectric properties of the GaAs
have an added advantage over the ZnO/GaAs structures in
that the propagation loss is much lower when the ZnO is
absent from the propagation path; thus, higher frequencies
and bandwidths are possible.
The most promising crystal orientation on GaAs is that
of the leaky surface acoustic wave (LSA Wi, the (100) cut
with < 110) propagation direction. The electromechanical
coupling coefficient for this LSA W mode is considerably
higher than for the normal SAW modes on GaAs. Fortu
nately the LSA W has zero leaky mode attenuation for the
exact (100) cut with propagation in the exact (110) direc
tion.11
In this letter we report propagation loss measurements
for the LSA W. The measurements were made in the frequen
cy range 200-900 MHz. The effect of a hydrogen implant
(common technique for producing high resistivity isolation
regions in GaAs 12) on propagation loss and macroscopic pie
zoelectricity are reported.
The device structure utilized for propagation loss mea
surements is depicted in Fig. 1. The aluminum interdigital
transducers consisted of 40 wavelengths of double electrodes
which produced a beam of width 100 wavelengths. The cen
ter-to-center spacing for adjacent transducers was
L = 0.889 cm. Devices were fabricated for operation at 200,
300, 600, and 900 MHz.
Using the transducer labeling illustrated in Fig. 1 the
ABC D
FIG. 1. Propagation loss measurement device configuration. delay line insertion loss between various pairs of transducers
can be written as
ILAB = TLA + TLB + a(L ),
ILAC = TLA + TLC + a(2L ),
ILAD = TLA + TLD + a(3L ).
ILBC = TLB + TLC + a(L ),
ILCD = TLC + TLD + a(L ), (1)
where TLn is the transduction loss of the nth transducer,
ILmn is the insertion loss between transducers m and n, and
a is the propagation loss in dB/em. The set of Eq. (1) is a
consistent set of five equations in five unknowns which can
be solved for a,
a = (1/2L )(!LAD -ILCD + !LBC -ILAB ). (2)
Hence by measuring the insertion loss between various pairs
of transducers one can determine the propagation loss.
Chrome-doped ( ~ I X 1017 cm -3) horizontal Bridgman
grown substrates were used for all experiments. The LSA W
propagation was in the < 110) direction; the crystal was cut 2°
from a (100) cut with the 2° tilt toward the nearest < 110)
equivalent direction. Hence the LSA W propagation loss
would have both leaky mode and viscous damping attenu
ation components.
Alternative devices on each wafer were implanted with
hydrogen (energy = 120 keY, dose = 1014 cm-2). This is a
common technique for producing high resistivity isolation
regions in GaAs and hence it is important to determine the
effect of the implant on viscous damping and macroscopic
piezoelectricity. Typical results for propagation loss are tab
ulated in Table I. The symbol I next to the device frequencies
TABLE I. Rayleigh wave attenuation on 45' (ZXt) GaAs. The symbol I
designates hydrogen implanted devices. a
a a
Frequency (dB/cm) (dB/flS)
200 1.13 0.323
2001 1.60 0.460
300 1.98 0.567
300 1 3.14 0.90
600 5.37 1.54
6001 6.35 1.82
900 11.5 3.29
9001 15.3 4.40
al Hydrogen implant: energy = 120 keY; dose = \014 cm 2
1008 Appl. Phys. Lett. 43 (11),1 December 1983 0003-6951/83/231008-02$01.00 © 1983 American Institute of Physics 1008
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155.33.16.124 On: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 03:07:32.1
U / ill "-iii
~ .
(J) / (J)
9 1.0- -z
0
~
t!) .
~ / 0
II: 0-• 1
0.1 I
100 500 1000 2000
FREQUENCY (MHz)
FIG. 2. Propagation loss vs frequency.
in Table I indicates devices which were hydrogen implanted
as described above.
As can be seen in Table I, the above described hydrogen
implant had a noticeable effect on the viscous damping at
tenuation. However, measurements of transducer radiation
conductance and susceptance showed no appreciable differ
ence for transducers fabricated on hydrogen implanted and
nonimplanted regions. Hence no noticeable affect on the
macroscopic piezoelectric activity was observed due to the
hydrogen implant.
The measured propagation loss versus frequency data
are plotted in Fig. 2. As mentioned above there are two com
ponents to the measured propagation loss. There is a leaky
mode attenuation component which is proportional to fre
quency II and a viscous damping component which is pro
portional to the frequency squared. 13 The results shown in
Fig. 2 of the logarithm of propagation loss versus the loga
rithm offrequency have a slope of -1.5.
Measurements of nonleaky mode SAW viscous damp
ing attenuation have been made for other orientations of
1009 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 43, No. 11, 1 December 1983 GaAs 14 using a laser probe technique.15 Those measure
ments were made in the vicinity of 1 GHz:3.62 dB/Jls was
obtained for the (211) cut with < 111) direction SAW propa
gation and 4.22 dB/ JlS for the (110) cut with < 1(0) direction
SAW propagation. Extrapolating our results for (100) cut
GaAs with < 110) direction LSA W propagation loss to 1
GHz, we obtained -3.6 dB/Jls for the propagation loss
which includes both leaky mode and viscous damping com
ponents.
In summary, the propagation loss for the LSA W on
(1 OO)-cut GaAs with < 110) propagation direction from 200
to 900 MHz has been measured and found to be nearly the
same as for non leaky SAW modes on other cuts of GaAs.
The effects of a typical hydrogen implant (used for high resis
tivity isolation in GaAs) on viscous damping and macro
scopic piezoelectricity have also been determined.
This work was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Re
search Projects Agency and monitored by the Office of Na
val Research.
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posium Proceedings, IEEE Cat. No. 82CH1823-4 (IEEE, New York,
1982), p. 442.
"'M. R. Melloch and R. S. Wagers, App\. Phys. Lett. 43, 48 (1983).
II D. Pen un uri and K. M. Lakin, 1975 Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings,
IEEE Cat. No. 75CH995-4SU (IEEE, New York, 1975), p. 478.
12K. Wohlleben and W. Beck, Z. Naturforsh A 21, 1057 (1966).
"B. A. Auld, Acoustic Fields and Waves in Solids (Wiley, New York, 1973).
"A. J. Siobodnik, Electron. Lett. 8, 307(1972).
I5A. J. Siobodnik, P. H. Carr, and A. J. Budreau, J. App\. Phys. 41, 4380
(1970).
M. R. Melloch and R. S. Wagers 1009
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1.1140693.pdf | Boxcar photography
G. J. Greene, G. Cutsogeorge, and M. Ono
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 60, 2690 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.1140693
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1140693
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/60/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38Boxcar photography
G. J. Greene, G. Cutsogeorge. and M. Ono
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08543
(Received 15 February 1988; accepted for publication 18 April 1989)
A si:nple, inexpensive diagnostic has been developed for time-resolved imaging of repetitive self
lummescent phenomena. An electro-optic birefringent ceramic shutter is employed to perform
photographic sampling and has demonstrated time resolution of 60 f1s. Photographic film was
used for imag~ detection in ~his system, and methods of image enhancement in the presence of
background hght from. a fi?lte-contrast shutter are discussed. The system has been applied to the
study of plasma evolutlOn 10 the CDX plasma confinement device.
INTRODUCTION
In the investigation of transient plasma phenomena, visual
imaging is often a useful supplement to other macroscopic
diagnostics. In hot plasmas, such observation gives informa
tion primarily about the plasma edge, while in cooler plas
mas light may be emitted from the entire plasma volume.
Information can be obtained from the spectrum of the emit
ted light, from its time history, and from its spatiallocaliza
tion. In particular, photographic imaging has long been uti
lized as primary diagnostic of magnetically confined plasma
boundaries. I
When the time evolution of the plasma is of interest, a
number of imaging techniques are available. If the relevant
time scales are on the order of seconds, as is often the case
with present-day tokamaks, a standard video or motion pic
ture camera can provide significant information.2 Many
events, however, occur on faster time scales. For investiga
t~on o~ submillisecond plasma phenomena, high-speed mo
tion picture cameras and image-intensified framing cameras
have been used. Both techniques are quite expensive, and the
latter, while capable of extremely fast time resolution, can
not directly provide a color image.
This article describes a very simple and inexpensive
diagnostic that has been recently devised to obtain time-re
solved color or black -and-white images of a plasma with par
ticular application to the Current Drive Experiment
(COX). The goal of the COX is to investigate novel means
of current drive via various forms ofhelicity injection. Initial
experiments have studied formation of a toroidal plasma dis
charge by a circulating electron beam, injected from a heated
cathode, and subsequent radial current penetration and evo
lution of a tokamaklike field topology. 3 This approach offers
the eventual possibility of a steady-state tokamak device.
The COX discharge is presently pulsed with a repetition rate
of up to lO Hz, and current penetration and evolution ofthe
plasma shape occur with time scales on the order of millisec
onds or less. Important information can be obtained by com
'paring the experimentally observed images with the plasma
evolution predicted by a numerical magnetohydrodynamic
(MHO) model.
I. DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS
The light available from a self-luminescent object (such
as the COX plasma) is insufficient, in many cases where a short exposure is desired, to adequately expose the particular
image detector employed (typically photographic film or a
solid-state array). An image intensifier can be used for light
amplification at the expense of a loss of spectral information
and a rather high cost. Since the COX discharge can be re
producibly pulsed (the time evolution of the total plasma
current, for instance, varies by only a few percent from one
shot to the next), our approach is simply to expose photo
graphic film, on successive shots, to light from a selected
time interval during the discharge until the film is sufficient
ly illuminated. The film can then be changed, a different time
interval during the discharge selected, and the procedure
repeated to obtain images of the plasma showing its evolu
tion as a function of time. Since light from the same portion
of many successive discharges is used to form one "hoto
graphic image, the result represents an optical ave;age of
these shots and the approach is analogous to the electronic
technique of boxcar integration4; hence, we have termed this
technique "boxcar photography." This approach, of course,
is subject to the fundamental limitations of any sampling
system. Features associated with fluctuation phenomena oc
curri?g on time scales shorter than twice the sampling peri
od wIll tend to be averaged out unless phase coherence is
maintained from shot to shot, in which case aliasing may
occur.
This procedure requires a shutter which can be electron
ically triggered and which has adequately short opening and
closing times (submillisecond resolution was desired for the
CDX application). Although electromechanical shutters
have been recently produced with effective exposure times as
short as 0.25 ms (for example, in certain 35-mm single-lens
reflex cameras), substantial timing jitter associated with the
solenoid-triggered mechanisms prevents their use here. In
addition, these fast shutters cannot be repeatedly fired at
rates of more than a few hertz, and a lO-Hz repetition rate
was required for the CDX diagnostic. Liquid crystal shutters
are rapidly evolving,5 but currently available products are
to~ slow for ~he application considered here. Shutters using
flUld suspenslOns of metallic dipoles aligned by electric fields
have been developed by Marks,6 but are also currently too
slow. Shutters can be constructed using an electrically con
trollable, optically birefringent material placed between
crossed polarizers. Implementations such as the Kerr cell or
Pockel ceU7 can be switched in time scales of nanoseconds.
Their primary drawbacks are a small useful angular aper-
2690 Rev. Sci. (nstrum. 60 (8), August 1989 0034-6748/89/082690-07$01.30 ® 1989 American Institute of Physics 2690
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38ture, relatively high cost, and the complexity of the drivers
needed to provide pulses of multikilovolt amplitude. Prox
imity-focused diode image intensifier tubes are also relative
ly costly but can provide large useful apertures, fast shutter
ing (nanosecond time scale), and moderate luminous gains
(30-100). They require switching large voltages (6-7 kV),
however, and can provide only a monochrome image. The
switching voltage can be reduced to 150 V using a micro
channel plate image intensifier, which also increases the lu
minous gain to _104 and may double the cost of the device
compared to a diode intensifier tube.
The electro-optic shutter used for the CDX diagnostic
was originally developed for flash-blindness protection gog
gles for pilots and is now commercially available.8 The de
vice uses a transparent ceramic material (lanthanum-modi
fied lead zirconate titanate, or PLZT) which exhibits an
electric-fieId-dependent optical birefringence.9 The material
is manufactured in large wafers ( 1-and 2~in. diameter) with
interdigital electrode arrays deposited on both surfaces in
order to generate a uniform electric field in the ceramic. The
wafer is sandwiched, as with a Kerr cell, between two linear
polarizers whose axes are perpendicular, and the optic axis
of the PLZT is oriented at 45° with respect to the polarizer
axes. These devices can be switched on and off with an ap~
plied voltage of less than 700 V (a range easily accessible to
transistor switches), provide submillisecond response, and
are relatively inexpensive. The model used in this work costs
only 4% of the price of a proximity-focused diode intensifier
tube (without a microchannel plate) of comparable size.
For the particular composition of PLZT used in this
shutter, the effective birefringence (L~n) is a quadratic func
tion of the applied electric field, and there is zero effective
birefringence when the applied field (E) vanishes:
an = K/iE 2, where K is the Kerr constant and..t is the wave
length of incident light. Therefore, with no applied voltage
the shutter is essentially closed and residual transmission
depends primarily on the polarizer quality. If the polarizers
are ideal (providing perfect linear polarization for all wave
lengths), then the ratio of the light intensity transmitted
through the modulator assembly to the incident intensity is
proportional tosin2( 17KTE2), where T is theeffectivethick~
ness of the birefringent layer and K is, in general, a function
of ..t. 10 For a fixed incident wavelength, the transmission in
creases from zero with no applied field to a first maximum at
an applied field of magnitude Em = (2KT)~-lf2.
Over the range of visible wavelengths, Em varies by
some 30% for the shutter used here. Typically, Em is chosen
to maximize white-light transmission and this choice results
in somewhat reduced transmission at the blue end of the
spectrum. The field Em is reached in these devices for ap
plied voltages on the order of 400-700 V. The contrast ratio
of the shutter (defined as the ratio between transmission of
white light with applied field Em and transmission with zero
applied field) is approximately 2000, and absolute transmis
sion at E = Em is approximately 15%.
II. EXPOSURE AND CONTRAST CONSIDERATIONS
The use of photographic film as an image detector re-
2691 Rev. ScI. Instrum., Vol. 60, No.8, August 1989 quires that care be taken in the interpretation of the results.
The eye is approximately a logarithmic detector, and film
attempts to mimic this response. The reflected density of a
developed print (the log of the ratio of intensity reflected
from an unexposed portion to intensity reflected from an
exposed portion) has a total range of only -1.5 for most
papers, and the range over which the density is a linear func
tion . of the log of the exposure is considerably smaller
(-0.5). Thus the dynamic range over which a print can be
used as an absolute measure of incident flux is at most -3D,
and then only if the characteristic curve of the film is accu
rately known. If quantitative measurements are needed,
much more sensitivity can be obtained with the use of nega~
dve film and measurements of transmission (using a densi
tometer) rather than reflection (a dynamic range of -1000
is then feasible). In the experiments described here, quanti
tative analysis of the images was not required, and Polaroid
type 57 print film was typically used for convenience. This
black and white film has a relatively high speed (ASA
3000), a spectral range of 350-650 nm, a total reflected den
sity range of 1.54, and a linear density range of approximate
lyO.7.1l
Photographic film does not act as an ideal integrator of
incident fiux. As the intensity ofincident light decreases, the
effectiveness of forming a photographic latent image (in
terms of photons absorbed per density increment on the de
veloped film) also eventually decreases, i.e., the exposure
(incident intensity X time) required to produce a constant
density in the developed film is not independent of intensity.
This is a statement of reciprocity failure which is related to
the fact that formation of a latent image requires more than
one photon to be absorbed by a particular grain in the film
within a certain period. 12 In addition, a series of N exposures
ofintensity 10 and duration to, separated by time tw' do not,
in general, produce the same photographic effect as a single
exposure of intensity 10 and duration Nto. This effect, known
as the intermittency effect, is of importance in photographic
sampling systems. It was found by Webbl3 that the photo
graphic effect of an intermittent exposure is identical (in
cluding reciprocity failure) to the effect of an exposure of
duration N(to + tw) and constant intensity Ie = Iotol
(to + tw), provided the frequency of the intermittent expo
sure [J; = 1/ (to + tw )] exceeds a critical frequency of fu
sion,.fc (typical1y./c -0.1-1 HZI4). A significant loss of sen
sitivity of the photographic system can therefore occur due
to reciprocity failure even if the intensity during each indi
vidual exposure is high. For a typical CDX experiment,
to = 0.5 ms, t", = 200 ms, and the average intensity 10 is suf
ficient that a single exposure of duration ts = 50 ms during
the plasma shot is adequate to expose the film. Assuming for
simplicity that the intensity does not change greatly during
the shot, the above relations would predict that a sampled
exposure of N:::::: tsl to = 100 shots would be required to pro
duce an adequate image. However, the duration of the equiv
alent exposure ( -20 s) is of sufficient length that reciproc
ity failure is important, II and in fact more than twice the
predicted number of shots are required to produce a suitable
image. Note that if the shot repetition rate (.t;)is lowered
below the frequency of fusion, a further loss of sensitivity
Boxcar photography 2691
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38will occur, requiring correspondingly more shots for an ade
quate exposure.
The contrast ratio of the shutter together with the film
characteristics determine the ability to discern features in
the final photographic image that arise from events occur
ring in the interval during which the shutter is open. The
effect of the finite contrast of the PLZT shutter is that very
low-level light from the nonsampled part of the discharge is
incident on the film. If the leakage is of sufficient intensity,
an image can be formed in regions of shadow on the primary
image. Also, a sublatent image due to the leakage can, at the
particular locations where it is produced, enhance the sensi
tivity of the film to formation of the primary image (the
effect oflatensification12) and thus, upon development, dis
tort that image. These concerns become more serious when
the ratio of the discharge duration to the exposure period
becomes large or when imaging a portion of the discharge
cycle that is much less intense than the remainder of the
cycle. It is advantageous to arrange the intensities oflight in
the system so that light leakage through the closed shutter is
reduced in effectiveness for image formation through reci
procity failure to a greater extent than is the primary image.
Experimental checks of image contamination due to leakage
through the shutter are discussed in the following section.
The contrast ratio of2000 specified for the shutter used
here assumes that light is normally incident on the polar
izers. The efficiency of polarization, and hence the contrast
ratio, decreases as the angle of incidence (OJ) increases from
zero (normal incidence). For (Ji = 15°, the contrast ratio is
reduced to a value of approximately 600. Hence limiting the
numerical aperture of the optical system can be an important
consideration. In the CDX diagnostic, the numerical aper
ture was limited to a value of 0.045, which ensured that all
rays passed through the PLZT shutter at angles OJ of less
than 2.6° and avoided any observable degradation of the con
trast ratio.
Another method employed to limit the effects of a finite
contrast shutter is to back the device with an electromechan
ical shutter that has effectively infinite contrast. Such electri
cally triggered shutters, designed for laboratory use, are
available with clear aperture diameters of 2.5 cm and mini
mum exposure periods of 6 ms. 15 In operation, the timing of
the slow mechanical shutter is arranged so that its open peri
od brackets the open period of the fast PLZT shutter.
If the average intensity of the discharge does not vary
greatly during the time that the backing shutter is open (t B),
the ratio of the exposure due to the sampled period to that
from the nonsampled period is eto/ (t B -to), where C is the
contrast ratio (and the different reciprocity effects on the
sampled and nonsampled images have not been taken into
account). The minimum sampled exposure time that can
then be used without danger ofimage contamination can be
/C lO(lJ .--D·) h roughly estimated as tmin = (t B) max moo, were
Dmax and Dillin are the maximum and minimum values of
reflected density (taken from the characteristic curve of the
film). For typical CDX experiments, evaluation of the above
yields tmill ::::::: 100 j..ls. Exposures of this duration or shorter
should be accompanied by careful experimental verification
of the lack of image contamination.
2692 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No. 8, August 1989 III. IMPLEMENTATION AND OPERATION
A diagram of the diagnostic built for the CDX experi
ment is shown in Fig. 1. A standard 4 X 5 view camera 16 is
used to record the image as it allows convenient interchange
of sheet and Polaroid film backs. The PLZT shutter is
mounted in a light-tight phenolic housing with an adapter
that screws into the camera lens. An electromechanical shut
ter is, in turn, mounted to the phenolic housing. The camera
views the plasma cross section tangentially through two mir
rors placed in a vacuum chamber port, and, due to the long
optical path length, a 300-mm focal length lens is used to
provide adequate image size on the film. The signal to initi
ate the boxcar photography cycle (from a manual push but
ton) enables a shot counter gate which allows the CDX dis
charge trigger pulses to pass to the subsequent electronics for
a selected number of sequential shots.
The PLZT shutter appears electrically as a capacitance
of approximately 0.02 J.1F in series with an equivalent elec
trode resistance of ~ 25 n. The shutter driver must be able to
provide relatively fast rise and fall times into this largely
capacitive load. A schematic diagram of a high voltage pulse
amplifier designed for this application is shown in Fig. 2. The
input stage utilizes a VMOS FET inverter (Q 1) and accepts
TTL-level pulses. The output stage consists of two Darling
ton-connected high voltage transistor pairs. The pair direct
ly driven by the FET (Q2, Q3) is an inverter and the other
pair (Q4, Q5) acts as a fonower. On the positive-going edge
of the input pulse, the shutter capacitance is charged by the
follower stage. When the input signal returns to zero, the
Shottky barrier diode (D 1 ) conducts and the shutter capaci
tance is discharged through the inverter portion of the out
put stage. The circuit is designed to operate at a low duty
cycle. The l-kfl resistor in series with the high-voltage input
limits the maximum current drawn, and the 2-j..lF capacitor
provides the peak currents needed for fast rise and fall times.
The input to the high voltage amplifier is a pulse of adjusta
ble width that is synchronized and delayed with respect to
the CDX discharge trigger. The time delay and the pulse
width are adjustable in lO-llS increments using inexpensive,
commercially available modules. 17
An example of the switching speed of the shutter and
high voltage amplifier is shown in Fig. 3. Here a white light
source (a dc-powered tungsten lamp) illuminated the shut
ter through a collimator, and a photomultiplier tube (rise
time < 1 j..ls) was used as a detector. The output from the
detector and the voltage across the shutter are shown for
three exposures of different widths. The rise time of the vol
tage signal is approximately 50 j..ls and the fall time, 20 J.1s.
The shutter optical closing time is also approximately 20 j..ls,
but the opening time is significantly longer. The opening
characteristic appears to be a two-stage process, an effect
which has been previously reported18 and which appears to
be related to the establishment of birefringence in the ceram
ic. The initial rate of opening is rather fast (the shutter
reaches 20% of its ultimate transmission within -40 j..ls)
but subsequently the rate decreases considerably. The shut
ter attains some 66% of its ultimate transmission in about
Boxcar photography 2692
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38Polaroid
Film Back 4 x 5 View Camera COX
Vacuum Vessel
(Top View)
High Voltage
Swi tch Solenoid
Driver
Exp08ur~
Initiah
Trigger Time Delay &.
Gate Modules
Repetitin
Discharge
Trigger
FiG. 1. Diagram of the boxcar photography diagnostic.
1 k!l
1W
400 -700 V
2111 + Lens
PLZT Shutter
Electromechanical
Shutter
Window
0.01 I! f
1 kV T T1kV
100 kO
2W
Gats
Input
(TIL) 01
10kO
iOO
kO
01:VNS 10KM
Q2-5: MJ8503
D1: 1/2 MBR1535 5.1
kO 02
1 kO
FIG. 2. Schematic diagram of the high-voltage PLZT shutter driver.
2693 Rev. ScLlnstrum., Vol. 60, No. e, August 1989 Dl
lOOn
lW
Boxcar photography PlZT
Shutter
Assembly
2693
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38SHUTTER 1000l;
VOLTAGE 500 """' ............................... """"'l
(Volts) 0 E ...... _I ......... \:.-... 2 ............ t: ... _3 ...
SHUTTER 100lk TRANSMISS!ON _ ...... __ -,
(% of Fully 50 r
2 \-3
Open Value) -I l \
o --~------~--
L! ~ __ L-_~~~! "~ __ L-~~~~ o 500 1000
TiME <P.Sl)C)
FIG. 3. Example of the switching speed of the high-voltage amplifier and the
corresponding spatially averaged optical transmission through the ~hutter
(collimated white light illuminated the shutter aperture). Signals from
three exposures of different widths are superimposed. The traces show full
width, half-maximum exposures of approximately 50 f.ls (trace I), 300 its
(trace 2), and 600 ItS (trace 3).
600 f..ts and requires several hundred ms to reach the final
steady-state, fully open level.
The optical switching speed tests described above uti
lized a light source that illuminated most of the shutter aper
ture. The transmission curves therefore represent the spa
tially-averaged response of the PLZT device. Since it is
conceivable that different areas of the shutter might open
asynchronously, particularly for very short exposures, a di
rect test of the effective shutter speed that demonstrates the
imaging qualities of the shutter was performed. A test pat
tern, consisting of black squares, radial lines, and the letters
"CDX" drawn on a white background, was affixed to a met
al disk, 12.7 cm in diameter, and was rotated at high speed
using an electric motor. A small hole near the edge of the
disk allowed a synchronization pulse to be generated using a
slotted optical switch. A photograph was taken of the rotat
ing disk using a signal derived from the synchronization
pulse to trigger the PLZT shutter at a rate of 3 Hz. The disk
rotated at 51 revolutions per second, corresponding to an
edge speed of20.3 m/s. The electromechanical backing shut
ter was employed, and 2000 exposures were required to pro
duce the photograph shown in Fig. 4. The black rectangle at
the bottom of the disk is the slotted optical switch (its
blurred outline arises from the shadows it casts on the disk).
The synchronization hole is visible as a black dot on the
right-hand side of the photograph. The lines of the test pat
tern are clearly defined in the center of the disk, but blurring
of the radial lines is observed toward the edge of the disk.
This blurring is due to the motion of the disk while the PLZT
shutter is open, and its magnitude gives a measure of the
effective shutter speed. The blurring of the radial lines at the
edge of the disk corresponds to an angular rotation of about
1.10, from which an effective shutter speed of 60 f.1S is calcu
lated. No other distortion of the test pattern is visible, and
the image density is relatively uniform across the face of the
disk. This test demonstrates that the PLZT shutter opens
uniformly, even at high speed.
In the application discussed, a perfectly square shutter
characteristic was not a requirement, and effective exposure
times as short as 40 f.1s were feasible at reduced contrast. For
even shorter exposures, several techniques are possible. La-
2694 Rev. Sci.lnstrum., Vol. 60, No.8, August 1989 FIG. 4. Photograph ofa 12.7-cm-diam test pattern, rotating at 51 revolu
tions per second, taken with the boxcar system. The shutter was synchro
nized to the rotation of the disk, and 2000 exposures were used to produce
this image. The extent of the blurring of the radial lines at the edge of the
disk indicates an effective shutter speed of 60 its.
guna19 has demonstrated a method of charging a PLZT
shutter with a constant current (rather than R-C exponen
tial charging) which yielded a significant improvement, and
Wolfram20 has discussed the approach of overdriving the
ceramIC.
Usbg the techniques discussed earlier, the maximum
ratio of the discharge length to the shutter open period for
which contrast degradation is not significant can be in
creased. Experimental checks of image contamination due
to finite shutter contrast should be performed, however, and
the characteristics of the particular film in use must be con
sidered. Since a plot ofthc relative log exposure versus opti
cal density produced in a film is not linear but rather sigmoi
dal, 12 simply repeating a series of exposures with the shutter
closed may not provide an accurate indication of contamina
tion of the desired image by light from the rest of the dis
charge. For a more realistic test, the film should be exposed
to a uniform source of light for a period sufficient to yield an
optical density comparable to that in the experimental im
age. This will ensure that the sensitivity of the film to the low
light levels penetrating the closed shutter is comparable to its
value in the actual experiment. A subsequent series of expo
sures to the discharge made with the shutter closed should
then correctly indicate if image contamination occurs.
The system described above has recently been used to
provide the first indication of the formation of a tokamaklike
plasma by electron beam injection in the CDX device.3 For
Boxcar photography 2694
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38#87XOO86
~-
J E "... e .3 u '-' v ,
)- )-J
~_~_-L
-5 0 5 ~5 0 5 -5 0 5
X (em) X (em) X (em)
FIG. 5. (a)-(c) Results ofa numerical model showing the path ofthe electron beam in CDX (single cross hatch shaded regions), projected onto a poloidal
cross section of the toroidal device, and areas of closed magnetic field lines containing the main CDX plasma (double cross hatch shaded regions), (d)-(f)
Photographs taken of the CDX discharge, with a tangential view, using the boxcar system. Plasma currents common to model and experiment were 10 A
[parts (a) and (d)], 50A [parts (b) and (e)j,and 330A [parts (el and m],
this experiment, type 57 Polaroid print film was used, the
shutter exposure period was 500 p.s, and 200 successive dis
charges were used to produce the images shown in Fig. 5.
Since the plasma duration for each shot was only ~ 20 ms
and the luminosity did not vary greatly during the shot, the
contrast was adequate without need for an auxiliary shutter;
no image contamination was discemable using the test de
scribed above.
The graphs displayed in Figs. 5(a)-5(c) show the re
sults of a 2-D current transport simulation for the CDX plas
ma at increasing electron beam currents. In each case, the
corresponding image of the plasma (viewed tangentially, as
indicated in Fig. 1) is shown in the photograph beneath the
figure. The lightly shaded regions (single cross hatch) in
Figs. 5(a)-5(c) show the path of the electron beam used to
create the plasma. The beam eminates from a heated cathode
(the large rectangle at the bottom of the figure). The more
heavily shaded areas (double cross hatch) in Figs. 5(b) and
5 (c) indicate regions of closed magnetic field lines contain
ing the main CDX plasma. The photographs show qualita
tively some of the general features of the simulation result,
especially the change in shape from a diffuse, vertical object
2695 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No.8, August 1989 at low beam current to a wen-delineated, brighter, rounded
plasma object at high beam current. Magnetic probe mea
surements have confirmed that the plasma, in the high cur
rent case, has developed a tokamaklike closed magnetic field
structure. The probe measurements generally require a sig
nificant amount oftime to complete and analyze. The boxcar
photography system allows rapid observation of the plasma
shape; the immediate feedback is routinely used to adjust the
CDX device for optimum performance.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by U.S. DOE contract DE
AC02-76-CHO-3073.
IR. H, Huddlestone and S. L Leonard, Plasma Diagnostic Techniques
(Academic, New York, 1965), pp. 27-520
2S, S. Medley, D, L Dimock, S. Hayes, D. Long, J. L. Lowrance, V. Mas
trocola, G. Renda, M. Ulrickson, and K, M. Young, Rev, Sci. Instrum. 56,
1873 (1985).
3M. Ono, G, J. Greene, D. Darrow, C. Forest, H. Park, and T, H. Stix,
Physo Rev, Lett, 59,2165 (1987),
4D. W. Swain, Rev. Sci. Instl'um, 41, 545 (1970).
5J, J. McCormick, Electron. Des. 33, 1i7 (1985).
BOl(car photography 2695
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitationnew.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:386 A. M. Marks, App!. Opt. 8, 1397 (1969).
7E. A. Enemark and A. Gallagher, Rev. Sci. lnstrum. 40, 40 ( 1969).
8The shutter used in these experiments was the model A20CE40BA PLZT
Modulator, manufactured by the Motorola Communications Systems Di-
vision, Ceramic Products Group (Albuquerque, NM).
9G. H. Haertling and C. E. Land, J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 54, II (1971).
'"A. Yariv, Introduction to Optical Electronics (Holt-Reinhart, New York,
1971),pp.230-236.
I I Polaroid Corporation, Polaroid Black and White Land Hlms (Focal, Bos
ton, MA, 1983), passim.
"T. H. James and C. A. E. Mees, Eds., The 1heory of the Photographic
Process (Macmillan, New York, 1966), passim.
2696 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 60, No.8, August 1989 IJJ. H. Webb, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 23, 157 (1933).
14R. E. Maerker, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 44,625 (1954).
15For example, the model 225L shutter, manufactured by Vincent Asso
ciates, Inc. (Rochester, NY).
'''The Cambo model SCX view camera was used (manufactured by Cambo
Fotografische Industrie. Kampen, Holland).
17Modc14145 programmable time delay and gate modules were used (man
ufactured by Evan~ Electronics, Berkeley, CA) .
ISJ. T, Cutchen, J. O. Harris, Jr., and G. R. Laguna, App!. Opt. 14, 1866
(1975).
19G. R. Laguna, Ferroelectrics 50,73 (1983).
It'G. Wolfram, Ferroelectrics 10, 39 (1976).
Boxcar photography 2696
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155.247.166.234 On: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 03:15:38 |
1.100192.pdf | Unified planar process for fabricating heterojunction bipolar transistors and buried
heterostructure lasers utilizing impurityinduced disordering
R. L. Thornton, W. J. Mosby, and H. F. Chung
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 53, 2669 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.100192
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.100192
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/53/26?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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Laterally injected lowthreshold lasers by impurityinduced disordering
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Buriedheterostructure lasers fabricated by in situ processing techniques
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Properties of closely spaced independently addressable lasers fabricated by impurityinduced disordering
Appl. Phys. Lett. 56, 1623 (1990); 10.1063/1.103145
Buried heterostructure lasers by silicon implanted, impurity induced disordering
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Low threshold planar buried heterostructure lasers fabricated by impurityinduced disordering
Appl. Phys. Lett. 47, 1239 (1985); 10.1063/1.96290
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142.157.129.16 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 16:11:43Unified p~anar process for fabricating heterojunction bipolar transistors and
tUJrieobheterostructure iasers utilizing impuritYftinauced disordering
R. L. Thornton, W. J. Mosby, and H. F. Chung
Xr?rox Palo Alto Research Center, 3333 Coyote Hill Ruad, Palo Alto, California 94304
(Received 9 August 1988; accepted for pUblication 18 October 1988)
We describe results 011 a novel geometry of heterojunction bipolar transistor that has been
realized by impurity-induced disordering. This structure is fabricated by a method that is
compatible with techniques for the fabrication of low threshold current buried-heterostructure
lasers. We have demonstrated this compatibility by fabricating a hybrid laser/transistor
structure that operates as a iaser with a threshold current of 6 rnA at room temperature, and as
a transistor with a current gain of 5.
There is currently great interest in device design issues
for the realization of integrated optoelectronics. One desir
able goal of integration is to realize a low-threshold laser
structure and a transistor structure on the same substrate.
The ability to integrate these two components would be
greatly enhanced if techniques arc developed for fabricating
both structures within the same set of epitaxial layers. There
have been initial demonstrations of this concept 1.2; however,
simultaneous high performance of hoth the laser and the
transistor devices has not yet been reported. In addition, for
high-density integration applications, it is highly desirable
that the fabrication process for the devices be planar, and
therefore that there be no etching and regrowth steps in
volved.
In this work we introduce a novel transistor structure,
which we call a lateral hcterojunction bipolar transistor (L
HBT). fmpurity-induced disordering (UD) 1,4 via silicon
diffusion is used to selectively convert a buried p-type GaAs
layer into n-type AIGaAs regions that serve as the emitter
and collector of the heterojunction bipolar transistor. The
resulting transistor structure is completely planar, and cur
rent now from emitter through base to collector occurs in the
plane of the base layer as opposed to perpendicular to the
plane of the base layer, as is the case in conventional hetero
junction bipolar transistors. Due to the no effect acting on
the base layer to form the wide band-gap emitter and collec
tor regions, a buried heterostructure is formed that is similar
to structures previously used to make high performance lID
buried-heterostructure (BH) lasers.5,1> We have in fact ob
served room-temperature laser operation from our transis
tor structure with threshold currents as low as I) rnA.
The basic structure for the transistor is shown schemati
cally in Fig. I. The multilayer heterostructure is grown 011 a
p-type GaAs substrate, and the layers grown subsequently
are (l) a GaAs buffer layer, (2) an AI(12 Ga()~ As buffer
layer, (3) an AIoA Gao"As burying layer, (4) a GaAs active
base layer, (5) an AloA Gaol; As base burying layer, and (6) 11
GaAs capping layer. All layers except the active GaAs base
layer arc intentionally doped p type to a concentration of
1 X 101~. Outdiffusion ofMg during the subsequent process
ing steps is relied upon to dope the active base layer to an
estimated concentration on X 1017• After growth of the epi
taxiallayers, a chemical vapor deposited (CVD) Si1N4 film
is deposited and patterned to serve as a mask for the diffusion ofSi. A bilayer film ofSi capped by Si3N4 is then CVD depos
ited to serve as a source for Si diffusion. As a result of the
Si,N4 capping layer, the diffusion can be performed in a hy
drogen ambient without the need to provide an overpressure
nf As to the surface to avoid As outdiffusion. The diffusion is
performed at 850°C for 8 h to reach a junction depth of 1.4
f~m. During the process of the Si diffusion, the buried p-type
GaAs layer is dispersed into the adjacent 40% aluminum
layers by impurity-induced disordering. As a result, the lat
eral npn structure that is formed by the Si diffusions has
higher alloy compositions in the emitter :lnd collector re
gions than in the buried GaAs stripe that forms the active
portion of the base. Figure 2 shows a scanning electron mi
croscope cross section of the transistor structure after the Si
diffusion step, in which the emitter and collector diffusion
profiles can be clearly seen as well as the lID action on the
base layer to make a wide-gap emitter and collector. Proton
bombardment is used to isolate the individual devices on the
chip, followed by metallization of the 4-flm-wide emitter and
collcctor contacts. All of the metallizations on this structure
are Cr-Au. The high 5i doping level in the Si-diffused regions
is relied upon to make ohmic contact to the emitter and col
lector. The base contact is made to the p-type substrate. A
shallow ion implantation is performed aftcr the metalliza
tion in order to prevent the GaAs cap layer at the surface
from functioning as a parasitic base channel which would
introduce substantial surface recombination. The devices
arc cleaved into 250-,um-long strips in the direction perpen
dicular to the stripe emitter and collector contacts.
GaA.Ooli'm
Alo.4GaO.6As O.9p.m:
GaAs Ool/Lm I
Alc.4GaQ.eAs 1.4j.Lml
p.GaA==~:stra!" : : ;»;;7"/
C:~Proton !mpiant [(ijSi D;ffU~
FIG 0 I. Schematic diagmm of the lateral heterojunction bipolar transistor
structure (L-HBTl fabricated by impurity-induced disordering.
2669 Appl. Phys. Lett. 53 (26), 26 December 1988 0003-6951/88/522669-03$01000 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 2669
............ ' •••••••••••••••• ;.;.;.;.:.;':.: •••••• ,. ••••••••• -;0;>; ••••••••• -.-.-....... -.-••••• ";".~;-••••••• ~->;~ •• ; •••• , .-.-.-.-.' " •••• "0',",-. r •••• " ••
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
142.157.129.16 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 16:11:43Unstained
4 microns
Stained
6 microns
FIG. 2. SEM cross section of tilt' transistor structure after performing of
disordering silicon diffusions.
We have fabricated this transistor structure and ob
served transistor action with significant gain. Figure 3 shows
a typical transistor characteristic for one of these devices,
indicating a current gain of approximately 5. This device has
a base length of 1.4 pm. It can be seen also that the turn-on
voltage for the transistor is on the order of 2.5 V. This is a
result of the high contact resistance associated with the emit
ter and collector contacts. The Si concentration in the Si
diffused region results in a net n-type doping of 7 X 10 III n
type. This level is not sufficient to yield a very low value of
contact resistance. The use of a more standard alloyed Au
Ge contact would result in a substantial improvement in the
quality of the ohmic contact, at the expense of increased
device fabrication complexity. The collector base break
down voltage of 8 V is also evident in this figure. The heavily
doped p-n junctions resulting from the Si diffusion result in
this relatively low reverse breakdown.
As has becn previously mentioned, the active base layer
<C 500
~ 400 E
~ 300 ...
::l
0 ....
.2 200
(.)
.!!!
"5 100 0
0
0 1.6 3.2 4.8 6.4 8.0
Collector Emitter Voltage (volts)
fIG. 3. Transistor characteristics of the lateral helcrojunctlOIl bipolar tran
sistor with a base width of 1.4 fLm. Base current is incremented in 10 11A
steps.
2670 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 53, No. 26,26 December 1988 Lr=l: 8932 11936 8940 8944 I
Wsvelength (Angstroms)
I
'---t---; --f-· --r--1 o 5 10 15 20 25
Current (Milliamperes)
FIG. 4. Properties of the laser emission of the transistor structure when
operated in the saturation mode.
of this transistor can also function as a BH laser under ap
propriate conditions of device bias. Specifically, when the
transistor is driven into saturation by forward biasing both
the emitter-base and the collector-base p-n junctions, the
carrier density in the base region can build to sufficiently
high levels to exhibit stimulated emission gain and lasing
action. We refer to this laser structure as a heterotransverse
junction (HTJ) laser, due to the fact that, similar to the
normal transverse junction stripe laser,7 current is injected
along the plane of the epitaxial layers. The important differ
ence is that the disordered heterojunctions provide strong
optical waveguiding and carrier confinement in this device.
Single transverse heterostructure lasers using Zn disorder
ing have been previously reported,X
We have operated this transistor in the saturation mode
and observed lasing action with threshold currents as low as
6 rnA pulsed, and 10 mA cw, both at room temperature. This
threshold current value compares favorably to those rou
tinely obtained in our more conventional geometry oflascrs.
In Fig. 4 we show the light versus current characteristics for
a typical laser/transistor structure. As shown by the optical
emission spectrum in the inset, the device operates predomi
nantly in a single longitudinal mode.
The transverse injection geometry employed in this de
vice can result in substantial reduction in the parasitic ca
pacitance of the EH laser, as well as a potential path for
contacting both sides of the lasing p-n junction from the top
surface. For these initial device demonstrations we have sim
plified the processing by contacting the base from the p-type
substrate; however, it is relatively straightforward to modify
the structure to allow for the laser structure to be grown on a
semi-insulating substrate with a buried p-type layer to be
used for accomplishing the base contact. The reduced ca
pacitance in this geometry oflaser may be preferred for ap
plications involving high-speed modulation and/or integra
tion with other optoelectronic components.
In conclusion, we have successfully fabricated a novel
Thornton, Mosby, and Chung 2670
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142.157.129.16 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 16:11:43transistor structure, which we refer to as a lateral hetero
junction bipolar transistor. The lateral heterojunctions are
formed by impurity-induced disordering of the buried GaAs
base layer. These transistor structures exhibit current gains
of 5 for base widths of 1.4 ,urn. The transistor device also
functions as a buried-heterostructure laser, with a threshold
current as low as 6 rnA for a 1.4 fl1TI stripe. The ability to
fabricate both high performance lasers and transistors in the
same set of epitaxial layers, via a technology that is com
pletely planar and diffusion based, has the potential for a
great impact on the future ability to realize complex opto
electronics on a common substrate.
2671 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 53, No. 26, 26 December 1988 'Y. Hasumi, A. Kazen, J. Temmyo, and H. Asahi, iEEE Electron Device
Lett. EDL·8, 10 (1987).
1J. Shibata, Y. Mori, Y. Sasai, N. Hase, H. Scrizawa, and T. Kajiwara, Eke
tnm. I"ett. 21, 99 (1985).
'W. D. Laidig, N. Ho]onyak, Jr. M. D. Camras, K. Hess, J. J. Coleman, P.
D. Dapkus, and J. Bardeen, AppJ. Phys. Lett. 38, 776 (1981).
4K. Meehan, J. M. Brown, M. D. Camras, N. Ho]orlyak, Jr., R. D. Burn
ham, T. L. Paoli, an W. Streifer, App!. Phys. Lett. 44, 7()O (1984).
'R. L. Thornton, R. D. Burnham, T. L. Paoli, N. Holonyak, Jr., and D. G.
Deppe, App!. Phys. Lett. 41, 1239 (1985).
"R. L. Thornton, R. D. Burnham, T. L. Paoli. N. Holonyak, Jr., and D. G.
Deppe, App!. Phys. Lett. 48, 7 (1986).
·IH. Namizaki, IEEE J. Quantum Electron. QE-ll, 427 (1975).
xY. J. Yang, Y. C. Ln, G. S. Lee, K. Y. Hsieh, and R. M. Kolbas, Appl.
Phys. Lett. 49,835 (1986).
Thornton, Mosby, and Chung 2671
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142.157.129.16 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 16:11:43 |
1.100873.pdf | Surface passivation of GaAs
H. H. Lee, R. J. Racicot, and S. H. Lee
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 54, 724 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.100873
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.100873
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/54/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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The effect of passivation on different GaAs surfaces
Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 173902 (2013); 10.1063/1.4826480
Passivation of GaAs(111)A surface by Cl termination
Appl. Phys. Lett. 67, 670 (1995); 10.1063/1.115198
Sulfur passivation of GaAs surfaces
AIP Conf. Proc. 227, 118 (1991); 10.1063/1.40657
The chemistry of sulfur passivation of GaAs surfaces
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 8, 1894 (1990); 10.1116/1.576822
Photoelectrochemical passivation of GaAs surfaces
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 1, 795 (1983); 10.1116/1.582680
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141.210.2.78 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 05:00:25Surface passivation of GaAs
H. H. Lee,a) R J. Racicot, and S. H. Lee
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Horida, Gainesville, Florida 32611
(Received 29 July 1988; accepted for puhlication 15 December 1988)
We have successfully passivated the surface of n-type (100) GaAs on the basis of P2SS1
NH40H treatment of the surface. A fivefold increase in the photoluminescence (PL) intensity
results at room temperature when the surface is passivated and the PL intensity remains the
same even after ten days' exposure to room air. Current-voltage characteristic also
corroborates the PL measurements and shows that the GaAs surface retains its integrity when
passivated with P 2SS and its electronic characteristic remains invariant with time even after
exposure to air for one month. The results are indications of the robust stability of the
passivated GaAs surface.
Recently, there has been a renewed interest in improv
ing the poor electronic quality of GaAs surface 1-4 which is
caused by the high density of surface states on GaAs formed
by segregated arsenic atoms5 via oxidation reactions. fi These
arsenic atoms are the main eause for the deep level traps
which pin the Fermi level and increase the nonradiative rc
combination.7-'i This inherent problem has limited the per
formance of existing GaAs-based electronic and opto
electronic devices and 1ms stilI prevented successful develop
ment of GaAs-bascd metal-insuIator-semiconductor tech
nology.
The root cause of arsenic segregation lies in the presence
of oxygen that is always present in a minute amount. The
presence of oxygen causes oxidation of GaAs to arsenic ox
ide and gallium oxide and then the gallium atoms in the
vicinity of the arsenic oxide gradually extract oxygen from
arsenic: oxide to form gallium oxide, leading to the segrega
tion of arsenic atoms.10,ll This is due to the fact that the
thermodynamic equilibrium composition prohibitively fa
vors gaHium oxide over arsenic oxide because of the higher
heat of formation of gallium oxide than that of arsenic oxide.
Therefore, the success of any passivating technique hinges
on choosing a species that makes the surface repel approach
ing oxygen and at the same time has a higher heat of oxide
formation than that of gallium oxide. The first requirement
can be satisfied by choosing a chemical species that adsorbs
strongly on the GaAs surface as an impenetrable passivating
barrier. Thus, a species that chemisorbs strongly has to be
chosen. as is well known in catalytic reactions (e.g., Ref. 12)
where a chemisorbing species such as phosphorus com
pounds occupies the active surface sites, thereby preventing
adsorption of other species. Excellent candidates that meet
the two requirements are phcsphorus compounds since the
heat offormation of phosphorus oxide is higher than that of
Ga203•
The samples used in the experiments are silicon-doped,
liquid-encapsulated Czochralski grown GaAs with a (100)
orientation. The doping level is 1,5-2.3 X 101'/cm3 with a
resistivity of 0,0015-0,0021 n cm and a mobility of 1475-
1834 cm:? IV s. The sample wafers were first cleaned, with a
subsequent rinsing in trichloroethane, acetone, methanol,
and de-ionized (Dl) water. Various etching solutions were
"' To whom correspondem:(' should be addressed. i.nvestigated based on sulfuric acid or ammonium hydroxide
mixtures. Best results were obtained from a mixture of
NH.!OH;H202:H20 in a reaction rate limited composition.
This is believed to be due to the GaZ01 being more readily
soluble in alkaline-based etchants.13 Wet etching usually
leaves behind a layer of a mixture of lower oxides and other
compounds. To remove the interfacial oxides of gallium and
arsenic, the samples were immersed in concentrated
NH40H/H20 (1:2) solution, followed by a brief dip of the
sample in a diluted HN03/H20 ( 1: 19) solution for removal
of arsenic. For further removal of arsenic, the samples were
subjected to photochemical activation (254 nm) of the sur
face while squirting with de-ionized water. [.14 The samples
thus pn~pared were then dipped directly into a passivating
~,olution and blow-dried with nitrogen after removal from
the solution. The solutions used were PCl] and PzSs dis
solved in NH40H. The best result was obtained at a P 2S5
concentration of 0.1 g/ml. It is noted that P 2SS may hydro
lyze in NH40H at high concentrations or upon heating.
Photoluminescence (PL) intensity measurements and cur
rent-voltage (f-V) profiles were obtained for botb the passi
vated <!lid unpassivated (but cleaned) samples. The room
temperature PL measurements 1 were made with an argon
laser at a wavelength of 488 nm and an output power of 350
m W. The J-V profiles were obtained with an electrochemical
semiconductor profiler system (Polaron 4200 from Bio
Rad). The system uses an electrochemical cell containing an
electrolyte. It employs an electrochemical Schottky contact,
which is equivalent to the conventional metal Schottky con
tact, on the polished side of GaAs wafer while ohmic con
tacts were made by pressure on the other side.
The results of the PL measurements before and after
various treatments are summarized in Table I. The PL inten
sity from unpassivated (but cleaned) samples is the refer
ence for the normalization. As shown in the table, the PL
intensity for the P 2Ss/NH40H-treated sample increases by a
factor of 5 as a result of the passivation. Further, the PL
intensity does not decrease even after exposure to room air
for ten days. The sample was left as originally mounted in air
and the PL intensity was periodically measured from the
same spot. The result for pel} shows that the PL intensity
increases by a factor of 3.5 bilt then gradually decreases to
2.5 after exposure to room air for tell days, indicating some
segregation of arsenic atoms. Because of recent passivation
724 AppL Phys. Lett. 54 (8). 20 February 1989 0003-6951/139/080724-03$01.00 @ 1989 American Institute of PhysiCS 724
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141.210.2.78 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 05:00:25TABLE t Increase (lfthe relative room-temperature PL intensity after var
ious chemical and photochemical treatments.
Sample
Un passivated c
Unpassivated C, e
LJnpassivated c, e, NH40H
Unpassivated c, e, HNO,
Ullpassivated c, e, Dr
Passivated, 1\S,
Passivated, PC!,
Passivated, Na2S'9H20
c-c1eaning.
e--ctching.
DI-activated D1 washing. Normalized PL
intensity after
treatment
1
I
1
1.4
1.4
5
3.5
5 Normalized PL
inkllsity after
ten days in room air
5
2.5
3.5
success reported in the literature based on sodium sul
fides, [-3 the samples treated with Na2S'9H20 were also test
ed. The result in the table shows that the PL intensity in
creases by a factor of 5 but then decreases to 3.5 after ten
days. More details on the treatments based on PCl3 and
Na2S'9H20 can be found in Ref. 15. The fact that the PL
intensity remains invariant with time for P2Ss-treated GaAs
is evidence that the surface remains the same with time.
The purpose of any passivation is to retain the integrity
of the surface under the passivating layer. Therefore, passi
vation is successful ifthe electronic state of the surface being
passivated is invariant with time. An example of unsuccess
ful passivation is shown in Figs. 1 and 2. The /-V profile for a
sample treated with PCl3 that was obtained right after passi
vation is shown in Fig. 1. It is seen that the usual 1-V profile
for a Schottky junction results. When the same sample was
exposed to air for seven days, the J-V profile changed to that
shown in Fig. 2. It is apparent that there are two modes of
conduction mechanism and that the electronic state of the
surface changed. It is noted in this regard that for n-type
samples, the negative region of the proflle corresponds to the
forward-bias region. It> It is also noted that the 1-V profile of
VOLTAGE
FIG. 1. J-V profiles of pel,-passivated GaAs right after passivation.
725 AppL Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No.8, 20 February 19S9 FIG. 2. 1-V profile ofPClrpassivated GaAs after exposure to room air for
seven days for the same sample as in Fig. 1.
the unpassivated sample, when exposed to air after cleaning,
shows the same dip (negative resistance) as in Fig. 2 around
the same forward bias (--0.8 V). The 1-Vprofiles obtained
for the P2Ss-treated sample right after the passivation and
after exposure to air for one month are almost identical with
that in Fig. 3, which is the profile after exposure to air for
seven days, and thus are not shown here. It can be conduded
that the passivation is successful in that the 1-V profile is
invariant with time for the P2Ss-treated samples.
The dip in the I-V profile for unpassivated sample and
that in Fig. 2 may be explained in terms of tunneling effect
dominating at low voltage level due to the surface states
created by segregated arsenic atoms and oxides, and then the
usual thermionic emission dominating at high voltage level.
The point, however, is that regardless of the exact nature of
the J-V characteristics, the electronic state of the P 2Ss-treat
ed samples is invariant with time.
It can be concluded from the PL and J-V measurements
that the GaAs surface can be successfully passivated with
p 2SS' Further, the passivated surface is very robust in the
o~.') GaAs
0..1.
0.3
0.2
0.1
c-/ 0.0
E u ! -0. [
-0.2
-0.3
-o,t,
-0.5
-2.0 (PASS) }",)S
t
-l.~ -1.0 -O.S G.U l.0 1.5
VOl.TAGE (\I) I
I;;
:
2.0
FIG. ~1. J-V profile of l'oS,-passiva,ed GaAs after exposure to air for seven
days.
Lee, Racicot, and Lee 725
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
141.210.2.78 On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 05:00:25sense that the increase in the PL intensity remains the same
and the J-V characteristic shows no sign of change with time,
even after more than seven days' exposure to room air. Work
is progressing on the nature of the passivation.
We are grateful to Arnold Howard for the J-V measure
ments, to our Microfabritech and DARPA programs for
partial support of the work, and to Paul Honoway for his
interest in the work. Our special thanks are to Louis Figue
roa, who as an electrical engineering faculty then and now a
researcher at Boeing has given constant encouragement and
advice in difficult times.
IS. D. Oftsey, I. M. Woodall, A. C. Warren, P. D. Kirchner, T. I. Chappel,
and G. D. Pettit, App!. Phys. Lett. 48, 475 (1986).
'c. J. SandroJf, R. N. Nottenburg, J. C. Bischoft', and R. Bhat, Appl. Phys.
Lett. 51, 33 (1987).
726 Appi. Phys. lett., Vol. 54, No.8, 20 February 1989 3D. J. Skromme, C. J. Sandrofl', E. Yablonovitch, and T. Gwitter, App!.
Phys. Lett. 51, 2022 (1987).
4E. Yablonovitch, C. 1. Sandrof!', R. Bhat, and T. Gwitter, App!. Phys.
Lett. 51, 439 (1987).
'w. E. Spicer, P. W. Chye, P. R. Skeath, C. Y. Su, and l. Lindau, J. Vac. Sci.
Techno!. 16, 1422 (1979).
"H. H. Lee and L. Figueroa, J. Electrochcm. Soc. 135, 496 ( 1988).
7D. E. Aspnes, Surf. Sci. 132,406 (191\3).
Xc. H. Henry, R. A. Logan, and F. R. Merritt, J. App!. Phys. 49, 3530
(1978).
oR. P. H. Chang, T. T. Sheng, C. C. Chang, and J. J. Coleman, App!. Phys.
Lett. 33, 341 (1978).
HIe. O. Thermond, G. P. Schw:l.rtz, G. W. Kammlot, and B. Schwartz, J.
Electrochem. Soc. 127, 1366 (1980).
"E. Capasso and G. F. WilIiams,J. Electrochem. Soc. 121), 921 (1982).
I.'H. H. Lee, Heterogeneous Reactor Design (Butterworth, Stoneham, MA,
1985), Chap. 5.
uS. D. Mukherjee and D. W. Woodard, Gallium Arsenide (Wiley, New
York, 1985), Chap. 4.
l4N. A. rYeS, G. W. Stupin, and M. S. Leung, App!. Phys. Lett. 50, 256
( 1(87).
/SR. J. Racicot, M.S. thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 1987.
"'Bio-Rad Company (persona! communication).
Lee, Racicot, and Lee 726
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On: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 05:00:25 |
1.2810980.pdf | Lasers, Spectroscopy and New Ideas: A Tribute to Arthur L. Schawlow
William M. Yen and Marc D. Levenson R. E. Slusher ,
Citation: Physics Today 42, 4, 69 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.2810980
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2810980
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/42/4
Published by the American Institute of Physicstion of differences in the depth of
surface-state annealing in silicon wa-
fers: Wafers with few defects showed
the annealing effect 50-100 fj,m be-
yond the irradiated region, whereas in
wafers with a high level of structural
damage (such as those that were
heavily implanted) the annealing ef-
fect was confined to the irradiated
region.
Each chapter contains many illus-
trations and a bibliography . This book
augments the texts already published
and will find a place on many a pro-
fessional's bookcase. I recommend it.
RICHARD LEE
Amperex
Slatersville, Rhode Island
Lasers, Spectroscopy and
New Ideas: A Tribute to
Arthur L Schawlow
William M. Yen and
Marc D. Levenson
Springer-Verlag, New York,
1987. 337pp.
$45.00 he ISBN 0-387-18296-9
This book allows the reader to enjoy,
at least remotely, the experience of
physics research with Art Schawlow.
Its 19 short articles, whose authors all
have been students of Art's at Stan-
ford University over the past 25 years,
cover the three primary areas to
which Schawlow has richly contribut-
ed—lasers, spectroscopy and "new
ideas." Each article includes reminis-
cences of Art's humor, his excellent
physics intuition and, most important-
ly, the immense joy and enthusiasm
he brings to his research, teaching and
lectures. It is interesting that many
physics concepts can be more clearly
grasped and understood with the in-
formal writing styles used in this book.
As one might expect, the style and
scientific content of the brief articles
in this volume vary widely. Some are
detailed and will serve as excellent
references and reviews. Examples are
the three articles on solid-stat e spec-
troscopy, by Roger M. Macfarlane
("Optical Spectral Linewidths in Sol-
ids"), Satoru Sugano ("Spectroscopy of
Solid-State Laser Materials") and
George F. Imbusch and William M.
Yen ("Ruby Solid-State Spectroscopy:
Serendipitous Servant"). Sugano dis-
cusses the early history of the laser.
This is an ideal time to look back at the
development of the laser, one of the
major advances of this century, but I
was disappointed that Schawlow's ear-
ly laser research and that of his
collaborators is not covered in this
book. There is an interesting anecdote
from the first session at a conferenceImprove your Low Level
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PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989 69SPEAKEASY
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For physicists who want to use
computational tools put together
for physicists by physicists. For
researchers who want to con-
centrate on the mathematics of a
problem rather than learning to
program. For fast accurate
results.
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Speakeasy is a high level
problem solving tool that has
been used for many years by
physicists in laboratories and
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world. It is a well tested system
that enables you to bring
together the tools you need to
carry out exploratory calcula-
tions and rapidly analyze data.
Matrix algebra, interactive
graphics, and the many special
functions used by physicists
combine with a natural
language to provide a truly
interactive environment in which
you can concentrate on your
calculations rather than the
mechanics of running a
computer.
The same Speakeasy is avail-
able for IBM computers with
TSO and CMS, for DEC VAX's
under VMS and Micro VMS, and
for Micro computers using
MS-DOS and PC-DOS. You can
even transfer results from one
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exploit specific machine
capabilities.
Want to learn more about the
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70 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1989on lasers in June 1959: Schawlow
suggested that the laser would most
likely be used as an oscillator and so
should be named "Light Oscillation by
Stimulated Emission of Radiation"—
or LOSER. I would love to have heard
more about this early period from the
laser pioneers. Several histories of
this period will soon be available [see
the article by Joan Bromberg in
PHYSICS TODAY, October 1988, page 26],
and some important figures, such as
Charles Townes in his remarks in his
1986 Beckman lecture at the Universi-
ty of Illinois, have already begun to
recount their versions.
The first section of this book on
lasers and laser spectroscopic tech-
niques includes a contribution from
Theodor Hansch that describes the
beautiful work on Doppler-free preci-
sion spectroscopy and the original
ideas on laser cooling. Today cooling
of atoms well below 10 fiK has been
attained, a breakthrough that can be
directly traced to the Stanford group.
Of course, it was the brilliant research
in spectroscopy for which Schawlow
received the Nobel Prize in 1981. The
book includes a song written for Art's
65th birthday and a picture of the
Stanford group taken the day the
Nobel Prize was announced.
Again , the joy of physics research is
the book's primary focus. But it also
manages to convey Schawlow's deep
humanity, scientific achievements
and broad influences on physics
through his graduate students in a
thoroughly enjoyable, though ran-
dom, manner.
R. E. SLUSHER
AT&T Bell Labs
Murray Hill, New Jersey
Exercises in Astronomy
Edited by Josip Kleczek
Reidel (Kluwer),
Boston, 1987. 339 pp.
$64.00 he ISBN 90-277-2409-1;
$19.50pb ISBN90-277-2423-7
In all fields legends abound, and
a laboratory book by Marcel G. J.
Minnaert has been an astronomical
legend. Since its publication in 1969,
following 25 years of development at
Utrecht University in the Nether-
lands, Minnaert's Practical Work in
Elementary Astronomy has been wide-
ly respected. Just as Minnaert's Na-
ture of Light and Color in the Open
Air (Dover, New York, [1948]) led
many people to a new appreciation of
the sky, Minnaert's laboratory book
provided a wide range of interesting
experiments to astronomy students
on all levels .
Josip Kleczek, a Czech astronomerwho is coordinator for the Interna-
tional Astronomical Union of the
International Schools for Young As-
tronomers, has edite d a new edition of
Minnaert's laboratory book. He has
retained Minnaert's organization,
with its split between "The Planetary
System" and "The Stars," as well as
20 of Minnaert's 34 planetary exer-
cises and 33 of 40 stellar exercises. To
these, he has added 2 planetary and 19
stellar exercises, credited to astron-
omers from countries around the
world, including the US, Belgium,
Australia, the UK, Brazil, France and
Czechoslovakia. As in Minnaert's
original, the exercises are labeled "S"
for observations carried out on the
real sky and "L" for laboratory exer-
cises carried out indoors. The ideal is
to start work on a given night out-
doors, and then continue indoors,
though weather will rarely permit
this ideal to be met.
Astronomical observing often is dis-
parate from the astrophysics taught
in class, because it is easier to observe
the locations of objects in the sky than
to analyze their radiation. Many of
the exercises in this book aim at
combining theory and observation.
In the first two of six exercises con-
tributed by David A. Allen (Anglo-
Australian Observatory), for exam-
ple, one learns about blackbody radi-
ation—as theoretical a concept as
there is. The first is a straightfor-
ward plotting exercise leading to
Wien's displacement law. The second
concerns infrared photometry—Al-
len's specialty. The third exercise is
about interstellar reddening. Allen's
three other exercises consider studies
of the atomic spectral transitions
known as forbidden lines and show
how to calculate abundances. Be-
cause such calculations make use of
recombination coefficients, statistical
weights and collision strengths, some
sophistication is called for on the
student's part. Surely the lengthy
exercise on magnetohydrodynamics
entitled "Practice with MHD," by
Donat G. Wentzel (University of
Maryland), is accessible only to stu-
dents with advanced physics experi-
ence. For such students, however, it
is an unparalled opportunity to learn
about an important field.
Some of the exercises are quite up
to date. Jean Surdej (University of
Liege, Belgium) even provides one
about gravitational lenses. But the
bulk of the exercises are unaltered
since the first edition, so the refer-
ences have dated. Too, the telescope
described in the opening pages of the
technical notes is not of a type likely
to be in current use. Nor are comput-
ers or even calculators put to explicit |
1.575054.pdf | Surface temperature determination in surface analytic systems by infrared optical
pyrometry
Donald R. Wheeler, William R. Jones Jr., and Stephen V. Pepper
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A 6, 3166 (1988); doi: 10.1116/1.575054
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.575054
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/6/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Neutral beam interlock system on TFTR using infrared pyrometry
Rev. Sci. Instrum. 57, 2063 (1986); 10.1063/1.1138739
Effect of scattered light on temperature measurement by optical pyrometry
Rev. Sci. Instrum. 47, 1547 (1976); 10.1063/1.1134577
Optical Pyrometry
J. Appl. Phys. 11, 408 (1940); 10.1063/1.1712789
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 69.166.47.134 On: Mon, 08 Dec 2014 00:15:55D. S. Blair and G. L. Fowler: Thermocouple mounting on semiconductor samples
The method of mounting a thermocouple to a semicon
ductor described above has clear advantages over previously
applied techniques. These advantages include (i) proven re
liability and reproducibility over a broad temperature range,
(ii) applicability to a variety of sample sizes and configura
tions, and (iii) ease of implementation. Acknowledgment: This work was supported by the United
States Department of Energy under Contract No. DE
AC04-76DP00789.
'M. J. Bozack, L. Muehlhotf, J. N. Russell, Jr., W. J. Choyke, and J. T.
Yates, Jr., J. Vac. Sci. Techno\. A 5, I (1987).
Surface temperature determination in surface analytic systems by infrared
optical pyrometry
Donald R. Wheeler, William R. Jones, Jr., and Stephen V. Pepper
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lewis Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio 44135
(Received 13 May 1988; accepted 30 July 1988)
I. INTRODUCTION
The measurement of specimen surface temperature is impor
tant for many experiments in surface science. Since modern
ultrahigh vacuum surface analytic systems with load locks
have the capability to change samples rapidly for routine
analysis, the technique of temperature measurement should
not compromise that capability. However, a thermocouple
spot welded to or near the specimen surface and hard wired
to an electrical feed through requires opening and rebaking
the analytic chamber to change specimens, effectively re
moving the system from routine analytic service. Therefore,
other methods must be developed if the system is to be capa
ble of both surface science experiments as a function oftem
perature and routine analytical service.
Arrangements that continue to use a thermocouple but
employ sliding electrical contacts on the sample mounts
have been recently described.I•2 However, these arrange
ments require custom-made sample mounts and internal
modification of the analytical chamber. Optical pyrometry
is a technique that offers an attractive alternative, because it
requires no mechanical or electrical contacts to the speci
men. In the temperature range above 700 DC, either disap
pearing filament or two-color optical pyrometers are com
monly used. Optical pyrometry, between room temperature
and 700 DC, requires infrared (lR) pyrometry, however, and
is seldom used. The major barriers to its use are the usually
unknown and possibly variable emissivity of the specimen
surface, the poor IR transmission of the vacuum chamber
viewport and the large viewing area required by most in
frared pyrometers. In this note we describe our method of
using infrared optical pyrometry to measure specimen tem
peratures in the range 70-500 DC in which these difficulties
are largely overcome.
3166 J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 6 (6), Nov/Dec 1988 II. APPARATUS AND MATERIALS
Our method is based on a commercially available infrared
microscope3 with a right-angle, long working distance objec
tive that has a focal spot diameter of 1 mm at a focal distance
of 53 cm. The instrument has a liquid-nitrogen-cooled, indi
um-antimonide detector with a 1.8-5.5 pm bandwidth and
can detect temperatures close to room temperature. The in
strument was operated as a radiometer rather than in its
calibrated direct temperature measurement mode. Since the
signal from the pyrometer varied by several orders of magni
tude over the temperature range used here, it was processed
by a logarithmic amplifier before reading. Transmission of
the IR radiation was improved by replacing the metal coated
glass vacuum chamber viewport with a quartz viewport cov
ered with a tantalum mesh.
The molybdenum specimen stubs for our system (VG ES
CALab, Mk II.) have an internal resistive heating element.
Our specimens were disks 6.35 mm in diameter and 6.35 mm
high with a 3-mm-wide flat ground on the side facing the
viewport. The problem of unknown specimen emissivity was
dealt with by focusing the microscope on a film of graphite
on this flat. The graphite film was formed by painting an
alcohol dispersion of colloidal graphite (DAG) onto the
flat. The DAG has a high emissivity that is independent of
the surface on which it is painted, is insensitive to the com
mon specimen treatment of ion bombardment and un
changed by exposure to most gases. The particular specimen
used for the initial calibration is depicted in Fig. 1. For initial
calibration, the specimen had a type-K thermocouple spot
welded to its side, diametrically opposite the DAG coated
flat, and 0.5-mm-diam beads of indium and tin soldered to its
top surface. The In and Sn melting points were used as fixed
temperature points, as described below, and these materials
3166
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 69.166.47.134 On: Mon, 08 Dec 2014 00:15:553167 Wheeler, Jones, Jr., and Pepper: Surface temperature determination in surface analytic systems 3167
VIEWPORT-
FIG. I. Specimen for calibration: (a) heatable molybdenum stub, (b) tanta
lum disk, (c) flat side ofTa disk with DAG, (d) indium and tin beads, and
(e) thermocouple spot welded to side ofTa disk, removed after initial cali
bration.
were chosen for their low vapor pressures in the temperature
range used here. For clarity, the method of clamping the Ta
disk to the heated specimen stub is not shown in Fig. 1. How
ever, it could be easily replaced, and after initial calibration,
the top surface of other such disks (without the In and Sn
beads or thermocouple, but with the DAG coated flat) were
available for surface analysis.
III. CALIBRATION
A. Initial calibration
Our approach requires initial calibration of the pyrometer
response against known specimen temperatures, because the
DAG emissivity and viewport transmission are unknown.
Before calibration, the initial calibration specimen was cy
cled between room temperature and 500 ·C several times to
equilibrate both the DAG and the metal beads. Then the
calibration curve of pyrometer response versus thermocou
ple reading shown by the circles in Fig. 2 was obtained. Our
thermocouple readout gave temperature readings to the
nearest degree, and it is evident from the curve that the preci
sion of the calibration is at least that good.
The accuracy of the thermocouple readings was assessed
by determining the melting points of the In and Sn beads.
The measured melting points were 154 and 227 ·C for In and
Sn, respectively. The corresponding handbook values are
157 and 232 ·C. The discrepancy is probably due to heat
conduction in the thermocouple leads and appears to be pro
portional to the difference between the specimen tempera
ture and room temperature. Accordingly, a linear correction
of the thermocouple readings was applied. The corrected
calibration curve is given by the crosses in Fig. 2. From 50 ·C
to the melting point ofSn, the calibration is probably correct
to ± 1 ·C. The extrapolation of the thermocouple correction
to 500·C introduces more uncertainty at higher tempera
tures, but we feel that the calibration is always within 5 ·C of
the true temperature.
B.Spotchecks
Visual observation of the melting ofIn and Sn can be used
to check the temperature of other specimen configurations
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 6, No.6, Nov/Dec 1988 .70
.60 c:ffJ m
([]<iIP
.50 ~
> ()l]
,.; ()l]
:::l .40 <III "-em ....
:::l 0 <III t :30 <III , em is
...I
G
.20 # 0 UNCORRECTED T .C. READING
0 CORRECTED T. C. READ I NG
.10 a
a
0 100
FIG. 2. Pyrometer calibration curves: 0 uncorrected thermocouple readings
on abscissa and D thermocouple readings linearly transformed for correct
room-temperature and indium and tin melting points.
and to check the stability of the initial temperature calibra
tion. Specimens of the form shown in Fig. 1 allow the use of
poly-or single-crystalline materials commonly available in
the form of bars or rods. Although thin films to be studied
can be deposited on these disks, it is often more convenient to
deposit films directly on the surface of the heatable molyb
denum stub. Therefore, we have fabricated such a stub with a
DAG coated Ta foil tab spot welded to the edge of the top
surface and protruding 2 mm below the edge. An In bead on
the top surface of this stub melted at a temperature of 154 ·C
as measured by the pyrometer. Thus, the Ta tab was 3 ·C
cooler than the top surface at 157·C. Assuming that the
error is proportional to the increase in temperature above
room temperature, we expect the error to be < 10·C at
450·C. This crude calibration is sufficient for our purposes
but could be improved by the use of both In and Sn beads or
by mounting a thermocouple on the stub and repeating the
initial calibration. In any case, the precision of the readings is
still better than 1 .C.
After the initial calibration, the thermocouple was re
moved from the calibration specimen of Fig. 1. We have
found it reassuring, however, to keep the specimen, with its
In and Sn beads, mounted on a heatable stub and easily avail
able. By verifying that the melting points measured with the
pyrometer agree with the handbook values, the pyrometer
calibration can be verified whenever desired. During six
weeks of intermittent use, there was no change in the calibra
tion. We have removed and repainted the DAG on the cali
bration specimen and used the melting points of the metal
beads to assure that the calibration did not change. The cali
bration also did not depend critically on the angle between
the pyrometer axis and the DAG coated flat on the specimen
or on the angle between the pyrometer axis and the quartz
window. Both angles could be within ± 1 SO of perpendicular
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 69.166.47.134 On: Mon, 08 Dec 2014 00:15:55Wheeler, Jones, Jr., and Pepper: Surface temperature determination in surface analytic systems
and were easily set, by eye. In general, this method of tem
perature measurement has been notably stable and repro
ducible.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors wish to thank Ralph D. Thomas for soldering
the In and Sn beads and Dennis P. Townsend for assistance in the initial stage of this work.
IJ. M. Lindquist and J. C. Hemminger, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A 5, 118
(1987).
2G. S. Chottiner, W. D. Jennings, and K.1. Pandya, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A
5,2970 (1987).
3Barnes Engineering Company, Stamford, CT 06904, model RM-2A Mi
croscope with model no. RM-164 right-angle, long working distance ob
jective.
An easily constructed, inexpensive cold stage for use in ultrahigh vacuum
G. Nelson, T. Ohlhausen, E. Hardegree, and P. Schulze
Departments of Physics and Chemistry, Abilene Christian University, Abilene, Texas 79699
(Received 28 April 1988; accepted 30 July 1988)
A liquid-nitrogen-cooled sample holder for use in ultrahigh vacuum systems is described. The
holder is well suited for either resistive or electron-beam heating, and requires less coolant than
some other designs. The holder can be constructed from commercially available parts for about
$350, using commonly available tools.
Many experiments which are performed in ultrahigh vacu
um require cooling of a sample to liquid-nitrogen tempera
tures. Some traditional designs for liquid-nitrogen-cooled
sample holders utilize a hollowed-out block of material,
usually oxygen-free high-conductivity (OFHC) copper, to
which the sample is attached.I-5 The liquid nitrogen is fed
through the block by stainless-steel capillaries which pass
through a vacuum flange. Typically, the block must be elec
trically isolated from the sample, but must still make good
thermal contact. This is often accomplished by placing a thin
sapphire wafer between parts which are to be electrically but
not thermally separated. The overall design usually requires
a number of custom-made pieces and may be expensive and
time intensive to construct.
We have designed and tested a new cold stage which is
easier to construct and is somewhat less expensive. In addi
tion, it uses far less liquid nitrogen and does not clutter the
region of space around the sample. The sample holder allows
cooling the sample to -80 K, and is well suited for resistive
or electron beam heating to above 2300 K. The holder is
mechanically sound and is easily adjusted for different sys
tem geometries.
The sample holder is shown in Fig. 1 and the parts used in
the construction are listed in Table I. The total cost of the
parts, including the stainless-steel liquid-nitrogen lead-in
capillaries and the tantalum rods and wires for mounting the
sample, was about $350. The major items used in the design
consisted of commercially available A-in. stainless-steel tub
ing, elbows, crosses, and tees, and three Ceramaseal electri
cal insulators. As shown in Fig. 1, the capillaries (a) are
attached to the V-shaped sample holder (g) which serves as a flow-through liquid-nitrogen reservoir. The three insula
tors (d) provide electrical isolation for resistive heating or
biasing of the sample. The holder is mounted to the center
shaft of a manipulator by set screws threaded into a stainless-
a
b c
d
e
f
9
FIG. I. Liquid-nitrogen-cooled sample holder consisting of (a) feed-in cap
illaries, (b) adjustable center support mounting cross, (c) adjustable cold
stage support mounting tees, (d) Ceramaseal electrical isolators, (e) adjus
table or fixed sample mounting elbows, (f) tantalum sample mounting rods,
and (g) stainless-steel reservoir tubes. For scale purposes, diameter of the
tubes is ! in.
3168 J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A 6 (6), Nov/Dec 1988 0734-2101/88/063168-02$01.00 © 1988 American Vacuum Society 3168
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 69.166.47.134 On: Mon, 08 Dec 2014 00:15:55 |
1.98249.pdf | Highly stable indium alloyed TbFe amorphous films for magnetooptic memory
Tetsuo Iijima
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 50, 1835 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.98249
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.98249
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Structure analysis of TbFe amorphous films using extended xray absorption fine structure
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 10:17:48Highly stable indium alloyed Tbfe amorphous fUms for magneto-optic
memory
Tetsuo lijima
NTT Electrical Communications Laboratorie.l; Tokai, lbaraki 319-11. Japan
(Received 9 February 1987; accepted for publication 27 April 1987)
Indium ulioyed TbFe amorphous films for use as a magneto-optic memory are proposed and
studied. These TbFeIn films show strong resistance to corrosion and oxidation. Indium is
effective in suppressing oxygen diffusion into the films. An oxygen diffusion coefficient of
5 X 10-25 mlls is calculated for ThFeln films incubated at room temperature. Activation
energy is 1.3 eV. This value is over 1.5 times larger than that of TbFe films, where the value is
obtained with ellipsometry measurements by R. Allen and G. A. N. Conn eli [J. Appl. Phys.
53, 2353 (1982)J.
Amorphous rare-earth transition meta! films have been
regarded as very promising materials for high-density mag
neto-optic memories.I•2 However, these materials exhibit
some intrinsic problems in resisting corrosion and oxidation.
Many studies have been done to improve corrosion resis
tance through anoying.3 This letter shows that TbFe amor
phous films aHoyed with indium (In) have an extremely
high resistance to corrosion and oxidation.
The TbFeln and TbFe films used were prepared by rf
sputtering from composite targets at 10--25 urn/min onto a
glass (Corning No. 0211) substrate under 3--4 X 10--2 Torr
Ar pressure. A protective layer was not deposited. Average
film compositions were determined by both x-ray fluores
cence analysis and inductively coupled plasma emission
spectrometry, while composition depth profiles were mea
sured by Auger electron spectroscopy. Reflectivities at 830
nrn, Kerr hysteresis ioops, and saturation magnetizations
M, at 15 kOe field were also measured. Finally, accelerated
aging tests were carried out in air at temperatures from 40 to
80 "C under constant 85% relative humidity (% R.H.).
The reflectivities of (Tbo.2gFeo.7i )OQ5IuOOS and
Tbo24 Feo.76 film surfaces are shown in Fig. 1 versus aging
time in air at 70°C and 85% R. H. The TbFeln film's reflec
tivity showed only a 10% decrease from its initial value of
63% even after 4000 h of aging. Few corrosion sites were
observed on the film's surface, as Fig. 2(a) shows. On the
contrary, the ThFe film without In showed an abrupt de
crease in reflectivity within a few hours. Many corrosion
sites occurred as shown in Fig. 2 (b).
Composition depth profiles of TbFeIn and TbFe films
are shown in Figs. 3 and 4. The TbFeln film profiles are
shown before and after 150 and 2000 h of aging at 70 'C and
85% R. H. in Fig. 3. The TbFe film profile is shown after 20
h of aging under the same conditions in Fig. 4. The abscissa
indicates film thickness normalized according to etching
time until the etching reached the substrates of both films.
The oxide layer etching rate was assumed to be half that of
the inside film layer from measurements on the homogen
eously oxidized film.
Three characteristics were evident as can be seen in Fig.
3. First, Tb, Fe, and In concentrations were uniform inside
the film. Second, oxygen diffused from the surface into the
inside of the film as aging time increased. The surface oxide layer increase suggests a co-diffusion reaction between oxy
gen in the air and the constituents of the ThFeln film. Third,
increases in Tb and oxygen in the surface oxide layer were
caused by more intense preferential oxidation ofTb than the
other atoms. As a result, the Fe concentration in the surface
layer was smaner than that inside the film.
On the contrary, the TbFe film profile in Fig. 4 shows
that preferential Tb oxidation depth increased about 35 nm
in thickness after only 20 h at 70 "C, 85% R. H. It is also
evident that oxygen completely diffused into the TbFe film
where Tb and Fe concentrations were uniform. These results
are qui.te different from those of the TbFeln films.
As stated above. in TbFeln !Hrns, oxygen remains near
the surface and homogeneous oxygen diffusion does not oc
cur in the same way as in TbFe films. Both results show that
low rate preferential Tb oxidation is dominant in TbFeln
films and that oxygen diffusion into the films is rather slow.
The differences in both the velocity of preferential Tb oxida
tion and oxygen diffusion into the films between the TbFeln
and TbFe films are caused by the presence ofIn atoms. These
effects of In differ from those of AI, which does not suppress
homogeneous oxidation from the film surface,>
The TbFeln film Kerr hysteresis loops aged at 70 "C,
85% R. H. were measured. Neither changes in Kerr rota
tion, Ok' nor in its polarity were found on the bottom surface
side. On the contrary, with increased aging time, Ok de-
100
~ 80
>-... .;
'£ w ;;:
OJ
0::
0 !
1 10 70°C, 85% R,H.
;1..=830 11m
(Tbo,29 FeO.l1 }IUlS1nO.05
Aging time (hoursl
FIG. I. Aging time dependences on reflectivity for (Tbo.,', Feo." )0>5 11lo-05
and Tbo.I.Fe,,76 films.
1835 Appl. Phys. Lett. 50 (25). 22 June 1987 0003-6951/87/251835-03$01.00 @ 1987 American Institute of Physics 1835
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 10:17:48(a) (b)
100.urn
FIG. 2. Comparison of material degradation between ThFeIn and TbFe
films: (a) ThFeIn film surface after 4000 h of aging at 70 'C, 85% R. II.; (b)
TbFe film surface after 2 h of aging at 70 'C, 85% R. H.
creased and its polarity changed in Tb-rich compositions
somewhere from 80 to 280 h on the film side. When the film
surface was etched to 50 nm, both Ok and the Kerr hysteresis
loop polarity on the surface recovered to their initial values.
These results indicate that oxygen diffused halfway through
the film. These phenomena correspond to the results of the
composition depth profiles described above.
Aging time dependences of Ms were examined for
(Tbo.30Feo.7o )097 Ina.o3 films 100 urn thick in the same man-
"#. 60
200
(a)
20
In
o--o-~.....,.o--o-o..o.""'" -tk.o--0-..0.-0-"'" ..a.
o 50 100 150 200
(hI
. C !n
'!"~..o-o--O" ...o,...-O--«--o-"O--o---O.o-O.'1:r-CI--<f.-G.
O~~~'---~r---~----~~~
o 50 100 150 200
(c)
Film thickness (nm)
FIG. 3. TbFeln film composition depth profiles before (aJ and after 150 h
(b) and 2000 h (c) of aging time at 70 'C, 85% R. H.
1836 Appl. Phys. Lett.. Vol. 50, No. 25. 22 June 1987 ~ 60 -c::
0 /c Fa .~
Cl! / 0 ... ... 40 r.: w (J
r:.:
0 g
(J 20
'E
() ... 4: (I
0 50 100
Film tilicknes;s (nm)
FIG. 4. ThPe film composition depth protile after 2(J h of aging at 70 'C,
85% R. H.
ncr as in Fig. 1. The aging test was carried out with tempera
ture as a parameter. The 11.( for TbFeIn films showed a gra
dual increase for each aging temperature, as a result of the
preferential Tb oxidation from the film surface.
When the medium life is defined as the time for Ms to
become 1.2 times larger than its initial value, the Arrhenius
plot shown in Fig. 5 is obtained. These medium life values
correspond to the times when the oxide layers reached a
certain thickness at each temperature. The result shows that
the oxidation process is activated at 1.3 eV. Oxygen diffusion
coefficients Dv were determined from oxygen diffusion
depth ( = 2,/i5.,1) at time interval t, which was obtained
from the depth profiles mentioned previously. These values
were calculated to be 10-22 m2/s at 70 OC, 85% R. H. and
5 X 10-25 m2/s at room temperature. Activation energy, as
determined by these diffusion coefficients, was calculated as
1.1 e V. This value is almost the same as that calculated from
the 111, changes mentioned above. Using data from Allen's
and Connell's study,4 which used ellipsometry measure
ments, medium lifetimes in which the TbFe film oxide layers
increased up to certain thicknesses at several temperatures
were calculated. A O.84-eV activation energy for TbFe films
105 100 8070605040 25
-104
'" ~
:':I
0
~
w 103 ~
E ,;lEa:;;"; ',3eV ~ i
::iE 102
10 I I
2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4
FIG. 5. Medium life Arrhenius plot vs liT for (Tbo.3o Fea,o )097 Irt003
films.
Tetsuo !ijima 1836
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 10:17:48was obtained by these calculations, The TbFeh film activa
tion energy of 1.3 eV was over 1.5 times larger than that of
TbFe films, and the medium life of TbFeIn films was esti
mated to be 10 years longer at room temperature.
The authors would like to thank Dr. Akihiko Yamaji
and Dr. Iwao Hatakeyama for their valuable discussions.
1837 Appl. Phys, Lett, Vol. 50, No, 25, 22 June 1987 'p, Chaudhari, ], J. Cuomo, and R, J. Gambino, AppJ. Phys, Lett, 22, 337
(1973),
2N. Imamura, S. Tanaka, F, Tanaka, and Y. Nagao, IEEE Trans. Magn.
MAG-21. 1607 (1985).
3K. Aratani, T, Kobayashi, S. Tsunashima, and S, Uchiyama, J. App!.
Phys, 51, 3903 (1985),
"R. Allen and G. A, N. Connell, J, App!. Phys, 53, 2353 (1982),
Tetsuo lijima 1837
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128.180.142.23 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 10:17:48 |
1.101219.pdf | Arsenicdoped CdTe epilayers grown by photoassisted molecular beam epitaxy
R. L. Harper Jr., S. Hwang, N. C. Giles, J. F. Schetzina, D. L. Dreifus, and T. H. Myers
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 54, 170 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.101219
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.101219
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/54/2?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
Articles you may be interested in
ptype arsenic doping of CdTe and HgTe/CdTe superlattices grown by photoassisted and conventional molecular
beam epitaxy
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 8, 1025 (1990); 10.1116/1.577000
Properties of doped CdTe films grown by photoassisted molecularbeam epitaxy
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 6, 2821 (1988); 10.1116/1.575608
Growth and properties of doped CdTe films grown by photoassisted molecularbeam epitaxy
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Controlled substitutional doping of CdTe thin films grown by photoassisted molecularbeam epitaxy
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 5, 3059 (1987); 10.1116/1.574216
ptype CdTe epilayers grown by photoassisted molecular beam epitaxy
Appl. Phys. Lett. 49, 1735 (1986); 10.1063/1.97231
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129.174.21.5 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 08:38:19Arsenic~doped CdTe epnayers grown by photoassisted molecular beam
epitaxy
R. L Harper, Jr., S. Hwang, N. C. Giles, and J. F. Schetzina
Department of Physics. North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-8202
D. L. Dreifus
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh,
North Carolina 27695-7911
T. H. Myers
Electronic Laboratory, General Electric Company, ,Syracuse, New York 13221
(Received 1 August 1988; accepted for publication 26 October 1988)
We report the successful p-type doping of CdTe films with arsenic using the photoassisted
molecular beam epitaxy growth technique. These doped epilayers were grown at substrate
temperatures as low as 180 0c. The room-temperature hole concentrations in the CdTe:As
layers ranged from 7X 1015 to 6.2X lOIS cm-1 as determined by van der Pauw-HaH effect
measurements. We propose a doping mechanism responsible for the highp-type doping levels
observed in the films. The arsenic acceptor ionization energy was found to be ~58-60 meV
using low-temperature photoluminescence measurements.
Cadmium telluride (CdTe) has many potential applica
tions in the fabrication of electronic and optoelectronic de
vices. 1 Interest in this wide-gap H-VI material also stems
from its chemical compatibility and close lattice match to
the important infrared detector material HgCdTe. However,
the use of CdTe in device applications has been limited due
to the tendency of this materia! to self-compensate. As a
consequence, the introduction of dopants in CdTe, using
conventional bulk or thin-film growth techniques, usually
leads to low activation of the impurity and results in highly
resistive as-grown materials, In order to realize device appli
cations similiar to those developed in III-V materials, a thin
film growth technique with demonstrated control over hoth
n-type and p-type conductivities must be utilized.
We are studying the enhancement of substitutional dop
ing in CdTe thin films using a nonequilibrium technique,
photoassisted molecular beam epitaxy (MBE)o By illumi
nating the substrate during film growth, energies beyond
those accessible by thermal means can be transferred from
the impinging photons to the atoms and molecules present
on the growth surface. This doping technique has already
been successfully employed to activate two different types of
impurities in CdTe: indium for n-type conduction
(n.;;6X 1017 cm-3),2 and antimony for p-type conduction
(p.;;2X lOI~ cm-3).1.4 Using the photoassisted MBE tech
nique, the first growth of an all-thin-film p-n junction of
CdTc was realized using In and Sb as the dopant materials.5
In addition, n-type CdTe:ln epitaxial layers prepared by
photoassisted MBE have been used to fabricate CdTe metal
semiconductor field-effect transistors.6
In this letter we report the successful preparation by
photoassisted MBE of highly conducting p-type CdTe epi
layers in which arsenic is used as the p-type dopant. We
present the doping mechanism which is responsible for the
high p-type doping levels we observe. We have also deter
mined the ionization energy associated with the substitu
tional arsenic acceptor in CdTe. In this work, an argon ion
laser with broadband yellow-green optics (488,0-528.7 um)
was used as an illumination source. The laser power density at the substrate during the film growth was approximately
90mW/cm2•
The MBE system in which the CdTe:As epilayers were
grown has been described in previous publications.7•8 In the
present work, three MBE ovens were employed. Two of the
ovens contained high-purity CdTe, while the third oven con
tained As. The CdTe:As epiIayers were grown on semi-insu
lating chemimechanically polished (100) CdTe substrates.
Prior to insertion into the photoassisted MBE system, the
substrates were degreased using electroni.c grade standard
solvents. Next the substrates were etched in a weak (1 % )
solution of bromine in methanol and rinsed in methanol.
And finally, they were dipped briefly in a 1:1 solution of
hydrochloric acid and water to remove the native oxide, and
rinsed in de-ionized water. Immediately prior to film
growth, the substrates were preheated briefly in the MBE
system to 300 °C. The CdTe:As films were grown using sub
strate temperatures ranging from 180 to 230 0c, The arsenic
even temperature was varied over the range 160-200 "c. Pri
or to the growth of the As-doped layer, a l!Lm semi-insulat
ing CdTe buffer layer was first deposited by conventional
MBE (no substrate illumination). The CdTe:As layers
grown under illumination were approximately 1.5,um thick.
Electrical characterization of the cpilayers was carried
out by means of van der Pauw-HaH effect measurements.
Ohmic contacts were made to the CdTe:As epilayers by
evaporating Ni/Cu/ Au (100 A/600 A./2000 A) over a pho
toresist mask. The excess metals were removed by using a
standard lift-ofl:' process. After deposition of the metal con
tacts, the CdTe:As epilayers were annealed at 200°C for up
to 30 min in a nitrogen atmosphere. Contacts prepared in
this manner allowed Hall measurements to be performed
over the temperature range 230--300 K for heavily doped
epilayers. However, for lightly doped samples only room
temperature measurements could be made, due to their
higher resistance. Weare investigating alternate means to
make electrical contact to p-type CdTe, and hope to report
more extensive temperature measurements in the future.
The photoluminescence (PL) characterization was per-
170 AppL Phys. Lett 54 (2), 9 January 1989 0003-6951/89/020170-03$01.00 © 1989 American Institute of Physics 170
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129.174.21.5 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 08:38:19formed using a He-Ne laser (6328 A) as the excitation
source with the samples cooled to liquid-helium tempera
tures in a Janis SuperVaritemp optical cryostat. The laser
output was mechanically chopped and focused onto the sam
ple surface giving a power density of ~ 2 W Icm2• A SPEX
double grating monochromator with a GaAs photomulti
plier tube, along with a lock-in amplifier, was used to mea
sure the PL signal.
The room-temperature electrical properties of a series of
CdTe:As epilayers are summarized in Table 1. The initial
CdTe:As films were prepared using a substrate growth tem
perature of T, = 230 °C, since this temperature produced
highly conducting films when Sb was used as ap-type dopant
in the photoassisted MBE system. 3.4 CdTe:As epilayers Nos.
15-19, grown using 1'., = 230°C, exhibited hole concentra
tions ranging from 7X 1015 to 1.9x 1016 em 3. Increasing
the arsenic oven temperature from 160 to 180°C for films
Nos, 20 and 21 did not result in a significant increase in the
hole concentration of these films. However, the hole mobil
ity did decrease, as a result of nonoptimum growth param
eters. Instead of raising the arsenic oven temperature, in or
der to increase the hole concentration in the epilayers, T, for
subsequent CdTe:As films was decreased. This lowering of
substrate temperature led to a drastic enhancement of do
pant activation in the layers. The highest hole concentration
obtained from this study was 6.2 X 1018 em -3 for an epiluyer
(No. 30) grown with T, = 180 cC and an arsenic oven tem
perature of 200"C. As a result of the improvement of the
electrical properties of the CdTe:As films, the hole mobilities
for layers grown at 180°C are comparable to the highest hole
mobilities observed in bulk p-type CdTe at 300 KY
A plot of mobility and carrier concentration versus tem
perature for the heaviest doped CdTe:As epilayer (No. 30)
is shown in Fig. 1. The mobility ofthis sample at 290 K is 74
cm2 IV s and increases with decreasing temperature to a val
ue of 157 cm2/V s at 230 K. The hole concentration of this
film remains above 2 X 101 g em 'even at 230 K, and, in fact,
is close to the degenerate doping level for CdTe. In contrast,
p-type doping levels in bulk CdTe rarely exceed 5 X 1016
em 3 at 300 K.1O It is a significant accomplishment that p
type films grown by photoassisted MBE have hole concen
trations ~ 100 times larger than hole concentrations in
TABLE 1. Growth parameters and room-tcmperature electrical properties
of CdTe:As epilayers grown by plJOtoassisted MBE.
Hole
Substrate As oven concentration
Sample temp. temp. (xtOI" Hole mobility
numbcr ee) ee) cm-') (crn1/V s)
15 230 160 0.70 69.1
16 230 160 1.1 66.2
18 230 160 1.4 6().4
19 230 160 1.9 34,5
20 230 180 1.7 34.6
21 230 180 2.3 27.2
24 200 180 1.8 49.0
33 200 200 29.0 65.0
29 180 200 70.0 7G.O
30 180 200 620.0 74.0
171 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 54, No.2, 9 January 1969 FIG.!. Mobility and carrier concentration for ap-type CdTe:As film grown
by pholoassisted MBE.
CdTe samples grown by conventional thermal-equilibrium
bulk methods.
Here we propose a mechanism which is responsible for
the high hole concentrations that have been achieved in both
CdTe:Sb4 and CdTe:As films grown by photoassisted MBE.
It has recently been reported, on the basis of reflection high
energy electron diffraction studies, that the introduction of
light from a He-Ne laser increases the rate ofTe desorption
from CdTe surfaces.ll The existence of these vacant Te sites
thus favors the incorporation of substitutional acceptors
such as SbTc and AsTe. This, coupled with increased atomic
surface mobility brought about by the impinging photon
beam, is what we believe gives rise to the highly doped p-type
layers that have been produced by photoassisted MBE.
In the absence of a p-type dopant, and at high laser illu
mination intensities, one might thus expect n-type layers to
be produced, since the film growth surface would be rich in
Cd, thus favoring the incorporation of interstitial Cd and/or
Te vacancies, either of which act as an n-type dopant. We
have recently observed this type of behavior in CdTe films
grown under high laser illumination (greater than 100
mW Icm2) with no dopant present. These n-type films had
carrier concentrations of over 1017 em -3 at 300 K. From
low-temperature PL measurements we can rule out uninten
tional donor impurities such as Cl,12 as the source of the n
type conductivity.
The mechanism described above is also consistent with
growth of highly activated n-type CdTe:In by photoassisted
MBE. In this case, we attribute the high degree of dopant
activation (100% in some films) to suppression of the sec
ond-phase defect structure 1n2 Tc3, which we believe to be
the p-type compensating defect in CdTe:ln samples grown
by conventional means. In the case of CdTe:ln films grown
by photoassisted MBE, we suggest that formation ofIn2 Te3
is suppressed or absent because the number density of Te
atoms available at the growth surface has been reduced by
the incident light. As a consequence, tetrahedral bonding of
Incd occurs.
The low-temperature PL measurements from the
CdTe:As films are used to determine optical quality and ac
ceptor ionization energy. In general, the PL signal from the
CdTe:As films is brighter than that previously observed
from CdTe:Sb films. Figure 2 shows a low-temperature PL
Harper, Jr. et at. 171
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129.174.21.5 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 08:38:19o 1.585 1.590 1.595 1.600
ENERGY (eV)
FIG. 2. Low-temperature \5 K) PL spectrum for a heavily doped CdTe:As
film grown by photoassisted MBE.
spectrum for the CdTe:As epilayer (No. 30) whose electri
cal properties are shown in Fig. 1. The PL spectrum of this
heavily doped CdTe:As film is dominated by a sharp (full
width at ha!fmaximum = 0.5 meV) bright (Ao,X) peak at
1.5907 eV. We associate this feature with an exciton bound
to a neutral As acceptor.
The free-exciton (X) transition is observed at 1.5967 eV
in Fig. 2. NormaHy, X recombination is seen at 1.5964 eV in
undoped CdTe films. The slight decrease in free-exciton
binding energy is believed to be due to the increase in dielec
tric constant E which follows from an increase in free-carrier
concentration. The X binding energy is proportional to 1/ i',
where E is 10.6 for high quality CdTe. (The increase in E
leading to the change seen in Fig. 2 is only-O. I 5, less than
2 % change.) PL emission at energies below and above the
free exciton transition energy occurs at energies associated
with the n = 2 and the n = 3 excited states of the (Au,X)
transition. The peak at 1.5937 eV occurs in the range where
donor transitions are normally observed in CdTe. We identi
fy the donor as residual el introduced during the substrate
preparation.
The (Ao,X) peak was seen to occur from 1.5901 to
1.5907 eY in the CdTe:As films studied here. In general, the
recombination energy increased with increasing hole con
centration. This is believed to occur due to a decrease in
acceptor impurity level ionization energy. This exciton ener
gy range is slightly higher than (A!>,X) recombination nor
mally observed for acceptors in CdTe.13 However, acceptor
bound exciton recombination has been reported at 1.5901
ey14 about a shallow complex acceptor. Because both the
(Au,X) and X recombinations can be clearly seen in Fig. 2,
one can approximate the acceptor ionization energy using
Haynes' rule's as applied to acceptors in CdTe:16 Ell lEA
-0.1, where E B is the binding energy of the free-exciton to
the acceptor impurity level. Using this formalism, one ob
tains EA (arsenic) = 60 meV, which is in close agreement
with the ionization energy associated with an effective-mass
acceptor in CdTe (56.8 meV).13 Also, our value for £4 is in
agreement with the 62 ± 4 meV As-acceptor ionization en
ergy obtained using resistivity measurements on CdTe:As
films grown by organometallic vapor phase epitaxy
(OMVPE).17I n that report, an (Ao,X) PL line at 1.591 eV
was also observed. However, our value for the binding ener-
172 Appl. Phys. Lett" Vol. 54, No.2, 9 January 1989 gy of a hole to the AsT< level differs from an earlier reported
value of 92.0 meV,13 obtained from studies of As + + ion
implanted bulk CdTe samples. To elimi.nate uncertainty in
the arsenic ionization energy, we have recently completed
temperature-dependent PL studies on a series of CdTe:As
films. These studies have produced spectra in which the elec
tron-tn-neutral acceptor (e,Ao) peak is present, correspond
ing to an acceptor ionization energy of 58 me Y for low dop
ing concentration. The results of those detailed studies will
be published elsewhere.
In summary, we report the growth of p-type CdTe:As
films using the photoassisted MBE technique. The CdTe:As
epilayers exhibit hole concentrations as high as 6.2X 1018
em 3 and mobilities as high as 74cm2jV s at room tempera
ture. The epilayers were grown at substrate temperatures as
low as 180 "Co We propose a dopi.ng mechanism responsible
for the extremely high p-type doping concentrations ob
served in layers grown by photoassisted MBE. The As ac
ceptor ionization energy as detennined by low-temperature
PL measurements was found to be -58-60 meV, in close
agreement with the effective-mass acceptor ionization ener
gy.
This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Re
search Projects Agency j Army Research Office contract
DAAL03-86-K-0146. The authors wish to acknowledge the
assistance of J. Matthews with substrate preparation, J, Tas
sitino with deposition of electrical contacts on p-type layers,
and K. A. Bowers for performing some oftne photolumines
cence measurements.
'K. Zanio, in Semiconductors and Semimetals, edited by R. K. Willardson
and A. C. Beer (Academic, New York, 1978), Vol. 13.
JR. N. Bicknell, N. C. Giles, and J. F. Schetzina, App!. Phys. Lett. 49, 1095
(1986).
'R. N. Bicknell, N. C. Giles, and J. F. Schctzina, Appl. Phys. Lett. 49,1735
( 1986).
is. Hwang, R. L. Harper, K. A. Harris, N. C. Giles, R. N. Bicknell, J. F.
Schctlina, D. L. Dreifus, R. M. Kolbas, and M. Chu, J. Vae. Sci. Tec!mol.
B 6,777 (1988); or N. C. Giles, R. N. Bicknell. R. L Harper, S. Hwang,
K, A. Harris and I. F. Schetzina, J. Cryst. Growth 86.,348 (1988).
'R. N. Bicknell, N. C. Giles, J. F. Schetzina, and C. Hitzmal1, J. Vac. Sci.
Techno]. A 5,3059 (! 987).
"D. 1,. Dreifu;;, R. M. Kolbas, K. A. Harris, R. N. Bicknell, R. L. Harper,
alld J. F. Schetzina, Apr!. Phys. Lett. 51, 931 (1987).
'T. H. Myers, Yawchcng Lo, R. N. Bicknell, and J. F. Schdzina. App!.
Phys. Lett. 42, 247 (1983).
"T. H. Myers, J. F. Schctzina. T. J. Magee, and R. D. Ormond, J. Vae. Sci.
Techno!. A 1, j 598 (1983).
9S. Yamada, J. Phys. Soc. lpn. 15, 1940 (1960).
,oJ. Gu. T. Kitahara, K. Kawakami, and T. Sakaguchi, 1. AppJ. Phys. 46.
1184 (1975).
"I. D. Benson and C. 1. Summers, J. Cryst. Growth 86,354 (1988).
I2n-type conductivity (n-W" em· ') in CdTefilms grown under low laser
illumination was attributed to shallow residual donor impurities; S.
Hwang, R. L. Harper, K. A. Harris, N. C. Giles, R. N. Bicknell, J. W.
Cook, Jr., J. F. Schetzina, and M. Chu, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A 6,2821
( 1988).
"E. Molva, J. L. Pautrat, K. Saminadayar, G. Milchberg, and N. Magnea,
I'hys. Rev. B 30,3344 (1984).
'4B. Monemar and E. Molva, Phys. Rev, B 31, 6554 (J985}.
"J. R. Haynes, Phys. Rev. Lett. 4, 361 (1960).
"'R. E. Halsted and M. Aven, Phys. Rev. Lett. 14,64 (1965).
!"IS. K. Ghandhi, N. R. Taskar, and 1. B. Bhat, AppL Phys. Lett. 50, 900
(1987).
Harper, Jr. et al. 172
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1.338347.pdf | Superconducting AgMo6S8 thin films prepared by reactive sputtering
G. B. Hertel, T. P. Orlando, and J. M. Tarascon
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 61, 4829 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.338347
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.338347
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:19Superconducting AgNhlsSa thin fUms prepared by reactive sputtering
G. 8. Hertela) and T. P. Orlandob)
Massachusetts Institute a/Technology, Cambridge, jilfassachusetts 02139
J. Mo Tarascon
Bell Communications Research, Red Band, New Jersey 07701
(Received 26 August 1986; accepted for publication 14 January 1987)
Preferentially oriented thin films of the Chevrel-phase superconductor AgMo6Sg were
prepared by reactive sputtering. Ag and Mo were simultaneously sputtered from separate guns
onto sapphire substrates held at about 850°C with H2S gas injected near the substrate. The
films have superconducting critical temperatures up to 9.2 K and narrow-phase transitions.
The reactive sputtering process chosen for the preparation of our films makes it possible to
change the superconducting properties and the microstructure of the samples in a systematic
way by changing individual preparation parameters and to study which of the preparation
conditions are the most crucial for the formation of the Chevrel phase. We find that the
superconducting transition temperature of the Chevrel phase is very sensitive to both substrate
temperature and to the flow of H2S but insensitive to the background pressure in the chamber
before deposition. The microstructure can be changed by controlling the H]S pressure. X-ray
measurements show that the films are preferentially oriented with the rhombohedral 001
planes parallel to the surface of the substrate.
I. INTRODUCTION
Ternary molybdenum sulfides with the stoichiometry
Mx Mo6Sg, where M is a metal, have attracted considerable
interest since their discovery in 1972. I Many of these com
pounds, also caned Chevrel phases, are superconductors
with interesting physical properties. They have, together
with the superconducting rhodium borides, allowed the
study of interactions between magnetism and superconduc
tivity, and more recently, were found to exhibit field-in
duced superconductivity.2 Their very high upper critical
fields make them excellent candidates to be used for the next
generation of high-field magnets.3-5 The main reason pre
venting the development of Chevrel phases for commercial
use is the fact that they are extremely difficult to prepare.
Although a few single crystals have been grown,6 most of the
work has been done on sintered samples, which have some
cbvious disadvantages. In this paper we describe the prep
aration of AgMo6Ss films by a reactive sputtering process,
In Sec. II, we first review previous work on sputtering
Chevrel-phase materials and then describe the reactive sput
tering technique which we used. Section III describes how
the physical properties of thin films are correlated to the
deposition conditions, and Sec. IV briefly discusses the crys
tal structure of the films.
It PREPARATION CONDiTIONS
The preparation of Chevrel-phase thin films is fairly dif
ficult. The relative concentration of the three constituents
has to be controlled with a very high degree of accuracy
because of the narrow-phase range of most Chevrel phases.
Straightforward thermal evaporation or dc sputtering from
elemental sources is difficult because the possible target ma
terials have a melting point that requires electron-beam
a) Department of I'hysics. Present address: Pacific Telesis International,
Piscataway, NJ 08854.
b) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. evaporation (Mo), can only be evaporated with special tech
niques (S), are not sufficiently conducting so that rf sputter
ing has to be used (MoS "' PbS), or cannot be sputtered at all
(S). In this section we first review previous multistep meth
ods of fabricating thin films of ChevreI-phase materials in
order to provide the rationale for the single-step reactive
sputtering technique which we have developed.
One way to prepare Chevrel-phase thin films is by sput
tering from a composite target that contains all elements in
the desired composition. Good thin films with critical tem
peratures comparable to bulk values have been prepared this
way.7 The targets were pressed tablets consisting of a mix
ture ofMoSz powder, and powders of the ternary metal or its
sulfides. Because the target was net conducting, rf sputtering
was used. Whereas CUx M06S8 could be directly formed by
sputtering onto substrates held at 850 ·C, all other com
pounds had to be deposited onto room-temperature sub
strates. The Chevrel phase was then obtained by subsequent
annealing in sealed quartz tubes under argon atmosphere.
Very similar is another method in which a reacted Chev
rel phase is used as a sputtering target. In this case,dc sput
tering can be used and the problems associated with rf sput
tering can be avoided. Good films of PbM06Sg,8-1l
AgMo6Sg, 12 and BaM06SS13 have been obtained. Again, the
Chevrel phase was formed by annealing the films in quartz
tubes after the deposition process, because the material sput
tered onto room-temperature substrates was amorphous and
not superconducting.
Both techniques described above require the prepara
tion of a new target every time a change in stoichiometry is
desired. This problem can be avoided if a more modular tar
get is used. In the first effort to prepare Chevrel-phase thin
films, a MoS2 target overlayed with wedges of Mo sheet and
sheets of the ternary metal was used. 14 In this case the com
position can be varied much easier between runs by simply
changing the dimensions of the metal sheets rather than
manufacturing a whole new target. But because parts of the
4829 J, Appl. Phys. 61 (10), 15 May 1987 0021 -8979/87/1 04829-06$02.40 (e) 1987 American Institute of Physics 4829
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:19target are not conducting, rfsputtering has to be employed,
and the homogeneity of the sputtered films may also become
a problem because the target consists ohones with different
compositions and very different sputtering rates. Again, the
Chevrel phase was formed by annealing the films in quartz
tubes after the deposition process.
Another technique to obtain thin films is to react a sput
tered or evaporated molybdenum film or a molybdenum
tape at high temperature in a sealed quartz tube with sulfur
and lead or tin. Layers ofPbMo6Sg with good superconduct
ing properties have been grown with this method.IS-17 Al
though very homogeneous films can be grown and the stoi
chiometry can be fairly easily controlled through the vapor
pressures, very little control of the microstructure is possi
ble. Because the molybdenum film has to significantly ex
pand its volume during the reaction in order to accommo
date the sulfur and the ternary metal, large amounts of
material have to be displaced and the films are rough on a
micron scale.
It would be very useful to control the microstructure in
such a way that smooth surfaces (for example, for tunneling
experiments) can be obtained. It is possible to control the
grain size up to a certain degree through the annealing tem
perature. Sufficiently smooth films to prepare tunnel junc
tions were obtained by annealing films sputtered from a
composite target at fairly low temperatures1H or by anneal
ing at the usual temperature, but reducing the substrate tem
perature during the sputtering process. 19,20 Unfortunately,
the lower temperatures did indeed lead to a smoother sur
face, but also to a reduced critical temperature and resis
tance ratio. So far, neither vacuum tunneling experiments on
single crystals21-23 nor thin-film tunneling experiments have
been of good enough quality to extract the phonon spectrum
a2 F( OJ) of any Chevrel phase.
The multistep processes described above have many dis
advantages: First, because of the many steps involved, the
turnaround time is long. Every time a change in stoichiome
try is desired, a new composite target has to be fabricated.
Even if the same target is used, it is only good for a few runs
because it changes its surface appearence and its composi
tion as a function of time, thus causing uncontrollable
changes in sputtering rates and stoichiometry. In addition,
MoS2 and Chevrel-phase targets are difficult to use because
of their brittleness, porosity, and poor thermal conductivity.
The best chance of controlling the microstructure in
such a way that either smooth surfaces for tunneling experi
ments or sman grain sizes for high critical current densities
can be obtained is provided by a single-step process that
eliminates both the preparation of a composite target and the
subsequent annealing step. This can be realized by reactive
evaporation or reactive sputtering. These single-step pro
cesses also provide opportunities to control the stoichiome
try and microstructure of Chevrel phases in a reliable and .
reproducible way, and to study correlations between prep
aration conditions and sample properties.
Good CUx Mo6Sg films have been made by reactive evap
oration using an electron-beam heated source for the molyb
denum and a resistively heated source for the copper.24•25
The sulfur was introduced as HzS gas or hot sulfur vapor.
4830 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 61, No. 10, 15 May i 987 The films were directly grown on heated substrates. In a
similar experiment, both CUx Mo6SS and HoMo6Sg films
were prepared using electron-beam heated sources for both
metals and a Knudsen cell for the sulfur.26•27 CuxMo6Sg
could be directly prepared on a hot substrate, whereas Ho
Mo6Sg films required additional annealing.
We prepared AgM06Sg films by sputtering silver and
molybdenum onto sapphire substrates held at 850"C. The
sulfur was introduced by directing H2S gas through a copper
tube directly onto the heated substrate. The sputtering guns
and deposition system are described in detail elsewhere.28
Briefly, the system has an I8-in. UHV cryopumped
chamber. Three sputtering guns are mounted at an angle in
the bottom of the chamber so that each gun focuses onto the
substrate area. This tilted arrangement allows the substrate
area to be coated relatively homogeneously. Ali the guns are
magnetically enhanced triode guns which allow separate
control over the sputtering voltage and the target current,
Each gun is independently operated with its own gas supply,
and its own plasma and target power supplies. Ag and Mo
were sputtered at the same time but from separate guns; this
allowed for individually controlling their deposition rates.
We were able to obtain single-phase AgM06Sg films with
critical temperatures up to 9.2 K and resistive transitions
only 0.2 K wide. The resistance ratios were found to vary
between 1.2 and 20, depending on the microstructure [the
resistance ratio is R (300 K) I R (15 K), where R (T) is the
resistance at temperature T]. The next section demonstrates
that the single-step reactive sputtering process described
above does indeed allow accurate and reproducible control
of the sample properties by changing the preparation condi
tions.
III. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN PREPARATION
CONDITIONS AND SAMPLE PROPERTIES
Over two hundred sputtering runs were made to test for
correlations between preparation conditions and sample
properties because of the many sputtering parameters that
had to be varied. However, each ofthe following figures con
tains a particular set of samples for which all preparation
conditions are identical except for the one parameter being
varied.
Molybdenum has a much lower sputtering efficiency
than silver, and the molybdenum sputtering rate, therefore,
turned out to be the factor limiting the thickness of the sput
tered films. Therefore, the molybdenum gun was operated at
the highest convenient power of 500 V and 1.5 A, corre
sponding to the sputtering voltage and the target current,
respectively. These parameters were kept constant through
out all depositions, and the silver sputtering rate, the H2S
flow rate, and the substrate temperature were varied in order
to obtain optimal superconducting properties.
Figure 1 shows the influence of the substrate tempera
ture during deposition on the critical temperature T,. of the
films, if all other preparation conditions are kept constant.
Because the thermocouple did not reliably perform in the
H2S atmosphere, the current through the graphite tape used
to heat the substrate holder was used as a measure for the
substrate temperature. Figure 1 shows that to consistently
Hertel. Orlando. and Tarascon 4830
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:19FIG. 1. Critical temperatures of several reactively sputtered AgMo6S, films
as a function of the substrate heater current.
obtain films with high critical temperatures, the heater cur
rent had to be around 73 A. If the heater current was raised
to 76 or 77 A, the critical temperature decreased by several
degrees. Although the exact temperature during each run is
not known, it can be estimated from tests of the thermocou
ple before it was exposed to H2S. The optimum temperature
is about 850 ·C, and a change in the heater current of I A
corresponds to a temperature change of 10 ·C. This mea~s
that an increase in the substrate temperature by 30 or 40 C
above the optimum temperature reduces the critical tem
perature by several degrees. A similar but less dra~tic reduc
tion in Tc is observed if the substrate temperature IS lowered
below the optimum value.
. Figure 2 shows that Tc is also sensitive to changes in the
H2S flow rate. If the H2S flow rate is reduced from 17 to 16
secm (standard cubic centimeters per minute), a change of
about 5%, Tc again drops from 9 to around 5 K. Although
T. very quickly decreases once the H2S flow drops below a
critical value, fairly good samples can be obtained if the H2S
flow is increased up to twice the optimum value, Although
for very high flow rates Tc is only slightly depressed, the
increased HzS pressure during deposition has a drastic effect
on the resistance ratio and the microstructure,
10
9
8
"52 7
;2
6
5
4
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
HYDROGEN SULFIDE FLOW (SeeM)
FIG. 2. Critical temperature of several sputtered films as a function of the
hydrogen sulfide flow rate.
4831 J, Appl. Phys., Vol. 61, No, 10, 15 May 1987 15 20 25 30 35
HYDROGEN SULFIDE FLOW (SeeM)
FIG. 3. Resistance ratios ofseveral AgMo6S. films as a function ofthe H2S
flow rate during deposition.
Figure 3 shows that very high resistance ratios can be
obtained with the optimal H2S flow. The resistance ratio
drops very quickly to values between 1 and 2 if the flow rate
deviates from the ideal value in either direction.
Electron micrographs were made of four samples pre
pared under identical conditions but with different H2S flow
rates.28 A film made with the ideal flow rate (which has a
resistance ratio of about 20) shows no grain structure on a
scale of 1 pm. As the hydrogen sulfide flow is increased, the
resistance ratio drops and the films develop a grainy surface,
down to a grain size of about 0.1 {-lm for the film with the
highest HzS flow rate. This correlation between ~he micro
structure and the resistance ratio suggests that m the film
with the highest resistance ratio the measured resistivity is
more representative of the intrinsic resistivity of the Chevrel
phase which is strongly temperature dependent. In.t~e ~l~s
with the loweroresistance ratios, the measured resIstIVIty IS
mostly due to grain boundaries, and, therefore, does not vary
much with temperature.
The least critical of the sputtering conditions is the silver
sputtering rate. Figure 4 shows that there is a maximum in
the critical temperature if the target current, which at con-
10
9
I
8
g 7
1-0
6
5
4'
0.9 1.0 Lf 1.2 1,3 1.4 1.5 1.6
TARGET CURRENT (Al
FIG. 4. Critical temperatures of the sputtered films as a fnnction of the
target current for the silver gun. The target voltage was 350 V for aU samples
in this graph.
Hertel, Orlando, and Tarascon 4831
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:198
7
0
f= 6 <1: a::
w 5 u
Z 4 « f-
(f)
[ji 3 w
0::: .. A 2 .. ..
O~ __ L-__ ~ __ ~ __ ~ __ ~~~~~
0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 14 1.5 1.6
TARGET CURRENT (A)
FIG. 5. Resistance ratio for the same films as in Fig. 5 as a function of the
target current for the silver gun.
stant voltage is proportional to the sputtering rate, is varied.
But even a change in the sputtering rate of 60% or more still
allows the preparation of samples with critical temperatures
above 8 K. It is interesting to note that the sputtering param
eters used for the silver and molybdenum guns, 350 V -1.35 A
and 500 V-1.5 A, respectively, are of the same order, al
though silver has a five times higher sputtering yield than
molybdenum, and only one sixth as much silver as molyb
denum is needed to obtain the correct stoichiometry for
AgM06Sg. This means that it is necessary to sputter approxi
mately 30 times more silver than one would expect from a
simple comparison of the sputtering rates, The reason for
this is probably that most of the silver does not stick to the
substrate because the substrate temperature during deposi
tion is too close to the melting point of silver. The sticking
coefficients of silver, as wen as sulfur, seem to depend very
strongly on the preparation conditions. Sputtering condi
tions that result in films with good superconducting proper
ties usually lead to a film thickness about 5000 to 10 000 A
after a deposition time of 15 min. If any of the sputtering
parameters significantly varies from its op~imal value, the
resulting film thickness is only about 2000 A after the same
10
8-
S
::.::
f-'" 4
2 -
0
0 .. "I ..
123
RESISTANCE RATIO ..
4
FIG. 6. Critical temperatures and resistance ratios of most of the supercon
ducting AgMo6SS films prepared for this paper.
4832 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 61, No.1 0,15 May 1987 deposition time. This thickness roughly corresponds to the
thickness one would expect, if only the molybdenum sticks
to the substrate. Silver and sulfur are apparently only incor
porated into the films at the right stoichiometry if the prep
aration conditions are exactly right for the formation of the
Chevrel phase. Although the superconducting properties of
the sputtered AgM06SS films did not strongly depend on the
silver sputtering rate, it was not possible to obtain supercon
ducting films if the sputtering voltage for the Ag target was
lower than about 300 V, indicati.ng that there is a threshold
voltage and, therefore, a threshold energy for the sputtered
silver particles in forming the Chevrel phase.
Figure 5 shows that there is a maximum in the resistance
ratio occurring at the same silver sputtering rate that led to
the highest critical temperature. This indicates that the high
resistance ratios in the reactively sputtered films are indeed
intrinsic to the Chevrel phase, and are not caused by sHver
precipitates in the samples, Silver precipitates could be very
clean because they are deposited so dose to the melting point
of silver, and could therefore show a large resistance ratio,
But in that case, the resistance ratio would be likely to in
crease for higher silver sputtering rates.
It should also be pointed out that some of the prepara
tion conditions can be played off against each other to some
degree. A higher substrate temperature, for example, will
shift the optimum HzS flow rate to higher values, and vice
versa. In order to find the optimal preparation conditions it
was therefore necessary to first find the optimal substrate
temperature for a given H2S flow rate, then vary the flow rate
and find its optimum value, and if it is different from the
original value, vary the temperature again.
The background pressure in the vacuum system before
deposition does not seem to have any influence on the super
conducting transition temperature of the films, although the
Chevrel phases are known to be very sensitive to impurities,
especially oxygen.29,30 This may be because the system is
continuously pumped with a dynamic gas flow during sput
tering.
There is a loose correlation between the critical tem
peratures and resistance ratios of the sputtered films, Figure
6 shows that samples with high critical temperatures gener
any also have high-resistance ratios. Similar correlations
have been observed in other superconducting systems.31-34
IV, CRYSTAL STRUCTURE
Because the Chevrel phases have a rhombohedral crys
tal structure which possesses only a very low symmetry, the
diffraction pattern is very complicated and one would expect
to see about 35 lines below e = 30° in an x-ray experiment
using CuKa radiation. A diffractometer scan for a typical
reactively sputtered film is shown in Fig. 7, The Bragg peak
at 29 = 40° is generated by the sapphire substrate, and the
only Chevrel phase Bragg peak ever observed in any of the
films is the one at 20 = 13.6°, which is due to the 001 plane in
the rhombohedral notation or the 101 plane in the hexagonal
notation. The fact that only one Bragg peak associated with
the Chevrel phase is observed in any of the samples suggests
that the films might be preferentially oriented. (We note that
thin films with randomly oriented grains that we have pre-
Hertel, Orlando, and Tarascon 4832
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:1925.0
22.5
20.0
: 7.5 ,.
, 5.0 u
'" "' 12 5
(J)
D-10.0 u
-'.5
5.0
2.5
FIG. 7. Diffractometer scan using CuKa for a typical reactively sputtered
AgMo6Sg film.
pared by a multistep reaction process show all the Chevrel
phase lines.)
The preferential orientation is indicated by measuring a
pole figure as shown in Fig. 8. The pole figure was taken
using both reflection and transmission geometries. A pole
figure can be visualized as a contour map that plots the
height of a particular diffraction peak (in this case the one at
28 = 13.6°) as the sample is tilted in various directions. The
shaded region A in the center of Fig. 8 is caused by a cluster
ing of diffraction peaks at tilt angles around 4°. This indicates
that a significant number of grains have 001 planes nearly
parallel to the surface of the thin film. Such oriented grains
should also give rise to regions on the pole figure at tilt angles
at 88° and 92° from region A. However, these additional re
gions are not evident, probably because of the low signal-to
noise ratio inherent to the diffuse diffraction pattern of
Chevrel phases and the small amount of material in our thin
films. Note that the shaded region B at tilt angles near 27° is
independent of region A and indicates that not all grains
have the 001 orientation.
Although we were able to determine the crystal struc
ture of the thin films, we were not able to determine the
6°f
30r
of-
-30 -
-60
FIG. 8.001 pole figure for a reactively sputtered AgMo6S, filmo The vertical
scale is the tilt a..'1g1e. The azimuthal angle is marked on the circumference of
the pole figure.
4833 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 61, No.1 0, i 5 May 1987 chemical composition of the sputtered AgMo6Sg films. At
tempts to measure the composition with an electron micro
probe failed because the primary x-ray lines of sulfur and
molybdenum are so dose together that they partially over
lap. Therefore, it was necessary to use secondary lines which,
especially in the case of sulfur, have very low intensity. In
addition, the thickness of our films was only 1 pm or less, so
that the intensities were very low. The measured sulfur to
molybdenum ratio, therefore, has a large experimental error
and did not provide any useful information. X-ray fluores
cence studies also provided no compositional information,
again because the sulfur and molybdenum x-ray lines were
too close to be resolved. It was also attempted to determine
the chemical composition of the films by Rutherford back
scattering. In this case the peaks generated by molybdenum
and silver overlap if the films are thicker than 50 A, and no
superconducting films thinner than 50 A could be prepared.
'V,SUMMARY
AgMo/iSg films with good superconducting properties
were prepared in a one-step reactive sputtering process that
does not require the preparation of a composite target or
additional annealing. Although the superconducting prop
erties of AgM06SS are very sensitive to changes in the prep
aration conditions, especially the substrate temperature and
the H2S flow, the reactive sputtering process can be con
trolled accurately enough to reproducibly influence the su
perconducting properties and the microstructure of the
AgMo6SS films. X-ray measurements show that the films are
preferentially oriented with their rhombohedral 001 planes
parallel to the substrate.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank L. H. Greene for doing Ruther
ford backscattering and D_ Bucholz for the pole figures and
electron microprobe_ We also acknowledge useful discussion
with J. Remcika. This work was supported by the National
Science Foundation under Contract No. DMR-8403493.
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Hertel, Orlando, and Tarascon 4834
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 11:06:19 |
1.37600.pdf | Turbulent magnetohydrodynamic density fluctuations
David Montgomery
Citation: 174, 60 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.37600
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.37600
View Table of Contents: http://aip.scitation.org/toc/apc/174/1
Published by the American Institute of Physics
60
TURB~MAGNETOHYDRODYNAM~C DENSITY FLUCTUATIONS
David Montgomery, Dartmouth College
MHD turbulence theory has developed mostly be generalizing Navier-
Stokes results, almost always incompressible ones. It has recently
been possible to develop I a slightly-incompressible theory of MIID
density fluctuations by what is essentially a generalization of
Lighthill's method. An approximately incompressible MHD turbulence
field drives a parasitic density field, the fluctuation spectrum of
which can be expressed in terms of kinetic and magnetic spectra. If
the incompressible MHD spectrum is Kolmogoroff-like, the inertial-
range results can be summarized by saying that the Fourier-
transformed density fluctuation, 6pk, is proportional to --(B2)k, the
k TM Fourier component of the square of the variable magnetic field. 2
Making the quasi-normal approximation on expectations of products of
four v and B field Fourier coefficients, a k -5/3 omni-directional
(k -11/3 modal) density fluctuation spectrum. Even without enough
spatial scale separation for the Kolmogoroff assumptions to apply, it
is still possible to demonstrate by numerical solution 2 of the MHD
equations that the connection between 6pk and (B2)k is valid for low
enough Mach number and high enough beta (ratio of mechanical to
magnetic pressure).
The most difficult assumption to justify, for the magnetohydro-
dynamics of the interstellar medium, is the use of an equation of
state, Pmechanlcal p(p), which uniquely connects the density and
mechanical pressure. Even assuming the existence of an equation of
state, it will in general have to be of the form p=p(p,s), where s is
the specific entropy. The assumption is thus basically one of
isentropic (or isothermal) MHD flow. At high Reynolds numbers, the
entropy is produced mainly in' the dissipation range, due to the
action of thermal conductivity and resistivity. If the inertial-
range hydrodynamic time scales are faster than the times necessary
for the entropy to travel back up to the inertial length scales, the
approximation would apparently be justified. It would also be
justified (via an isothermal equation of state) if the inequality
were sharply reversed; but not unless one of the two inequalities
were satisfied would any equation of state be plausible. Until we
know more about the thermodynamic parameters of the interstellar
medium, this will remain an open question.
I D. Montgomery, M.R. Brown, and W.H. Matthaeus, J. Geophys. Res.
92, 282 (1987).
J.V. Shebalin and D. Montgomery, "Turbulent Magnetohydrodynamic
Density Fluctuations", to be published in J. Plasma Phys., 1988 (in press).
© 1988 American Institute of Physics
|
1.1139611.pdf | New device for measuring postarc currents in circuit breakers
V. Vokurka, U. Ackermann, and E. Schade
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 58, 1087 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.1139611
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1139611
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/58/6?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42New device for measuring post .. arc currents in circuit breakers
v. Vokurka, U. Ackermann, and E. Schade
Brown Boueri Research Center, CIl-5400 Baden, Switzerland
(Received 23 December 1986; accepted for pUblication 25 February 1987)
This paper describes a new technique for measuring post-arc currents in circuit breakers. The
measurements are performed with a specially designed current monitor. In contrast to
commonly used current monitors saturation of the core of the transformer at high pulses of
current is prevented by shunting the turns of the transformer by antiparallel fast-recovery
diodes. This new device offers several advantages in comparison to other known techniques for
post-arc measurements: there is no galvanic coupling to the network, the system is easy to
handle, and the costs of the components are low. The two post-are-current monitors (PACM)
described have a sensitivity of 0.1 V / A and 10 m V / A, and are linear within 1 % in the range of
± 4 and ± 100 A, respectively, The first PACM has an upper cutoff frequency of 18 MHz,
the second one 3.8 MHz and are designed for sinusoidal fault currents of 6.3 kA and 56 kA,
respectively, at a frequency of 50 Hz, Examples of applications to axially blown arcs in SF 6 and
to vacuum circuit breakers are presented.
INTRODUCTION
In a circuit breaker an arc of plasma is initiated by separation
of the current-carrying contacts, The plasma forms a con
ducting bridge between the parting contacts until the separa
tion is sufficient to extinguish the arc and to insulate the
disconnected parts of the network. At higher network vol
tages, current interruption is only possible when the current
passes through zero which occurs periodically in ac net
works. 1 Current interruption takes place when the residual
charge carriers are sufficiently reduced after current zero.
Up to this moment a so-called post-arc current is driven
between the disconnected network parts under the influence
of the recovering network voltage. In high-pressure arcs
collisions between the charge carriers are very frequent and
deionization occurs by volume recombination as the arc
cools down. Post-arc currents up to some tens of amperes
might flow immediately after current interruption for about
1 f-ls up to several microseconds depending on the experi
mental conditions and the arc-quenching medium.
In low-pressure arcs such as vacuum arcs the behavior
of the post-arc current is determined by separation and col
lection of residua! charges. Immediately after current inter
ruption and application of voltage a positive space-charge
sheath and associated electrical fields are built up and spread
out from the cathode to the anode. The propagation of the
sheath is reflected by the shape of the post-arc current. Cur
rents of up to some tens of amperes occur, the magnitude
depending on the rate of decay of power current and the rate
of rise of recovery voltage.
The measurement of post-arc currents of only a few am
peres is very difficult. The detection system must withstand
short-circuit currents of several kiloamperes for 5--10 ms
during arcing. Under these circumstances most standard
measuring techniques cannot be applied.
An accurate measurement of post-arc current requires
the following: (a) high sensitivity at low current (less than 1
A), (b) highresolutionoftime (better than I,us), (c) capa
bility to withstand fault currents of several tens of kA's for several cycles, (d) high safety standards to protect personnel
and delicate instruments, and (e) no interference between
network and measurement.
Because of these considerable difficulties, few measure
ments afpost-arc current have been made (e.g., Refs. 2-14)
although such measurements are particularly important in
improving the understanding of the physical phenomena in
volved in current interruption.
The old techniques are reviewed in Sec. I A. The new
device is presented in Sec. I B. The application to circuit
breakers is demonstrated by the two examples of Secs. II A
and II B.
I. MEASURING TECHNIQUES FOR POSTsARC
CURRENTS
A. Previously used principles of measurement
Hitherto three different principles for measuring post
arc currents have been described in the literature which
more or less fulfill the requirements mentioned above: ohmic
shunts, electron beam tubes, and ordinary current trans
formers. In the first case, an ohmic resistance i.s placed in
series with the circuit breaker and the potential drop due to
the current is monitored, A disadvantage common to all
measurements with such shunts is galvanic coupling to the
network which can lead to risks to personnel and equipment
which can only be avoided by optical links. Additionally
EMC problems due to transient groundrise may occur. Such
an ohmic shunt must have a high tolerance to thermal over
load because of the high arcing current preceding post-arc
current. Consequently a small resistance must be chosen,
leading to poor sensitivity. Only in networks with low peak
current can satisfactory sensitivity be achieved in this way?
However, shunts may be used successfully when the fault
currents are simulated with synthetic networks. These net
works consist of two circuits: one generating the main cur
rent and the other injecting a current with lower amplitUde
and short duration at a predefined time before the main cur-
1087 Rev. Sci. Instrum. 58 (6), June 1987 0034-6148/87/061087-09$01.30 © 1961 American Institute of Physics 1087
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42rent vanishes and thus simulating the rate of decrease of a
high sinusoidal fault current. Recently St. Jean et al. 3 placed
a shunt in the low curren t part of sueh a network thus obviat
ing the need for the shunts to have high tolerance to over
load. The disadvantage of this arrangement is that not only
the current flowing through the breaker is measured such
that the post-arc current has to be evaluated.
To overcome overload problems the shunt may be
short-circuited by some switch or electronic components
while high current flows. Thus a higher resistance may be
used resulting in better sensitivity. Since the shunt is de
signed for lower power it may have smaller dimensions lead
ing to better frequency response. However, if the test breaker
fails, additional half-cycles of the fault current can flow
whieh may damage the resistor. The main problem of this
technique is the realization of such a bypass system.
Murano et a/" 4 employ two vacuum switches in parallel
to their high resistance shunt. While high current flows one
of the switches is closed and the other is open. After peak
current the first switch is opened and an arc is initiated
between the two contacts of the vacuum circuit breaker.
Most of the current flows through this bypass until commu
tation to the shunt occurs shortly before current zero, when
the potential drop across the vacuum arc falls below a limit
ing value of about 20 V at which the vacuum arc can exist no
longer. The value of the current commutating to the shunt
can be controlled by the potential drop in the bypass which is
controlled, for example, by the number of vacuum switches
connected in series. To protect the shunt from damage if the
test breaker fails the second vacuum switch is closed within a
defined time after current zero" Because this arrangement is
independent of the peak power, current allows the use of this
technique for post-arc-current measurements in high-power
test circuits.
A new bypassing technique has been described recently
by Mahdavi et al. 6 In this device the shunt is inserted into the
network only for a time of approximately 600 fts. The central
part of the device consists of a moving conducting rod par
tially coated with an insulating layer. Current flows over the
rod and stationary tulip contacts. These short-circuit the
shunt unless the insulating layer of the rod forces the current
to flow through the shunt. The rod is appropriately acceler
ated by a magnetic coil, a spring provides the necessary re
turn force. The main difficulty with this device is mechanical
wear which eventually reduces reproducibility.
Another bypassing method, is described by Stokes" 7 He
uses an electrical discharge near the Paschen minimum
which ignites at a potential drop of about 200 V and extin
guishes at low voltages. This discharge needs no synchroni
zation but the handling of high fault currents is not triviaL
Schade and Molls use diodes in parallel to the shunt.
During the high-current period, the current flows through
the diodes" As soon as the current becomes so small that the
potential drop across the shunt is smaller than the drop
across the semiconductor barrier the current begins to com
mutate onto the shunL After current zero the diode blocks
and the post-arc current flows entirely through the resistor.
The coaxially arranged diodes have to satisfy the following
requirements; high peak forward current, short recovery
1088 Rev. Sci" Instrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 time, low reverse currents, and low capacitance in the junc
tion" The system does not need synchronization but its fre
quency response is limited by the capacitance of the diodes.
In addition to the described methods there are many
other ways to insert temporarily a high-resistance shunt into
the network, but the problems arising are similar to those
described above.
A completely different technique for measuring post
arc currents was developed by Roth et al. 10 The electromag
netic field of a current-carrying conductor is used. An elec
tron-beam tube is placed near the conductor. The
electromagnetic field perpendicular to the electron beam
causes a deflection of the beam and, therefore, a change of
the current detected at ihe anode of the tube. This results in a
voltage variation across a resistor in the anode circuit. In
order to cancel geometric distortions two electron-beam
tubes are used. An advantage of this device is decoupling
from network and independence from high-power currents.
A current transformer has been used first by Spruthl2
for measuring post-arc currents. During the high-current
period the core of the transformer which consists of high
permeability material is saturated" As the current goes to
zero the energy of the magnetic field is absorbed in a choke
which is connected to an auxiliary winding of the current
transformer. When the post-arc current starts to flow the
unsaturated part of the hysteresis curve is reached and the
integral of the magnetic flux is measured. Because of the
physical properties of cores this technique allows resolution
of time in the order of only 10-100 J.ls depending on the peak
fault current.
B. A novel post~arc·current monitor
Figure 1 shows the simplified circuit diagram of the nov
el post-are-current monitor (PACM) to be described here.
The down transformation of the current to be measured to
lower values makes it easier to fulfill the requirements for
measurement of post-arc current. While the heavy current
flows through the primary circuit, the secondary of the
transformer is shunted by the antiparallel configuration of
fast-recovery diodes. Within the linear range of measure
ment, these diodes turn off and the transformed post-arc
current produces a proportional voltage drop across the
shunt which is proportional to current.
Compared to a clipping of overvoltage with diodes
placed directly in parallel with a shunt in the primary circuit,
FIG. L Principal circuit diagram of the new post-are-current monitor
(PACM)"
Post-arc currents 1088
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42the new PACM offers a number of advantages for the user,
as well as for the designer.
The insertion impedance of the primary circuit can be
kept very low, thus imposing practically no additionallimi
tations on the voltage/current rating of the circuit contain
ing the circuit breaker.
The output circuit of the PACM is isolated from the
circuit carrying heavy current. Thus EMC problems due to
the transient ground rise are minimized. With proper screen
ing and a balanced arrangement of differential output, the
disturbing effects of the differential-mode coupling through
the various stray capacitance in the assembly can be sup
pressed to an acceptable level without special precautions or
excessive EMC engineering during the setting up of the ex
periment.
In the design, the down transformation of the current
allows for an optimized trade-off between the maximum
surge current and the reverse recovery time of available sem
iconductor diodes.
The shunt resistor Rs across the secondary winding of
the transformer has a transient power dissipation in the or
der of 1 W, allowing easy broadband design as wen as selec
tion of the full-scale range ofthe post-arc current by chang
ing or switching the value of Rs.
If the impedance of the secondary circuit of the trans
former is well matched to the impedance of the two-wire
screened rf cable, any length of cable necessary in practical
experiments may be used without reflections or limitations
of the bandwidth.
1. Theory of operation
Figure 2 shows the equivalent circuit diagram of the
P ACM with all parameters transformed in thc usual way
from the primary to the secondary side. The primary circuit
is assumed to consist of one single conductor. For analysis,
two basic operational modes have to be distinguished:
a. High-current operation: The high current, ranging
from several to several tens of kA, flows through the circuit
breaker and the primary circuit of the PACM. The second
ary winding of the transformer is shunted by the diodes, the
output voltage is given by the equivalent forward turn-on
voltage UF of the diode and the potential drop on its incre
mental series resistance rF•
b. Post-arc operation: Close to the moment of current
zero of the high primary current, the voltage on the second
ary drops below the diode voltage U F and the diodes turn off.
The PACM returns to the linear range and the secondary
current flows now through the shunt Rs and the zero-bias
capacitance CD of the diodes in paralleL
FIG. 2. Equivalent circuit of P ACM.
1089 Rev. Sci.lnstrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 In the high-current mode of operation, the maximum
permissible primary current is determined by the saturation
conditions of the toroidal transformer and thus by its rat
ings.
Referring to Fig. 2, the saturation voltage is, for a sine
wave, given by
(1)
wheref denotes the frequency, A Fe the cross section of the
magnetic transformer, Bmax the flux-density at saturation,
and II the number of secondary turns. The maximum permis
sible primary current is then
ltmax = n(Uls --uF)/Z2, (2)
where U F is the forward voltage across the diode at the maxi
mum current, Ilmax and Z 2 is the total impedance of the
secondary circuit Z2 = jU1Ls2 + r2 + rF. By substitution
into (2), the maximum primary current can be expressed as
2rrfAFeBmal<.n -UF
llmax = . n.
jOJLS2 + r2 + rr (2a)
Clearly thc linear current range is
lUll = n(uFi IR,), (3)
where Up] denotes the forward voltage across the diode, at
which the current, IF, through the diode is considered negli
gible in comparison to I lin' i.e" IF < 0,005 I Lin'
In the low-frequency range the P ACM behaves as a
first-order high-pass filter with a cutoff frequency ( -3 dB)
of
(4)
where R I is the resistance of the primary circuit and R ;
=n2R!.
The pulse response of such a high-pass filter always ex
hibits a droop of the top of the pulse, followed by a corre
sponding undershoot of the output voltage at the end of the
input pulse. To minimize this undershoot the cutofffrequen
cyofthePACMmustbesufficientlylow (fgL <50Hz) if the
post-arc current, following a high-current half-wave at 50
Hz, is to be measured with high resolution and accuracy.
Within the linear range, the upper cutoff frequency of
the PACM will be given mainly by the secondary leakage
inductance LS2' the resistance r2 of the secondary of the
transformer, and the resistance R ll' which represents all
losses in the magnetic core. This simplification is permissi
ble, since for correct design the conditions
'2<RH; l/(,;C[)~Rs; R; <WL'SI;
always hold. The upper cutoff frequency is then
hu = CR, + Ru)/2-rrLs2' (5)
In many experiments the half-wave high-current pulse is
generated synthetically by discharging capacitors through
shaping networks. In such experiments high current of
mostly one polarity flows through the P ACM. Especially in
cases where the amplitUde of current comes dose to the max
imum rating of the PACM the core of the transformer has to
be demagnetized after each high-current pulse, which is
clear from consideration of the hysteresis curve. Starting in
the fully demagnetized state the flux density will increase
Post-arc currents 1089
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42during the first half-wave ofthe high current up to the satu
rated fiux Bmax, returning then to the remanent fiux density
Brem after the circuit is broken. For the next experiment the
significantly reduced swing of the fiux density between Brem
and Bmax would result in a much lower equivalent induc
tance and thus transient distortion of the output voltage. A
complete demagnetization of the core or premagnetization
into the opposite remanence -Bren> avoids these problems.
2. Design of the PACM
The design considerations for a high limit to maximum
primary current are contradictory to the demand for a maxi
mum upper cutoff frequency (or fast response) since higher
current limits require a larger core, which necessarily has a
larger leakage inductance.
For this reason, two different PACM's have been devel
oped, each optimized for specific requirements.
For both PACMs, toroidal cores were chosen, made of
the Ni-Fe aHoy PERMAX M (54%-68% NO from the
German Vacuumschmelze Co. The high-saturation flux
density of Bmax = 1.5 T together with a high permeability
(/14 = 40 000; Pmax = 125000) allow a design with high
current-carrying capacity and sufficiently low lower cutoff
frequency of the PACM's.
A fast PACM for measurements on SF 6 -insulated cir
cuit breakers allows maximum currents of 6.3-kA peak, of
fering a resolution of about 0.1 A and a rise time of 20 ns
within the linear range.
Another PACM, designed for studies on vacuum circuit
breakers, has a full-scale range of 56-kA peak with 90-ns rise
time in the linear range.
Figure 3 shows a complete circuit diagram of this
PACM, including the device for demagnetization of the
core. By remote control a power relay switches the second
ary winding of the transformer from the diode/shunt config
uration to the output of a demagnetizing generator, which
produces a sinewave voltage with exponentially decaying
amplitude. Alternatively, a dc premagnetization into the op
posite remanence can be done.
More detailed data of both PACM's are summarized in
Table I.
3. Performance tests
At first the current-carrying capacity of the PACM's
was tested under well-defined and monitored conditions. A
FIG. 3. Cllrrent monitor (2) with demagnetization circuit; linear range 50 A
(100 A).
1090 Rev. Sci.lnstrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 TABLE I. Specifications of the post-are-current monitors.
l'ACM (1) PACM (2)
Dimensions of toroidal cores (mm) 120/80X20 180/120X30
Number of secondary turns 50 100
Resistance of secondary winding, r2 14 40
(mO)
Low-frequency inductance of 0.15 1.1
secondary, Ln (H)
Leakage inductance, LS2 (pH) 13 70
Secondary saturation voltage U1S (V) 8.5 39.6
Saturation primary current, J I max (kA) 6.3 56
(1/2 sine wave, 10 ms)
Peak surge current of diodes, IFSH (A) 140 600
(112 sine wave, ]0 illS)
Reverse recovery time of diodes, 35 100
t" (ns)
Slope resistance of diodes, rf (mn) 15 7
Resistance ofslmnt, Rs eu) 10 2
Primary insertion impedance (mn) 4 0.2
Linear primary current range, fUN (Al 4.2 60
Sensitivity into 95 n, S (mV/A) 100 10
Lower cutoff frequency, f (Hz) 7 0.3
Upper cutoff frequency,f (MHz) 18 3.8
Rise time, t (ns) 20 90
FIG. 4. Current pulse half sine wave 20-kA peak; upper trace: PACM (2).
(a) 100 A/div, (b) 2 A/div; lower trace: Transfoshunt LEM 5 kA/div.
Post-arc currents 1090
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42FIG. 5. Circuit diagram for testing transient response of P ACM. Trig
IN
fast-recovery thyristor controlled by a logic circuit, chops a
single half-wave of 50-Hz current from a power-line
powered transformer and feeds up to 1.25-kA peak into the
PACM's primary winding of 20 tUnIS, thus simulating an
equivalent current surge of 25-kA peak. The primary cur
rent of the PACM is monitored by a dc-coupled current
monitor, a "Transfoshunt" from LEM Co.
The results obtained with the 56-kA PACM are shown
in Figs. 4(a) and 4(b), where the upper trace always gives
the response of the PACM, the lower trace the output of the
current monitor. The undershoot of the PACM's response,
caused by the high-pass behavior (lower cutoff frequency)
of the P ACM, is 1 A.
To test the high-frequency behavior of the PACMs an
arrangement according to Fig. 5 was used. Only a single
conductor formed the primary of the PACM in order to
simulate the real experimental conditions to the best possible
extent. An HP 214A pulse generator was used as a source,
delivering a current of about I-A peak through 50 n into the
primary circuit. This current was monitored by the de to 50-
MHz Tektronix current probe P 6302.
In Figs. 6(a) and 6(b) the input current with a rise time
of -15 ns as monitored by the Tektronix current probe is
shown on the upper trace. The lower trace is the output of
the 6.3-kA peak PACM. In Fig. 6(c) the bandwidth of the
scope was limited to 5 MHz. The difference in time between
both traces is caused by the difference in the delay times of
the devices.
The experimental results are in very good agreement
with the theoretical predictions.
II. APPLICATION TO CIRCUIT BREAKERS
A. Highapressure arcs
Separation of current-carrying contacts leads to an elec
tric arc between them which results in a highly conductive
plasma between the contacts of the breaker. For current in
terruption it is necessary to reduce the electrical conductiv
ity of the plasma, which is equivalent to a reduction in the
number of charge carriers. In collision-dominated plasmas
deionization predominantly occurs by volume recombina
tion. For this to occur the plasma has to be strongly cooled to
reduce its temperature quickly. In one kind of circuit
breaker this is done by imposing a flow of gas generated by a
pressure gradient across a nozzle. When the current goes to
1091 Rev. ScI. Instrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 FIG. 6. Dynamic ac performance ofPACM (1) vertical 0.2 A/div; Ca) and
(b) transient response: lower trace P ACM, upper trace Tektronix P 6302;
(e) bandwidth of the scope limited to 5 MHz.
zero the arc plasma is cooled down, especially in the region
of the nozzle where a strong, turbulent heat exchange oc
curs. The influence of cooling on the conductivity of the
plasma can be seen in Fig. 7, where the calculated conductiv
ity16 for an arc in SF6 at a pressure of 4X 105 Pa is plotted as
a function of the temperature of the plasma. During the
high-curreni period the temperature of the arc is 20000 K
and the conductivity is in the order of 104 S/m while it is one
Post-arc currents 1091
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:424000 10000 2.0000
TEMPERATURE ( K )
FIG. 7. Conductivity of SF" at 4 X 105 Pa as afunction ofthe temperature of
the plasma.
order of magnitude lower at 8000 K, which is a typical tem
perature of the region where interruption occurs at current
zero.
However, immediately after current zero the residual
arc plasma cannot decay freely because a post-arc current
flows under the influence of the recovering voltage of the
network The resultant input of electrical energy counteracts
the energy loss caused by cooling. Depending on which way
the balance tips either reignition or interruption of the power
current occurs. The time during which this energy balance is
reached is called the thermal regime. Afterwards, the input
of electrical energy can be ignored because the post-arc cur
rent drops to very low values (micro-and miIli-amperes).
However, there still exist regions of high temperature and
consequently high electrical conductance. In these cases the
post-arc current mainly consists of a current component
which is proportional to the derivative of the voltage,
Depending on the arc-quenching medium the ability of
thermal recovery may be quite different. Modern high-vol
tage circuit breakers use SF6 which is an eminently suitable
quenching and insulating medium because of its high dielec
tric strength, great thermal stability, and chemical inertness.
In comparison to air-blown arcs recovery is much faster.
Consequently, the post-arc period is different. While air
blown arcs have post-arc currents in the order of some tens
of amperes with durations of several tens of microseconds,
SF 6 breakers usually have post-arc currents of a few amperes
or less which flow for about 1 its. Therefore, measurements
of post-arc currents for blown arcs in SF6 are much more
difficult and have been rarely performed.2-4,8,9
For investigations of post-arc current we use a model
breaker blown with SF 6 by a dual-nozzle configuration. The
pressure value upstream is 3.4 X 105 Fa and 1.2 X 105 Pa
downstream at the moment of interruption. The nozzle di
ameter is 18 mm to prevent clogging ofthe nozzles due to the
arc. By means of the explosion of a wire between two fixed
contacts an arc is initiated and a nearly constant current of
about 2.5 kA flows for about 10 ms. The pulse of current is
generated by the discharge of capacitors. To simulate high
1092 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 -1.1=0
~i=O
u=O
1=0
FIG. 8. Examples of measured post-arc currents from a blown arc in SF6
stressed with a rate of change of current of 14 AI fis in the power circuit;
upper traces: recovery voltage--400 V Idiv, lower traces: post-arc cur
rents-l A/div.
fault currents a synthetic network similar to that of Frind et
aJ.2 was used to produce the corresponding current decay
rates. The equivalence between direct and synthetic inter
ruption test has been shown, e.g., by St-Jean and Fu Wang. 15
In the thermal regime the highest stress for circuit
breakers is the short-line fault. At this fault condition recov
ery voltage rises linearly for several microseconds beginning
immediately after current zero. The rate of change of current
decreases to zero and the rate of rise of transient recovery
voltage (TR V) can be freely chosen for the range of param
eters in which we are interested. The exact geometry of the
model breaker will be published in another paper. The first
measurements of post-arc currents, monitored with one of
the current transformers developed, are shown in Figs. 8(a)
and 8 (b). A fast resistive capacitive voltage divider mea
sures the voltage across the arc. The rate of change of current
at interruption of 14 All1s corresponds to a 50-Hz sinusoidal
current of 31.5 kAeif• Figure 8( a) shows a successful inter
ruption where a post-arc current with a peak amplitude of 1
A flows for about 1.5,1s, measured with PACM (1). During
this time the TR V is fairly linear. When the TR V is increased
interruption fails as shown in Fig. 8(b). The second oscillo
graph is an example for a process of interruption at the
boundary between successful interruption and failure of the
breaker. The balance between cooling of the arc and reheat
ing due to the post-arc current is impressively evident.
About 1 flS after current zero the post-arc current has an
amplitude of 1.3 A and is nearly constant for the next 2 f-ls. If
Post-arc currents 1092
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42~
W
U z
<:: I-
(f)
(J'j
W
et:
...J « I-
0 I-104
103
-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4
TIME (IJ,S)
FIG. 'l. Total resistance between the breaker contacts as a function of time,
for the two examples given in Fig. 8, counted from current zero (0).
the input of energy to the arc is too high heating exceeds
cooling and current increases within a microsecond by a fac
tor of 3. From the measurement of post-arc current and vol
tage across the contacts of the breaker the total resistance of
the arc close to current zero can be determined. This is
shown in Fig. 9 for the two examples given in Fig. 8. When
current is out of the range of the P ACM values measured by
an additional current transformer are used. Before current
zero the resistances of the arcs for the two cases differ be
cause of statistical variations in the arc-quenching process
by less than 15%. At current zero the resistance is about 120
n. In the case of successful current interruption the resis
tance of the arc increases within 1.5 f-ls by two orders of
magnitude. If interruption fails the resistance first increases
similarly, but then more slowly up to 2.81ls after current
zero where a maximum value of about 1.7 kn is reached.
Thereafter, resistance decreases rapidly leading to the onset
of heavy current flow.
Obviously analysis of post-arc currents gives important
information about the arc-quenching process. Standard tests
on circuit breakers detect whether interruption fails or not,
but by measuring post-arc currents during tests it can be
estimated how close an interruption is to failure. This allows
the predictions oflimiting conditions for interruption in cir
cuit breakers and spares time and costs required for their
development.
Another motive for making post-arc current measure
ments is the possibility to assess modelsl6,21 of arcing which
describe interruption. These models are based on the com
bined solution of the three equations for the equilibria of
energy, momentum, and mass. However, the different ap
proximations and assumptions made in the models lead to
different results, the calculated post-arc currents being very
sensitive to the assumptions made. A comparison between
the measured post-arc currents and the calculated ones will
be published later.
10S3 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987
.••• -•••••••• ',';o ••••••• -.~.; •••••• ' ••• -.'.-.~.: ••••• , •••••••••• :.;.:.: •••••••••••••••• ;.:.:.; ••••• , •••• ' •• ;:-:.:.: •• >; •••• '.' ••• r ••••• ;.; ••••••••• ,o;"; •••• -,-.·. '-'-'.' B. Vacuum arc
Different physical processes determine the behavior of
the post-arc current and its significance for the process of
interruption in a vacuum arc which consists of an arc in
metal vapor surrounded by vacuum. For high-pressure dis
charges the value of the post-arc current reflects the conduc
tivity of the decaying arc and is proportional to voltage. In
vacuum arcs the post-arc current results from the separation
and collection of the residual charge carriers. The energy
balance between heating and cooling of the plasma is no
longer of importance .
In the case of vacuum arcs the charge carriers in the
plasma have to be conti.nually renewed during arcing be
cause of the steady loss due to outflow and condensation at
the surrounding walls. The material ionized to form the plas
ma originates from the metal electrodes. It is vaporized by
the footpoints of the arc. When the power current ap
proaches current zero the rate of ionization simultaneously
drops to zero, the evaporation stops, and the decay of the
plasma commences. At the prevailing low densities colli
sions between electrons and ions are very rare and conse
quently the process of volume recombination of charge car
riers is of no importance for the decay of the plasma after a
vacuum arc. Instead, neutralization of charge carriers main
ly occurs when they come into contact with the surrounding
walk Thus the velocities of the ions determine the rate of
decay of plasma.
While charge carriers remain, a so-caBed post-arc cur
rent is driven by the voltage increasing across the electrodes.
The residual charge carriers are separated and collected at
the electrodes. Due to formation of a positive space-charge
sheath in front of the cathode a strong increase of the electric
field strength at the cathode results. The space-charge
sheath spreads out to the anode and finally reaches the anode
when the charge carriers are collected. All these processes
are reflected by the temporal behavi.or of the post-arc cur
rent. An example is given in Fig. 11, which demonstrates the
measurement of post-arc current performed on a vacuum
model breaker with the new current monitor. The corre
sponding experimental arrangement, outlined in Fig. 10, is
t<o
\>0 \=:::
I .
orc c+l~+ e HV
.~
~
FIG. 10. Experimental setup.
Post-arc currents i~"HkA
~OA
-_. -----__ t
I 40ms I 5,5ms 1
1093
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42r-~.----r---'r-~~==~120
U 6.0 kV
i
A
4.0
2.0 100
" i = 4kA 80
60
... -j shield 40
0'-----'---'----'-----'----'-----'0 o 10 20 t/J-LS
FIG. 11. Examples for two post-arc currents in a vacuum circuit breaker,
carrying 4 kA. The current~ to the anode and the shield were measured
separately.
described in detail elsewhere.22 The interruption unit con
sists of two flat OFHC Cu contacts of 25 mm diameter
mounted in a spherical UHV enclosure and separated to 7.5
mm. The vacuum enclosure was connected to earth by a
diode so that it assumed floating potential during the arcing,
but the potential of the anode during the application of the
HV pulse. A rectangular pulse of current of 5.5-ms duration
and peak values up to 11 kA was used. The high-voltage
pulses of exponential shape applied to simulate the increas
ing network voltage are switched on at different delay times
after current interruption. In the case of Fig. 11 this is after
about 20 Jis. The new current measuring device [PACM
(2)] monitored the post-arc current (mode to the lower elec
trode, the HV anode, while ishield' the current to the metal
enclosure or shield, was measured with an ordinary current
transformer. The post-arc current to the anode ianooe lasts
for about 3.5 Jis, that is until all charge carriers are collected
which were contained in the space between the contacts be
fore the HV pulse was applied.
In order to obtain the number of ions, the post-arc cur
rent has to be integrated over time assuming that the loss of
plasma during the collection can be neglected. This is the
case if the applied HV pulse quickly reaches high enough
values as in the present experiment. However, the post-arc
current signal does not only result from the collection of
residual plasma. It includes a considerable flux of secondary
electrons emitted when the residual charges butt the elec
trodes. This additional current was evaluated and subtracted
from the original signal. When the number of ions is known,
the density can be estimated.
For the measurement of the decay of the residual plasma
the moment of triggering of the HV pulse was varied. An
important conclusion from these measurements could be
drawn. The amount of slow ions with velocities correspond
ing to temperatures of only some thousand degrees assuming
a Maxwellian velocity distribution was much higher than
previously expected. Correspondingly the dielectric recov
ery of the present experiment was mainly determined by the
influence of residual plasma. That no ionization occurred
1094 Rev. Sci. Instrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 during the collection of charges was a prerequisite for the
measurement of the decay of residual plasma. However, the
technique described can also be used to study the onset of
amplification of current in case of a dielectric breakdown.
III. DISCUSSION
A new device for measurement of post-arc current has
been presented which has special importance for the under
standing of current interruption in circuit breakers. The de
vice consists of a current transformer with short-circuited
secondary turns while the heavy current flows through the
primary circuit. This is done by antiparallelly arranged di
odes. Within the range of parameters for which the post-arc
current monitor is designed core saturation is prevented and
the post-arc current provides a linear potential drop across
the resistor. The device offers several advantages: no galvan
ic coupling to the power circuit and consequently minimized
EMC problems, low-insertion impedance of primary cur
rent, 110 synchronization, and high safety standards. Two
post-are-current monitors, designed for different applica
tions, are presented.
The first one is applied to a blown arc in SF 6' This
P ACM is designed for one half sine wave (10 ms) with a
maximum peak current of 6.3 kA and has an upper cutoff
frequency of 18 MHz. The sensi ti vi ty of detection of post-arc
current is 100 m V I A. The device has a primary insertion
impedance of only 4 mD.. The second PACM was designed
for vacuum circuit breakers. The saturation current of pri
mary circuit is calculated to 56 kA (one half sine wave 10
rns). With an upper cutoff frequency of 3.8 MHz post-arc
currents can be detected with a sensitivity of 10m V I A. All
requirements for an accurate measurement of post-arc cur
rent are fulfilled.
To achieve optimum performance the PACM must be
designed for specific applications. Unfortunately the upper
cutoff frequency decreases if the PACM is designed for high
er saturation currents. For this reason the applicability of
this technique of measurement is restricted.
Applied to circuit breakers, both PACM's showed ex
cellent performance.
lK Ragaller, A. Pless!, W. Hermann, and W. Egli, International Confer
ence on Large High Voltage Electric Systems, Paris, CIGRE paper 13-03,
1984.
2G. Frind, L. E. Prescott, and J. H. van Noy, IEEE Trans. Power Appar.
Syst. PAS-99, 268 (1980).
"G. St-Jean, M. Landry, M. Leclerc, and A. Chenier (to be published).
4M. Murano, H. Nishikawa, A. Kobayashi, T. Okazaki, and S. Yamashita,
IEEE Trans. Power Appar. Syst. P AS-94, 1890 (1975).
5G. Frilld, L. E. Prescott, and J. H. van Noy, J. Phys. D 12, 133 (1979).
6J. Mahdavi, A. Schaffer, C. Velo, L. Hompa, and I. Gatcllet, lEE l'roc.
132,285 (1985).
7 A. D, Stokes, lEE 4th International Conference on Gas Discharges,
Swansea (The Whitefriars Press Ltd, London, 1976), p. 75.
SR. Moll and E-Schade, J. Phys. (Paris) Colloq. C7 SuppL No.7, C7, 309
(1979).
9A. Kobayashi, S. Yanabu, S. Yamashita, S. TomimuTO, and E. Hagino
mori, IEEE Trans. Power Appar. Syst. PAS·97, 1304 (1978).
lOH. Roth, F. Brischnik, and H. Notz, BBC Mitteilungen 49, 119 (1962).
lIN, AI. Husayni and G. Voisin, Rev. Gen. Electr. (France) 86, 833
(1977).
12W. Spruth, thesis, RWTH Aachen, 1956.
Post-arc currents 1094
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:4213S. Yanabu, Y. Satoh, M. Homma, T. Tamagawa, and E. Kaneko, IEEE
Power Society, Winter Meeting, 86 \'>'M 139-0, 1986.
145. E. Childs, A. N. Greenwood, and J. S. Sullivan, IEEE Trans. Plasma
Sci. PS·ll, 18! (1983).
150. St-Jean and R. Fu Wang, IEEE Trans. Power Appar. Syst. PAS·IIll,
2216 (1983).
16e. B. Ruchti, Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on
HSwitching ARC Phenomena" Lodz (Polen) (1985), p. 39.
I7W. Hermann and K. Ragaller, IEEE Trans. Power Appar. SyM. PAS·96,
1546 (1977).
l"W. Hermann, U. Kogelschatz, L. Niemeyer, K. Ragaller, and E. Schade,
1095 Rev, Scl.lnstrum., Vol. 58, No.6, June 1987 IEEE Trans. Power Appar. Syst. PAS·95, 1165 (1976).
19B. W. Swanson, R. M. Roidt, and T. E. Browne, Jr., Elektrotech.-Z .. Ar
chiv 93,375 (1972).
2nB W. Swanson, R. M. Roidt, and T. E. Browne, Jr., IEEE Trans. Power
Appar. Syst. PAS-90, 1094 ( 1971).
OJF. EI-Akkari and D. T. Tuma, IEEE Trans. Power AppaL Syst. PAS-96,
1784 (1977).
22E. Dullni, E. Schade, and B. Gellert, IEEE Proceedings, XfIth Interna
tional Symposium on Discharges and Electrical Insulation in Vacuum, Is
rael (Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 1986), p. 214.
Post-arc currents 1095
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132.248.9.8 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 06:13:42 |
1.102144.pdf | Timeresolved measurement of tunneling and energy relaxation of hot
electrons in GaAs/AlGaAs double quantum well structures
N. Sawaki, R. A. Höpfel, E. Gornik, and H. Kano
Citation: Appl. Phys. Lett. 55, 1996 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.102144
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.102144
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Downloaded 28 Aug 2013 to 137.99.26.43. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsTimearesolved measurement of tunnenng and energy relaxation of hot
electrons in GaAsl A~GaAs double quantum weH structures
N. Sawaki,a) R. A. Hopfel, and E. Gornik
Institutfur Experimentalphysik. Universitat Innshruck, Technikerstrasse 25, A-6020 Innsbruck. Austria
H. Kano
Toyota Central Research and Development Laboratories, Inc., Nagakute-cho, Aichi 480-11, Japan
(Received 25 May 1989; accepted for publication 1 September 1989)
The tunneling and cooling times of photoexcited hot electrons in AlGaAs/GaAs double (one
narrow and the other wide) quantum well structures have been measured using
photoluminescence excitation correlation spectroscopy. The tunneling time was of the order of
20C ps for a 60 A barrier. The tunneling is the indirect process assisted by the emission of
optical phonons. The relaxation time of electrons as a function of the kinetic energy shows a
threshold for cooling via the emissicn of optical pnonons.
The tunneling structure with coupled quantum wens via
a thin potential barrier is interesting for the fundamental
studies of the low-dimensional system as well as for the ap
plication to electron and electro-optical devices. I~ In the
application to high-speed devices, the dynamics of carriers
such as tunneling through the potential barrier and cooling
of hot electrons is the main scope of the studies. Several au
thors have shown that negative differential resistance
(NDR) devices can be obtained by utilizing the double
quantum wen (DQW) structure with two quantum wells of
different width, where the tunneling transfer afhat electrons
from a wide wen into a narrow well plays an essential role.4,5
As has been discussed previously,"; the tunneling transfer in
DQW systems could be of the same mechanism as of the
intersubband transitions in a quantum well. If the two quan
tized levels are not at the same energy (not resonant), the
tunneling transfer must be assisted by impurity or phonon
scattering. Thus, the interest is on the mechanism and the
speed of the tunneling transfer.
In this letter, we have investigated the carrier dynamics
of photoexcited hot electrons by picosecond luminescence
spectroscopy. The samples were made by molecular beam
epitaxy on semi-insulating (OOn GaAs. Between 500-700
A thick nondoped Ala.3 Gao. 7 As layers, ten sequences of
DQW were embedded. The width of the wide and narrow
wells is 140 and 60 A, respectively. The potential barrier is
due to 60 A Alo.3 G~1.7 As. (See the inset in Fig. 1.) The
DQW region was doped uniformly with Be. The hole density
isp = 2X lOll cm-2.
Time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy was
performed by using the two-beam correlation method.6-H
For the excitation we used a colliding pulse mode-locked
(CPM) dye laser at 620 nrn (pulse width 150 fs, repetition
rate 100 MHz). The laser beam (pulse train) split into two
beams, one of which gave a certain delay T. The two beams
were focused on the sample, which was immersed in liquid
nitrogen. Two electron and hole populations n 1 (t), PI (t),
and n2 (t + r), P2 (t T r) are generated. The laser power at
the sample surface was < 2 m Wand the total excited carrier
") Permanent address: Department of Eicl'tronics, Nagoya University, Chi
kusa-ku, Nagoya 464, Japan. density was estimated to be < 5 X 1010 cm-2• The two pulse
trains were chopped at 250 and 225 Hz, respectively, and the
cross-correlation signal of the photoluminescence intensity
was measured at the difference frequency of25 Hz by a lock
in amplifier. The signal intensity is proportional toB:
Correlation signal
o::f[fl1U)P2U+r) +PI(t)n 2U+r)]dt. (1)
Obviously, by measuring the correlation signal at various
wavelengths as a function of the delay time r, we can deter
mine the decay time constant of the photoexcited hot carri
ers at various kinetic energies. R
Figure 1 shows the typical photoluminescence spectra
at 77 K. The inset shows the schematic structure of the
DQW. The main peak at A I = 810 nm is by the electron-hole
A
g ... e..,.
B
>-l-
ll) 10-1
Z
W r-
Z
W
U 10"2 Z w
U
lfl
W
Z
~ 10-3
::::>
...J
0 I-
0 :r: a.. "Aex= 620 nm
1()"4
750 770 790 810
WAVELENGTH (nm)
FIG. l. Time-integrated photoluminescence spectrum of sample No. 378.
The inset shows schematically the DQW structure and the processes con
cerned.
1996 Appl. Phys. Lett. 55 (19), 6 November 1989 0003-6951/89/451996-03$01.00 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 1996
Downloaded 28 Aug 2013 to 137.99.26.43. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsrecombination in the wide well, and the small peak at
/1.2 = i76 nm is that in the narrow well. The processes in
volved are also shown by the inset. Since the excitation
energy (620 am, 2.0 e V) is larger than the energy gap of the
AIGaAs barrier layer, the carriers are excited in the whole
region. After the capture into the QW's (A =? B), the hot
electrons in the QW relax in each QW by emitting phonons
(B=}C). Those electrons captured in the narrow QW
escape into the wide QW by phonon-assisted tunneling
( C =? D =? E). Because of the energy difference Ilt 12
between the two lowest subbands, direct tunneling is forbid
den due to momentum conservation. The same applies for
the holes but the time constants are different from those for
the electrons.
Figure 2 shows the correlation signal as a function of the
delay time at several wavelengths. The curves are described
by an exponential decay exp( -Tire)' from which the de
cay time constant'e is determined. 8 The results are shown in
Fig. 3. At the peak wavelength A I' the time constant was too
long to be measured (longer than 1 fiS). As the wavelength
decreases, or as the kinetic energy of electrons andlor holes
increases, the time constant decreases rapidly and reaches a
value of ~ 80 ps with a maximum at A ~ Az. At the shortest
wavelength measured, the correlation signal becomes very
weak and we have two time constants. The shorter one is as
short as 15 ps.
The capture time of electrons and holes is < 1 pS,9 Be
cause ofthe larger effective mass, the relaxation of hot holes
:;;
d
....l \ <!
Z
~ (,!) 99.5 750nm
If)
z
Q I-12 ps <!
....l X 5 / w a:: a:::
0 !\ 124ps u
DELAY TIME Cps)
FIG. 2, Correlation signal ofphoto!uminescence intensity at vairous wave
lengths, The intensity is not to scale. At 1"'~ 0, e.g., the intensity for A = 800
nrn is 590 times stronger than that for A = 750 nrn. At A = 750 nm, the
decay curve includes two components. The resolution of the measuring sys
tem is estimated to be < 0.3 ps.
1997 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 55, No. 19,6 November, 9S9 1000
#378
T= 77 K
Ae,('620 nm
... ~
0.
W 0
~ 100 0 I-
>-
<i
t i u w
Cl
i1wLO "2 nwLO "1
I" O>j ~ .. !
10
750 770 790 810
VvAVELENGT H (nm)
FIG. 3. Correlation time or the decay time of photo excited hot electrons in
sample No. 378.
to a thermally steady state takes place very quickly « 1
ps), l{) and the tunneling time of holes is expected to be much
longer than that of electrons. II Therefore, the time constant
obtained above is mainly determined by the electron process.
The time constant longer than 1 ns at /1. I should be the life~
time of electrons at the bottom of the wide weli. Similarly,
the time constant at Jl2 should be the lifetime of electrons at
the bottom of the narrow well. We cannot explain the tre~
mendous difference in the magnitUde of the lifetime by its
quantum well width dependence. i2 An additional relaxation
process for the electrons in the narrow well is the tunneling
escape into the wide weIL From the experimental data the
tunneling time in this sample is of the order of 200 ps.
This tunneling time is nearly equal to the tunneling es~
cape time obtained for a double-barrier (DB) structure. Us~
ing the results by Tsuchiya and co-workers13 and assuming
Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin (WKB) approximation, we
estimated the tunneling escape time in a DB structure having
60 A AIIJ.3 Gao.? As barriers. For the calculation we assumed
the potential barrier height V = 0.23 eV and the effective
mass m*lmo = 0.07. We obtained a value -100 ps. The
time constant obtained experimentally is slightly longer than
the estimated one. This i.s probably due to the fact that the
tunneling escape in DQW is to a quantized level in the wide
wen, while in DB structures there is a three-dimensional
continuum outside the barriers. Recently Jackson and co
workersll studied the tunneling escape time in DB struc
tures. Their results were four times longer than those by
Matsusue and co-workers. The precise discussion on this
point, therefore, needs further experimentation including
the exact determination of the width and height of the poten
tial barrier.
As pointed out earlier, the tunneling transition in DQW
can be considered as a kind of intersubband transition. For
the phonon-assisted case, the transition probability is pro
portional to4,14:
Sawaki et al. 1997
Downloaded 28 Aug 2013 to 137.99.26.43. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsPi; a:: if r/>'l (Z)CP,K (z)Cq (z,z')eiqZZ'dZ'dzl"
x 8 (k ~ --k 1 + q 1 ), (2)
where ¢a, (z) is the electron wave function along the z axis,
the subscript 1 stands for the two-dimensional vectors in the
x-y plane parallel to the heterointerface, and Cq is the cou
pling constant In DQWs, tPiK' (z) has its maximum in the
wide well, while ¢,K (z) is maximum in the narrow well,
Thus the overlap is weak
Seilmeier and co-workersl5 measured the decay time
constant of electrons in the upper level in MQWs, They ob
tained a value of the order oflO ps for LlEl2 = 150 meV. Ifwe
consider the overlap integral between the two associated
subband states, the longer time constant of the order of 200
ps for sample No, 378 is attributed to the reduction of the
overlap integral in the DQW structure. The precise estima
tion including phonon localization will be the subject of fu
ture work.
By analyzing the temperature dependence of the photo
luminescence spectra, the energy separation of the two quan
tized levels, LlEl2, can be determined experimentaBy.4 For
sample No. 378 we got LlE12 = 38 meV. Since this is larger
than the LO phonon energy of GaAs (36 meV), the tunnel
ing can be assisted by the emission ofLO phonons. For com
parison, we performed similar measurements about a sample
having a 35 A A10 2(,Gao 74As barrier (sample No. 21 I). In
this sample we also got a similar wavelength dependence of
the decay time constant. By decreasing the potential barrier
thickness from 60 to 35 A, simple WKB calculation gives the
tunneling time of the order of 3 ps. But the tunneling time
was as long as 300 ps. For this sample the energy separation
Ll.€!2 was 24 meV,4 so the tunneling was assisted by acoustic
phonons. Oberli and co-workers [6 measured the intersub
band relaxation time 712 in a quantum well and obtained 570
ps for the acoustic phonon process. If this is the case, the
acoustic phonon process is 60 times slower than the LO
phonon process. Thus, the possibility of the reduction of the
tunneling time in No, 211 is canceled out by the reduction of
the phonon emission rate.
Finally let us focus our attention on the relaxation phe
nomena in the narrow quantum welL As was shown in Fig. 3,
in the wavelength range 755-770 nm the time constant
(~100 ps) is rather insensitive to the wavelength, At
shorter wavelengths, we observe two time constants, The
shorter one is as short as 15 ps, At this wavelength, the kinet
ic energy of electrons in the narrow well is larger than the LO
phonon energy ofGaAs. So the appearance of the short time
constant is attributed to the onset of the energy relaxation
via the interaction with LO phonons in the narrow welL The
slow component of the order of lOOps might be due to the
combination of the energy relaxation time via the acoustic
phonon process and the tunneling escape time. The observa
tion of the LO phonon threshold has been scarce in the study
1998 AppL Phys, Lett" VoL 55, No, 19,6 November 19S9 of energy relaxation in QWs. Since sample No. 378 is p-type
doped, we have negligible density of equilibrium electrons in
the DQW. By the ratio of the photoluminescence intensity at
the two maxima (AI and ..1.2), the electron density in the
narrow well is estimated to be as low as 5 X lOR em -,2. There
fore, the hot phonon effect in the narrow well is weak and we
might expect to see the intrinsic character of the electron
phonon interactions. 17 In order to confinn the interpretation
given above, we need further experiments on the excitation
intensity dependence of the time constant, which is the sub
ject of future work.
In conclusion, we have measured the tunneling time
constant and the cooling time constant in AIGaAs/GaAs
DQW structures. The tunneling time constant is of the same
order as the escape time constant in a double-barrier tunnel
ing diode structure. It has been shown that the tunneling is
assisted by the emission of optical phonons and/or the
acoustic phonons. The relaxation time of electrons as a func
tion of the kinetic energy shows a threshold of the cooling via
the emission of optical phonon:'>.
This work is partly supported by the Fonds zur Forde
rung del' Wissenschaftlichen Forschung, Austria, under
project No, P 6184. Partial support for the stay of N.S. at
Universitat Innsbruck by the Murata Science Foundation,
Japan, is acknowledged.
lN, Yokoyama, K. Imamura, H, Olmishi, T, Mod, S, Muto, and A, Shiha
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aka, and M, Hashimoto, Solid-State Electron, 31,351 (1988), and refer
ences therein,
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"0, von der Linde, J, Kuhl, and E. Roscngart, J, Lurnin, 24/25, 675
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Phys, Rev, Let(, 59, 1345 (1987),
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Sawaki eta/. 1998
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1.458431.pdf | Collisioninduced angular momentum reorientation and rotational energy transfer in
CaF(A 2Π1 / 2)–Ar thermal collisions
Jeffrey B. Norman and Robert W. Field
Citation: The Journal of Chemical Physics 92, 76 (1990); doi: 10.1063/1.458431
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.458431
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jcp/92/1?ver=pdfcov
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141.212.109.170 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 15:21:40Collision-induced angular momentum reorientation and rotational energy
transfer in CaF(A 2ll1/2)-Ar thermal collisions
Jeffrey B. Norman
Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139,
and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York 12601
Robert W. Field
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
(Received 5 September 1989; accepted 25 September 1989)
We have carried out an experimental study of collision-induced rotational angular momentum
laboratory frame reorientation and energy transfer in CaF(A 2II1/2, v = 0) in thermal
collisions with ground state Ar atoms. An optical-optical double resonance (OODR)
technique has been used in which the J = 1/2, M = + 1/2,j-symmetry level of the CaF
A 2II1/2 state is initially populated. from the ground X 2!, + electronic state, using circularly
polarized cw dye laser radiation at 606 nm. Collision-induced population of nearby magnetic
sublevels of the A state, belonging to both e and/symmetry components of J' = 1/2 and 3/2, is
probed with a second circularly polarized cw dye laser via the E 2!, + +-A 2II I 12 transition at
560 nm while monitoring subsequent E 2!, + -X 2!, + ultraviolet fluorescence at 290 nm. This
experiment has yielded M-dependent thermal rate constants and velocity-averaged cross
sections, ratios of which are in partial agreement with those predicted by Alexander and Davis
[M. H. Alexander and S. L. Davis, J. Chem. Phys. 79, 227 (1983)] in an infinite-order
sudden, irreducible tensor treatment of the collision dynamics of an open-shell diatomic
molecule and a structureless collision partner.
I. INTRODUCTION
This paper describes an experimental study of angular
momentum reorientation and energy transfer in CaF
(A 2II1/2, J = 1/2-J' = 1/2 and 3/2) in thermal collisions
with Ar( IS) atoms. The experiment uses an optical-optical
double resonance technique. A specific electronic, vibration
al, rotational. parity, magnetic sublevel of CaF (A 2II1/2,
v = 0, J = 1/2,J, M = + 1/2) is populated by a single mode
(spectral bandwidth -2 MHz) cw dye laser via the
A 2II1/2_X2!,+ transition. A second cw dye laser probes
neighboring rotational and magnetic sublevels, through the
E2!,+ -A 2III/2 transition, for collision induced popula
tion. A pressure-dependent study of the resulting
E 2!, + -X 2!, + fluorescence yields rate constants and veloc
ity averaged cross sections for rotational energy transfer and
reorientation. This type of OODR technique was first used
for the study of atom-diatomic molecule collisions by Silvers
etaU in their work on BaO(A I!,+ )-Ar and BaO(A I!,+)_
CO2 collisions in which M-state selectivity was achieved.
The present experiment is modeled after that work. The key
difference here is the presence of nonzero spin and electronic
orbital angular momentum. Similar methods have recently
been used in rotational and vibrational energy transfer stud
ies of N2, Nt, and CN2 without M selectivity. Reference 3
describes a related form of collision-induced double reso
nance using cw and pulsed infrared lasers and transient ab
sorption detection. Other double resonance experiments in
the infrared, microwave, and visible regions have yielded
information on M-changing collisions in polyatomic mole
cules.4
Dufour et al. 5 have measured orientation-averaged cross
sections (no M selectivity) for rotational energy transfer within theA 2[11/2 and A 2II3/2 states ofCaF in thermal colli
sions with Ar and He. Their initial (J) and collisionally pop
ulated final (J') rotational levels were J = 1/2, 3/2 and
J' = 1/2,3/2,5/2,7/2, and 9/2. The CaF molecules were
excited into the A 2II1/2 state by a cw dye laser and the flu
orescence back into the ground state was analyzed with a
high-resolution spectrometer. Their results confirmed the
propensity for e//symmetry conserving collisions predicted
earlier by Alexander.6 They also showed that their experi
mental CaF-Ar cross sections obeyed the sudden limit scal
ing relation of Ref. 6.
Alexander and Davis 7 have derived explicit integral
cross section expressions for rotational energy transfer and
laboratory-frame M-changing (reorientation) collisions in
an infinite-order-sudden, irreducible tensor treatment of the
collision dynamics of an open-shell diatomic molecule (one
with a nonzero internal electronic angular momentum) and
an inert collision partner, in a thermal cell environment. The
theory of Alexander and Davis 7 was chosen for comparison
with the present experimental data for two reasons: (1) the
dynamical approximations which were made, in particular
the sudden approximation (in which it is assumed that the
inverse of the collision duration is much larger than any in
ternal frequency spacing between collisionally coupled lev
els of the diatomic molecule) were satisfied in this experi
ment, and (2) detailed predictions were available which
could be readily related to measured quantities. The deriva
tion in Ref. 7 was an extension of the results for closed-shell
molecules which were developed earlier, also by Alexander
and Davis.8 The open-shell results retain the features of the
closed-shell case while adding to them the consequences of
the coupling of diatomic molecule internal electronic angu
lar momentum to the relative orbital motion of the collision.
76 J. Chern. Phys. 92 (1).1 January 1990 0021-9606/90/010076-14$03.00 @ 1990 American Institute of Physics
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141.212.109.170 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 15:21:40J. B. Norman and R. W. Field: Angular momentum reorientation 77
For example, when the total internal angular momentum of
the molecule has a nonzero projection along the internuclear
axis (0.=10), resulting in two near degenerate levels (A
doublets) of opposite parity, interference effects occur in the
squared atom-molecule interaction potential matrix ele
ment expression which lead to propensities for and against
collision induced transitions among these levels. These inter
ference effects are due to the fact that each ofthe A-doublet
wave functions is a linear combination of + 0. and -0.
basis states. The relevant results of the Alexander-Davis
theory will be outlined in Secs. IV and V.
A few words are needed concerning the notation which
has been adopted in this paper. J is used here to denote the
diatomic molecule internal angular momentum and L is
used for the relative collisional orbital angular momentum of
the collision partners. Unprimed quantum numbers denote
the initial state of the collision, that is, before the collision
takes place. Primed quantum numbers will be used to denote
thefinal states, that is, after the collision. Mis used here for
the space-jixed projection of J. In the Appendix, where the
formalism is extended to include diatomic molecule hyper
fine structure, MF will be used for the space-fixed projection
of F, the total angular momentum, including nuclear spin.
E = + I and E = -I are used to denote e and/symmetry
levels, respectively, of the molecule.
Details of the experiment are presented in Secs. II and
III. Theoretical results of Alexander and Davis,? along with
relevant predictions, are outlined in Secs. IV and V. An ex
planation of the method of data analysis is given in Sec. VI
and the experimental results appear in Sec. VII. Section VIII
presents a summary and discussion. The Appendix is a dis
cussion of the hyperfine structure of CaF and its influence on
the present experiment.
II. EXPERIMENTAL METHOD
This experiment is based on an optical-optical double
resonance (OODR) scheme which is pictured schematically
in Fig. 1. In this figure only t::..J = ° collisional processes are
shown, for clarity of explanation. The case of t::..J = + 1 is
discussed separately below.
Referring to Fig. I, we see that only the J = 1/2,
M = + 1/2, / symmetry sublevel of the A 211,/2(v = 0)
state is populated from the ground state using a+ light when
the pump laser is tuned to the A-X Q, (1/2) (0,0) transition.
This population is then transferred by thermal collisions
with Ar atoms into other J', M', el/sublevels. The collision
ally transferred population is probed by a second laser which
selects specific J " M ' , elf sublevels by appropriate choices of
frequency and polarization. For example, as shown in Fig. I,
exciting the E2};+_A 211,/2 Q,(12)(O,O) transition with
a+ light probes the A 211, /2 J' = 1/2, M' = -1/2, f state
(this population resulting from purely elastic reorienta
tion). The E2 };+_X2};+(0,0) ultraviolet fluorescence
which results is then detected (unpolarized detection) and,
as shown below, its intensity is related to the relative popula
tion in the collisionally populated level. The capability of
uniquely pumping and probing individual M sublevels, the
UV fluorescence, which provides an unambiguous indica
tion of collision induced population, and the sub-Doppler M -1/2 +1/2 -1/2 +1/2
E2I+
'4(1/2)
2 A lTl/2
'4(1/2) o· 606 nm
X2I+ --e
FIG. 1. OODR level diagram for laser pumping and probing of magnetic
sublevels of the CaF A 201/2, J = 1/2 states. All levels shown correspond to
u = 0, J = 1/2. The curved, dashed arrows denote collisional transfer of
population. For clarity, only t::..J = 0 collisional processes are shown here.
nature of the signal comprise the chief advantages of this
experimental technique.
We have benefitted from the extensive previous spectro
scopic studies of the CaF A 211_X 2}; + and E 2}; + -A 211
transitions.9•10 Nakagawa et al.'o and Bernath and Field9
performed rotational analyses of the A 211_X 2}; + transition
while Bernath et al.9 did optical-optical double resonance
spectroscopy (E 2}; + -A 2113/2-X 2}; + ) and rotationally
analyzed the E 2}; + state. Bernath et al. did not analyze E-A
transitions which originate in the A 211 state 0. = 1/2 spin
orbit component. This spectroscopy had to be performed
here before the collisional studies could be started. Table I
displays a line list of the relevant E 2}; + -A 211, /2 transitions
used in this experiment as well as a number of other low-J E
A lines which were observed.
Unfortunately, theA 211'/2-X2};+ (O,O)Q, (1/2) pump
transition turned out to be blended with unrelated and con
siderably more intense higher-J lines from the (1,1) band.
This was exacerbated by the fact that the J = 1/2 level pos
sesses relatively little thermal population compared to the
rotational levels from which the (1,1) band lines originate
(Jz20.5). It was not possible, therefore, to tune the pump
laser directly to the peak of the Q, (/2) line in a Doppler
limited spectrum. It was necessary first to resolve the
Q, ( 1/2) line using sub-Doppler intermodulated fluores
cence spectroscopy I , and to measure its line center relative
to lines in the 12 Fourier transform spectrum,I2 which was
used for absolute frequency calibration in the experiment.
Subsequently, the pump laser frequency could be placed at
the center of the Q I ( 1/2) line using the 12 spectrum along
with relative frequency calibration fringes from the output of
a 300 MHz free spectral range Fabry-Perot etalon, through
which a small percentage of the power of the pump and
probe laser beams was directed. The Doppler-limited and
intermodulated fluorescence spectra of the Q, ( 1/2) line are
shown in Fig. 2.
In addition to the four J' = 1/2 sublevels, the eight
J I = 3/2 magnetic sublevels of the A 211 '/2 state have been
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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141.212.109.170 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 15:21:4078 J. B. Norman and R. W. Field: Angular momentum reorientation
TABLE I. Line list ofCaF E2 l:+ -A 2 n'/2 (0,0) low-J transitions."
ell ell
(lower E-A v (lower E-A v
J" level) transition (±0.01 cm-') J" level) transition ( ± 0.01 cm-')
1/2 I Q,(O.5) 17678.109 7/2 I Q,(3.5) 17677.436
R2, (0.5) 680.195 R2, (3.5) 683.710
e Q,.(O.5) 678.740 P2,(3.5) 677.230
R,(0.5) 678.825 e Q2,(3.5) 679.938
3/2 I Q.(1.5) 677.850 R,(3.5) 680.179
R2, (l.5) 681.345 P,(3.5) 675.036
P2,(1.5) 677.764 9/2 I Q,(4.5) 677.251
e Q,.(1.5) 679.105 R2,(4.5) 684.937
R,(1.5) 679.246 P2,(4.5) 676.999
P,(1.5) 677.010 e Q2,(4.5) 680.384
5/2 I Q,(2.5) 677.623 R,(4.5) 680.692
R2,(2.5) 682.515 P,(4.5) 674.102
P2, (2.5) 677.481
e Q2' (2.5) 679.505
R,(2.5) 679.700
P,(2.5) 676.016
"CoIlisional cross sections were determined in this experiment using the transitions shown in boldface.
probed in this experiment, though not uniquely. Figure 3
shows the J' = 3/2, M' sublevels which are probed upon
E ..... A excitation via the QI (3/2) and Q21 (3/2) transitions
using u+ and u-light. In principle, it would be possible to
Doppler Broodened
Ftuorescence
Intermodulated
Fluorescence
( I,ll (1,1)
Q(2 (20.5) PI (21.5)
crossover H
300MHz
I
(0,0)
Q( (0.5)
FIG. 2. Doppler-limited and sub-Doppler fluorescence spectra in the region
ofthe OODR A 2n'I2-X2l:+ (0,0), Q,(l/2) transition. Because of the se
vere blending of the Q, (1/2) line with unrelated (1,1) lines, the frequency
ofthe pump laser was tuned to the Q, (1/2) line using reference 12 spectra
(Ref. 12) and fringes from a 300 MHz Fabry-Perot etalon. The intermodu
lated fluorescence spectra allowed precise measurement of the frequency of
the Q,(l/2) transition. extract collisional rate constants into individual J' = 3/2,
M' sublevels by probing via PI (3/2) and P21 (3/2) transi
tions as well and with both helicities of the probe laser circu
lation polarization. The four relative intensities obtained in
this manner would yield the relative populations in the four
J' = 3/2, M' sublevels through a simple solution off our si
multaneous linear equations. This approach was unsuccess
ful owing to inadequate signal to noise ratio for the P branch
excitations (an alternative approach is outlined in Sec.
VIII). Therefore, only the E ..... A Q branches were used to
probe these levels.
III. EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
A diagram of the experimental setup is shown in Fig. 4.
Two cw dye lasers with spectral bandwidths of -2 MHz
were used. The pump laser wavelength is 606 nm (dye: Rho
damine 6G) and the probe wavelength is 560 nm (dye: Rho
damine 560). The beams are initially linearly polarized in
the vertical direction. Both beams are passed through calcite
polarizers in order to better specify their polarizations. The
pump beam is amplitude modulated at -1 kHz by a chopper
to allow for phase sensitive detection. It is focused by lens L 1
if = 150 cm. ) and reflected at the edge of mirror M 1. It then
propagates through the Fresnel rhomb (labeled Il. /4), whose
optical axis is at 45° to the laser polarization direction, there-
-1/2 +1/2 +3/2
J = 3/2 f or e
J = 3/2 e or f
FIG. 3. Magnetic sublevels in the A 2n'/2 state sampled by the 0'+ or 0'--.
polarized probe laser tuned to the E2l:+ -A 2n'/2' Q,(3/2) or Q2,(3/2)
transitions.
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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141.212.109.170 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 15:21:40J. B. Norman and R. W. Field: Angular momentum reorientation 79
M2
'/2
POL2
lasers M1 spectrometer
606nm
(A-X)
i"'~"--'-"'-"--'--'-"'-'-:~"~-"
_~~-:: __ J.. J
laser power no.rmalization
FIG. 4. Diagram of the CaF OODR experiment. The experimental setup is
described in detail in the text.
by producing circularly polarized light. The beam enters the
cell through antireflection coated, quartz windows mounted
nearly perpendicular to the laser propagation direction.
Typical laser intensities were l(pump) ;::;1(probe) ;::;0.1 W /
cm2•
After passing through the calcite polarizer POL2, the
probe laser goes through a half-wave plate (A. /2) which ei
ther rotates the laser polarization by 90° or leaves it un
changed, depending on the experiment. It is focused by lens
L 2 (j = 150 cm.) and reflected by mirror M 2. The probe
beam then bypasses mirror M 1, barely missing its edge. The
pump and probe beams are then nearly copropagating. The
probe beam also goes through the Fresnel rhomb (A. /4) and
emerges circularly polarized. The relative directions of cir
cular polarization (same or opposite) of the pump and probe
beams is determined by the half-wave plate (A. /2) orienta
tion. The two beams are overlapped at a small crossing angle
(-4 mrad) within the cell. It was determined that the cell
window did not measurably depolarize the beams. Although
they are not shown in Fig. 4, a number of -1 mm apertures
were placed in the path of the beams in order to ensure the
preservation of optical alignment as the half-wave plate was
rotated.
To test the purity ofthe circular polarization of the two
laser beams after emerging from the Fresnel rhomb, a rotat
able calcite polarizer and a power meter were placed in the
beam path. As the polarizer was rotated, the minimum and
maximum powers of the transmitted beams were noted. The
relationship between these two measurements and the purity
of circular polarization can be specified as follows. The laser
power is proportional to the square of the electric field am
plitude. Let E ~in and E ~ax be the minimum and maximum
squared electric field amplitUdes at the detector as the polar
izer is rotated, and let a = E ~in / E ~ax' which is the ratio of
minimum to maximum measured laser powers. The two cal
cite polarizer orientation directions, corresponding to Emin
and Emax, are perpendicular to each other regardless of the
polarization state of the beam. We can use these directions,
described by the unit vectors Emin and Emax, to express the electric field vectors in terms of left and right circularly po
larized basis vectors, (1..]2) (f" min ± if" max) :
Solving for ELand E R , we get
E=I+.Ja E L 2 max and
The fraction of laser power in the left circular polarization
state is then given by
Ei +E~
a = 0 corresponds to pure linear polarization and a = 1 cor
responds to pure circular polarization. In this experiment, a
was found to vary approximately between 0.40 and 0.70,
corresponding to 95%-99% pure left circular polarization.
The amplitude modulated CaF A 2nI/2->x2~+ laser
induced fluorescence at -606 nm excited by the fixed fre
quency pump laser is focused (using suitable detection op
tics) into a one meter monochromator (SPEX Model 1802,
1200 lines/mm, first order) equipped with a Peltier-cooled
photomultiplier tube (RCA C31034). This signal is detect
ed at the 1 kHz chopper frequency by lock-in No. 1. The
fluorescence is detected in first order with a 500p slit width,
which corresponds to a spectral bandwidth of -10 cm -I.
This bandwidth assured that all A 2n-x 2~ + (0,0) fluores
cence was detected, making the signal insensitive to rota
tionallinestrength effects.
The OODR signals are produced by fixing the pump
laser frequency on the center of the A-X QI (112)(0,0) line
and scanning the probe laser frequency. When the probe
frequency coincides with an E 2~ + -A 2n 1 /2 transition for
which lower state population exists, due either to direct exci
tation from the ground state by the pump laser or to colli
sional transfer, UV E2~+ ->X2~+ fluorescence at -290
nm is detected by a solar blind photomultiplier tube (Hama
matsu R166UH side-on, operated at -600VDC; spectral
response: A. = 160-320 nm) through a Corion UG-ll inter
ference filter. This signal is sent to lock-in No.2, whose refer
ence frequency is also the pump laser amplitude modulation
frequency. These two fluorescence signals, along with a vol
tage proportional to the probe laser power, are sent to the
computer. The OODR (E-X) signal is divided (point by
point) by the A-X fluorescence signal and by the probe laser
power signal. This procedure normalizes the data to the
pump and probe laser powers and to the total CaF popula
tion encountered by the beams, which changes slowly due to
varying oven conditions. This procedure is successful only if
the probe laser does not saturate the E-A transition.
Relative frequency calibration of the spectra is done by
sending a small portion of the probe beam through a semi
confocal Fabry-Perot etalon with a free spectral range of
300 MHz. Simultaneously, 12 spectra are recorded for abso
lute frequency calibration (± 0.01 cm -I). The Fourier
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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transform spectra of Gerstenkorn and Luc IZ are used for this
purpose.
The CaF molecules are produced in a resistively heated
oven by sublimation and dissociation ofCaFz crystals (melt
ing point: 1360 'Cl3), just as was done by Dufour et al.5
Optical grade CaFz (Morton Thiokol, Alfa Products No.
30109, > 97% purity, -7g) and Ca metal (Baker, purified,
99% purity, -0.5g) are placed in a graphite crucible (Ultra
Carbon Corp., UPG grade graphite) and resistively heated
by a tungsten coil (R. D. Mathis Co., tungsten filament No.
B1O-3X.04OW, modified), surrounding the crucible
(l = 40-70 A, V = 3-6 VAC) to 1200-1400 'C, as mea
sured by an optical pyrometer focused onto the CaFz crys
tals. At these temperatures, the CaFz and hence the CaF
pressure is less than 10-4 Torr.l3 The laser beams are direct
ed to cross immediately above the crucible in order to maxi
mize the observed CaF density. The total cell pressure is
measured using a capacitance manometer (MKS Instru
ments, Inc., Baratron, model No. 220BA-0001OB2A) to a
precision of 5J.l and ranges between 0.5 and 1.5 Torr.
The oven is a modified Broida-type oven. 14 The changes
are made to accommodate the geometry and relatively high
temperatures of this experiment. Three modifications are
made to the basic Broida oven design: (1) the stainless steel
cone, which is normally used to direct the argon flow in
order to form a compact flame in the traditional Broida-type
oven, was removed (no flame is evident in the present oven
arrangement), (2) the water-cooled copper electrodes are
extended in length in order to bring the top of the crucible
close to the laser beams, and (3) it is found necessary to
purge the windows, through which the fluorescence signals
are observed, with argon, to prevent Ca from condensing on
them and thereby degrading the signal. The argon purge
serves also as the source of argon collision partners
(99.996% purity).
IV. THEORY OUTLINE
Presented in this section is a brief summary of the rel
evant theoretical results of Alexander and Davis.7
The formulation of Alexander and Davis 7 derives its
predictive power from two sources: (1) a rotationally invar
iant multipolar expansion of the cross sections in terms of
irreducible tensorial components, IS each rank of which cor
responds to a definite amount of angular momentum trans
ferred in the collision, and (2) the application of dynamical
approximations (infinite-order-sudden and first Born)
which permit the separation (decoupling) of translational
and internal diatomic molecule degrees of freedom. In this
section and the next we state the essential results of the Alex
ander-Davis analysis which allow a direct comparison of the
theory with the experimental data. Results are presented for
the case where diatomic molecule hyperfine structure is ab
sent. As shown in the Appendix, this is nearly correct for
40CaI9F(A zIIl/z), in spite of the 19F nuclear spin of 1/2.
Modifications of these results to include hyperfine structure
are also presented in the Appendix.
Alexander and Davis have adapted an irreducible tensor
formalism originally formulated by Grawertl6 and well
known in the theory of atomic collisions. In this formula-tion, the ,£o»ision frame scattering amplitude
fJMnE.J'M'n'E' (R,R lab) for transitions between molecular
states with well-defined quantum numbers J, M, n and elf
symmetry is expressed in terms ~f .£roducts of irreducible
tensorial componen~,J~gE.J'n'E' (R,Rlab) and M-dependent
3j coefficients. Here R denotes scattering angles in the colli
sion frame with the z axis defined to lie along the initial
relative velocity vector and R lab describes the orientation of
the collision frame relative velocity vector with respect to the
laboratory Z axis. To obtain the corresponding M-depen
dent integral cross sections appropriate to thermal cell ex
periments, this formalism is combined with the standard
Arthurs and Dalgarnol7 expression for the collision frame
scattering amplitude. The resulting scattering amplitude is
squared, integrated over all scattering angles, and averaged
over all possible orientations of the collision frame with re
spect to an external laboratory frame Z axis to which the M
quantum numbers refer (corresponding, in the present case,
to the laser propagation direction).
The result1 for the laboratory-frame M-resolved inte
gral cross section appropriate to thermal cell type experi
ments is, in a case (a) basis,
where J' K )2
M' -Q
(1)
(2)
k ~nE = 2J.lEJfllfzz is the wave number of the initial state,
where EJflE is the translational energy. K and Q are the con
tributing tensor order and component, respectively, of the
scattering amplitude, and (JLnEII TK IIJ'L 'n'E') is the re
duced matrix element of the T matrix, 18 which contains all
aspects of the dependence of the collision upon the interac
tion potential, reduced mass, and collision energy of the sys
tem. The sum in the definition of P~nE.J'n'E' is over initial and
final relative collisional orbital angular momenta. These
P~nE.J'n'E' quantities are similar to Grawert coefficients,
which have been defined in the theory of atomic collisions. 16
The most important feaure of Eq. (1) is the separation
of orientational and dynamical effects, as expressed in the 3j
symbol and tensor opacities, respectively. This permits the
derivation of propensity rules for collisional energy transfer
and reorientation which are independent of the specific in
teraction potential and depend only on angular momentum
coupling factors, as shown below. The non vanishing ofthe 3j
coefficient in Eq. (1) requires that J, J', and K satisfy an
angular momentum triangle relation, IJ -J' I <,K <,J + J'.
The allowed values of K correspond therefore to the amount
of angular momentum transferred during the collision. This
means that [2 min (J,J') + 1] tensor orders, at most, will
contribute to the sum in Eq. (1). This result applies only to
laboratory frame quantization.7 Alexander and Davis7 have
shown that the number of non vanishing tensor orders is
further reduced if either the infinite-order-sudden (lOS) or
first-order Born approximation is applicable.
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92. No.1. 1 January 1990
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The sudden approximation may be shown to be valid in
the present CaF-Ar collision system based on simple classi
cal arguments, especially at the relatively low CaF rotational
angular momentum and in the range of temperatures ofthis
experiment. Its validity has been experimentally confirmed
by Dufour et al.,5 through a successful fit of their CaF-Ar
collision data to a sudden scaling relation. Taking the typical
collision duration to be 1"c ;:::,2~ohTrv;:::,5 X 10-13 s, where
(T = 5 A 2 is a typical cross section and v is the mean thermal
relative speed, and taking the rotational period of the mole-
cule to be 1"rot = 21TI/ [h ~J(J + 1)] = 5 X 10-11 s, where I
is the moment of inertia of CaF and J = 112, we have
1" c /1" rot ;:::, 10 -2• This demonstrates the validity of the sudden
approximation in the present experiment.
The remaining condition required for the validity of the
lOS approximation is that the translational energy be large
compared to the energy separations between collisionally
coupled states of the molecule. 19 The average translational
energy is on the order of 600 cm -1 and the rotational and A
doublet energy gaps in this experiment are on the order of 1
cm -I, so that this condition is clearly satisfied.
Since this experiment monitors only collisional pro
cesses fot which 0. = 0.', the following discussion will be
restricted to this case.
Application of the lOS approximation leads to the fol
lowing expression for the tensor opacities in Eq. (2), for
collisions which are elastic in 0. (0. = 0.'):
X 1 " IR K.IOS 12 (3) (2K + 1) ft, JW •. J'L'n."
where
Ffn •. J'n .. =Hl +EE'( _1)J+J'+K+2n] (4)
and all the dependence on the interaction potential, reduced
mass, and collision energy is now contained in the RK fac
tors. Important propensity rules for K are found in the r
factor of Eq. (4) and will be discussed in the next section.
These arise from the interference effect mentioned in Sec. I,
which occurs in the squared matrix element of the interac
tion potential. A similar term occurs in inelastic cross sec
tion expressions for all states possessing A doubling (Le.,
non-~ states).
The propensity rules implied in Eq. (4) and the restric
tions on K and aM dictated by the 3j symbols ofEq. (1) are
the key results. These are explored in Sec. V. Here we state
Alexander's and Davis' final expression for the laboratory
frame M-state-resolved lOS integral cross sections, within a
case (a) 211 state, for collisions in a thermal cell environment
and for the case of 0. = 0.':
=_1T I(J
k]n. K.Q -M M' K )2 _ Q Ffn • .J'n .. J'
x(2J+ 1)(2J'+ 1) " IRK•IOS 12 (5) 2K + 1 Ct, JLn •. J'L'n.'· v. PREDICTED RESULTS
This section contains a description of some observable
consequences of Eq. (5) and how they relate to the present
work. These features are discussed in greater detail in refer
ence 7.
A significant simplification of the problem results when
one transforms from the collision frame treatment of the
scattering to a laboratory frame treatment, independent of
any particular dynamical approximations. In this transfor
mation the directions of the initial relative velocity vectors of
the collision pair are averaged with respect to the laboratory
fixed quantization axis, assuming an isotropic distribution.
In the collision frame, interference occurs between the var
ious possible contributing tensor orders K which appear in
the orientation-dependent integral cross sections.20 In the
transformation to the laboratory frame these effects are
washed out, i.e., the tensor orders are decoupled from each
other and the expressions are simplified. The essential differ
ence between the orientation-dependent cross sections in the
collision and laboratory frames is that in the collision frame
the cross sections consist of the square of a sum of K-depen
dent T-matrix elements (thereby producing interference)
whereas the laboratory frame cross sections consist of a sum
of squares of the same. Naturally, the degeneracy-averaged
cross sections are identical in both frames. The important
result of this decoupling of tensor orders in the laboratory
frame is a profound reduction in the number of independent
measurements which are required to determine the entire
matrix of JM --J' M' cross sections.
When combined with the triangle relation between J, J',
and K, the decoupling of the tensor orders implies that all
JM--J'M' integral cross sections (for fixed J and J'), of
which there are (2J + 1 )(2J' + 1), are determined by a
much smaller set of2 min(J,J') + 1 parameters, the tensor
opacities of Eq. (2). For example, the 12 J = 112,
M --J' = 5/2, M' cross sections are reduced to 2 tensor opac
ities, with K = 2 and 3. Similar reductions in the number of
parameters required to model inelastic processes have been
shown to apply in atomic collisions.16 It is important to re
member that this reduction of independent parameters ap
plies only to laboratory frame quantization.
An important additional propensity rule, which con
trols the tensor orders which contribute to the cross sections,
is implicit in the r factor of Eq. (4). The condition for the
nonvanishing of the r factors, and therefore for the non
vanishing of the tensor opacities and cross sections in CaF
(A 2111/2) is, from Eq. (4),
(6)
This implies that for each set of JME --J' M' E' cross sections,
for fixed J,E, and J' ,E', only even or only odd tensor orders
will contribute. Table II summarizes this propensity rule.
There are two remaining features of Eq. (5) which de
serve to be highlighted. First, the 3j symbol implies that a
strict aM = 0 collision selection rule will never be valid in a
thermal cell environment.7 It would require that the 3j sym
bol vanish whenever Q is not equal to zero, which does not
happen. The second feature involves the RK factor in the
sum of Eq. (5). As already mentioned, this factor contains
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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TABLE II. Nonvanishing tensor orders K contributing to cross sections.
J+J' even
J+J' odd E= E'
odd K
even K even K
odd K
all interaction potential, reduced mass, and collision energy
information about the system. Alexander and Davis7 have
shown that in the lOS approximation, for any state in which
O;fA (such as 2nl/2),
1 KIOS 12 (J' K J)2 R JLnE;J'L'nE' a: _ 0 0 0 (7)
The full expression for the RK factor can be found in Ref. 7.
In the high-J limit, the 3j symbol in Eq. (7) will be non van
ishing only if K -J' + J is even. This, combined with the
condition for the nonvanishing ofthe pc factor [Eq. (6)],
implies that, in the high J limit, there is a propensity toward
the conservation of the € index, i.e., collisional transfer
between A-doublet levels of different elfsymmetry is unlike
ly. This rule holds for both M-dependent and degeneracy
averaged integral cross sections. It can show up clearly even
in the lowest rotational levels of a 2n 1/2 state, as demonstrat
ed in the present experiment (see Fig. 5), and has been veri
fied in a number of other experiments.5,9,21
The relevant aspects of the Alexander and Davis analy
sis which have been discussed in this section are summarized in Table III below. The table shows each feature of Eq. (5)
and its source.
The successful application of these results to the CaF
A 2n state relies on this state being well described by case (a)
coupling. 22 That this is the case can be readily seen by noting
that the ratio of the diagonal spin-orbit and rotational con
stant in the v = 0 level is much greater than unity.22 For
CaF A 2n we have AoJBo:::::215.
Since J, J', and K must obey a triangle relation, in the
case of J = 1/2 there are only two possible values of K for
each J = 1/2 ..... J' collision induced transition, K = J' ± 1/
2. Table II can then be used to eliminate one of these, either
the odd or the even one, for collisions into a specific elf
symmetry level. In other words, for collisions out of J = 1/2,
regardless of the final rotational quantum number (at least
up to the validity limit of the lOS and first Born approxima
tions) only one parameter, the only surviving tensor opacity
pK is needed to determine all 2 ( 2J' + 1) cross sections, for a
givenJ',€'. TabelIVsummarizestheseresultsuptoJ' = 9/2.
Extension to higher J' is trivial.
An interesting feature which is displayed in Table IV, in
addition to the extreme reduction in the number of tensor
orders, is that for a given J = 1/2 ..... J' process elf symmetry
conserving and changing collisions are governed by different
values of K, i.e., these two dynamical processes are complete
ly independent of each other, as initially recognized by Alex
ander and Davis.7
The consequence of there being only one non vanishing
tensor order for J = 1/2 ..... J' ,€' collisions is that the pK fac-
Co F Collision Induced OODR: E2 ~+:A2 nl/2-x2~+
PAr = 1.5Torr
E2!+-A2n 01 9/2 7/2 5/2 3/2 1/2
1/2 I I I I I
G>
U c:
G>
U
VI
G> ...
o
::J
lJ...
>
:J
"0
G>
N
o
E ... o
Z * 2 A nl/2 f
P21 *
7/2 512 3/2
I I
*
*
17678 porent 112 3/2 5/2 ~+2
I I I ~I !-~ nll2
2 A nl12e
RI
1/2
I
*
*
*
17679 3/2
I pump: 0"+
probe: 0"
pump: 0"+
probe: 0" +
Probe Loser Frequency (cm-I )
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92. No.1. 1 January 1990 FIG. 5. Collision-induced OODR
fluorescence spectra in CaF. The
pump laser is u+ circularly polar
ized and its frequency is fixed on the
A'n'/,-X'1:+ (0,0), Q, (112)
transition, while the probe laser fre
quency is scanned in the region of the
E '1: + -A 'n 1/2 transition. E 21: + -
X '1: + ultraviolet fluorescence is de
tected. The lines marked by asterisks
were used to obtain the reported
cross sections.
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TABLE III. Features of theoretical laboratory frame cross sections [see Eq. (5)].
Feature
Only odd or only even K's contribute
to a given cross section
Il.M = 0 not strictly valid Source
(/-M ~, ~Q)
e-e and/-/at high I. (I' K I)
-!l 0 !l and pK
Only 2min (/,J') + I tensor orders
required to determine all 1M -I'M'
cross sections. collision -laboratory frame averaging
tors will cancel in ratios of cross sections into (1) different
M' sublevels of the same J' ,E', or (2) adjacent J' levels of
opposite elfsymmetry but equal K values, as in the case of
J' = 112 elf changing and J' = 3/2 elf conserving pro
cesses, for both of which K = 1. As an example of case (1)
above, the ratio of cross sections for collisionally induced
transitions from J = 112, M = + 112,/ into the J' = 112,
M' = ± 1/2, e levels is predicted to be
UJ = 112.M= + 112j-J' = 112.M' = -112.e
UJ = 112,M= + 112j-J' = 112,M' = + 112,e
which can be seen from Eq. (1). (8)
Table V summarizes the predicted proportionalities
among the M-dependent cross sections which are derived
fromEq. (l),forJ= 1I2,M= + 1I2,f-+J' = 112 and 3/2
processes. In using this table, it must be remembered that
only those cross sections which involve equal K values can be
related to each other in the way described above, since only
then will the tensor opacities cancel. Table V contains all of
the predictions which are experimentally tested here.
TABLE IV. 1= 1/2-contributing tensor orders.
I'
1/2 3/2 5/2 7/2 9/2
# ofo's
to be determined 4 8 12 16 20
K,
ell conserving 0 2 3 4
K,
ell 2 3 4 5
changing VI. METHOD OF DATA ANAI,.YSIS
This experiment has yielded thermally averaged rate
constants, from which velocity-averaged cross sections were
obtained by dividing the former by the average relative ther
mal speed of the sample. The steady state rate equation for a
collisionally populated (daughter) level is
nd
( -) p CaF _ 0 nArCTU nCaF - 2 -,
'TR (A 111/2) (9)
where n Ar is the Ar density, u is the cross section of interest,
n~aF and n&F are the steady state densities of the parent and
daughter levels, and 'TR (A 2111/2) is the radiative lifetime of
the A state. That is, at steady state the rate of collision-in
duced population transfer from the parent to the daughter
level is equal to the daughter (A -+ X) radiative decay rate (in
terms of molecules Is). A more useful form ofEq. (9) is
d [( _ ) ] nCaF v 2 -p-= - 'TR (A 111/2) UPAr
nCaF kT
[( 8 )112 2 ] = 1Tp,kT 'TR(A 111/2) UPAr> (10)
where PAr is the Ar pressure and the ideal gas law has been
used. It remains to relate this population ratio to the ratio of
intensities of laser induced fluorescence lines corresponding
to p~obe transitions out of the daughter and parent levels (ld
and Ip).
TABLE V. Predicted cross section proportionalities for I = 1/2,
M= + 1/2./
M'
I' -3/2 -1/2 1/2 3/2 K
1/2 I-I 0 0
1/2 I-e 2
3/2 I-I 0 2 3
3/2 I-e 4 3 2 2
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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There are two main assumptions inherent in Eqs. (9)
and ( 10) above: ( 1 ) on the average, at most one collision per
radiative lifetime of the parent A 2n 1/2 state occurs, and (2)
the rate of probe laser depopulation of the A state sublevels is
small compared to the A-state radiative decay rate. In other
words, both the collisional transfer and probe laser pumping
rates (per molecule) must be small compared to the A -state
radiative decay rate. The A-state radiative decay rate is
-4.6X 107 S.-I 23 Assuming an upper limit of U= 10 A2,
the maximum collisional transfer rate per molecule at
PAr = 1 Torr is approximately nAroV = 5 X 105 s-1, which
validates the first assumption. The second assumption can
be shown to be true by a simple comparison of the Rabi
frequency of the E-A excitation at the laser intensities of this
experiment to the known A-state radiative decay rate.24
The expression for the fluorescence intensity depends
upon the transition moments of the excitation and fluores
cence transitions, the laser and fluorescence polarizations,
and the detection geometry. The general theoretical treat
ment of resonance fluorescence can be found in Refs. 25, 26,
and 27. For the present case of circularly polarized incident
radiation and unpolarized detection, it can be shown that the
fluorescence intensity for the A -+ E -+ X process has the fol
lowing form, in terms of the 2K multi pole moments of the
scattered light:
[a:n(JA)S(JA,JE)S(JX,JE) L (_I)JrJx(2K+l)
K=O.2
(1 1 K\2 {11K} {11K}
X 0 0 0) JE JE Jx JE JE JA
XPK (cos (J), (11)
where n (JA ) is the population in the initial A state level, P K
is a Legendre polynomial, (J being the angle of detection mea
sured relative to the incident laser propagation direction
(90· in this case), J A ,J E' and J x are the angular momentum
quantum numbers of the A (initial), E (intermediate), and
X (final) states, and S(JA,JE) and S(JX,JE) are the line
strength factors for the probe excitation and fluorescence
transitions, respectively. The sum in Eq. (11) contains all of
the angular and polarization dependence of the fluorescence
intensity. Since all of the probe transitions in this experiment
are between the same electronic and and vibrational states
and lie close in frequency, no Franck-Condon, electronic
linestrength, or frequency corrections to the intensity ratios
are needed. Integrated rather than peak intensities were
measured in order to account for some velocity equilibration
(inhomogeneous broadening) which accompanies the ener
gy transfer events. These intensities were also normalized to
the probe laser power and to the A -+ X fluorescence signal, as
discussed in Sec. III. The latter provided corrections for var
iations both in pump laser power and CaF density.
Combining Eq. (10) and (11), we obtain
~; = [Sd(J~'J~) ~ Sd(J~,J~)¢d(J~,J~,J~) 1
SP(J~,J~) L SP(J"x,J~)¢JP(J~,J~,J"x)
J~
X [(1T'J.l8kTY1\-R (A 2n1/2) ]uPAT' (12) where the ¢ factors represent the sum in Eq. (11). The ex
plicit sums in Eq. (12) are over all E-X fluorescence chan
nels and are necessary since the UV fluorescence is not dis
persed. According to Eq. (12), a plot of integrated and
normalized daughter to parent intensity ratios as a function
of Ar pressure will yield straight lines, the slopes of which
determine the thermal rate constants and the velocity-aver
aged cross sections, if the temperature of the sample and the
radiative lifetime of the collisional daughter state are known.
VII. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
Figure 5 displays representative data obtained at fixed
Ar pressure (PAr = 1.5 Torr) for both relative helicities of
the circularly polarized pump and probe lasers.
E 2I, + -+X 2I, + ultraviolet fluorescence intensity, normal
ized to the A 2nI/2-+X2I,+ fluorescence signal and to the
probe laser power is plotted against probe laser frequency.
The OODR fluorescence excitation spectra have sub
Doppler linewidths (-200 MHz FWHM for the parent
line, > 300 MHz for the collisional lines), since the active
molecules are velocity selected by the pump laser. The par
ent line is labeled in the upper trace and corresponds to prob
ing the population in the originally pumped A 2n 1/2'
J = 1/2, M = + 1/2,/ symmetry sublevel (see Fig. 1). All
E --A QI transitions probe/symmetry levels (corresponding
to e//symmetry conserving collisions), whereas E--A Q21
transitions probe e symmetry levels (corresponding to e/ /
symmetry changing collisions). The transitions used in this
experiment are marked in Fig. 5 with asterisks. Precise wave
numbers of all transitions shown in Fig. 5 are listed in Table
I.
The cross sections result experimentally from a pressure
dependent study of relative daughter and parent line intensi
ties (integrated and normalized). This analysis is presented
below. The spectra of Fig. 5, obtained at afixed argon pres
sure, provide a qualitative picture of the relative amounts of
population transferred in these collision processes. Each
daughter level studied receives less than 6% of the partially
relaxed steady-state parent population in the range of pres
sures ofthis experiment (0.5-+ 1.5 Torr).
The most important feature of Fig. 5 is the relative in
tensities of a single line in the upper and lower scans, corre
sponding to u+ and u-polarizations of the probe laser. For
example, a dramatic effect is seen in the E-A QI ( 1/2) transi
tion recorded with u+ probe light (lower trace), whereby
the popUlation of the J' = 1/2, M' = -1/2, / symmetry
sublevel is probed. Collisions which populate this level are
rotationally elastic and correspond to a pure reorientation of
J without any change of magnitude. It can be seen from
Table V and the discussion in Sec. V that this cross section is
predicted to vanish. The nonzero intensity ofthis line and its
pressure dependent behavior can be qualitatively accounted
for by two experimental defects: ( 1 ) the imperfect u+ polar
ization of the pump laser, and (2) partial saturation of the
A --X transition. These defects, along with a simple model
designed to explain the data, are discussed below after the
data are presented. Another large reorientation effect is re
vealed in the P21 (3/2) transition, which is labeled in Fig. 5.
Since the lower state of this transition (J = 3/2) has four
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92. No.1, 1 Jjanuary 1990
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TABLE VI. Pressure-dependent ratios of daughter to parent line intensities8•b (integrated and normalized, as
described in the text). Initial CaF level: A 2n'/2' J = 1/2, M = + 1/2,/
I:J.J 0 +1 +1
E+-A Line Q,(0.5) Q2,(0.5) Q,(\.5) Q2' (\.5)
Daughter symmetry f e f e
Probe laser
polarization q+ q+ q q+ q q+ q -
Pressure
0.50 Torr 0.1l97 0.0204 0.0108 0.0072 0.0144 0.0021 0.0018
0.62 0.1l84 0.0216 0.0122 0.0082 0.0150 0.0027 0.0024
0.75 0.1202 0.0219 0.0129 0.0090 0.0213 0.0027 0.0027
0.87 0.1l36 0.0268 0.0150 0.0098 0.0038 0.0026
1.00 0.1093 0.0274 0.0167 0.0110 0.0246 0.0035 0.0029
1.25 O.llll 0.0343 0.0195 0.0132 0.0324 0.0045 0.0036
1.50 0.0314
8 The estimated experimental uncertainty in these ratios is 5%.
b Each data point corresponds to the ratio of the intensity of the stated E-A line to the parent line, the Q, (0.5)
line with q-probe laser polarization.
(a) 0.14
0.12
~ -I: 0.10 .. .. .,
CI. -0.08 -.. .. 0.06 -..c .. = ., 0.04 "d ;:-
0.02
0.00
0.4 0.6 (see text)
" \
"
0.8 1.0 1.2 magnetic sublevels (M = -3/2 -+ + 3/2) and the upper
state (J = 1/2) has two sublevels (M = -1/2, + 1/2),
0'+ light probes only the J' = 3/2, M' = -3/2 and -1/2
sublevels and 0'-light probes only the J' = 3/2,
M' = + 1/2 and + 3/2 sublevels. According to Table V,
the ratio of cross sections and therefore of line intensities for
exciting this transition with 0'-vs 0'+ light is 5 (i.e.,
[3 + 2] / [0 + 1]). It is seen in Fig. 5 that this is qualitative
ly in agreement with the data (the P21 ( 1.5) line is barely
discernible above the noise level in the lower trace) . Another
propensity rule from the Alexander-Davis theory7 which is
readily apparent in Fig. 5 is that e//symmetry conserving
collisions are more probable than e/ / symmetry changing
ones. This is seen by noting that the intensities of Ql lines
(with/symmetry lower levels) are always larger than those
of Q21 lines (with e symmetry lower levels) at the same J
(the rotational linestrength factors for these two branches
are nearly identical at J = 1/2 and 3/2). Finally, it is worth
noting that, according to Table V and the data of Fig. 5,
larger reorientations seem to correlate with changes in elf
symmetry. Argon Pressure (Torr)
(b)
=: c .. .. ..
CI. -.. ..
.c ..
:I
co ... -0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01 1.4 85
1.6
02 t(O.5) (IV)
QI(1.5) «n
<b1(1.5) (a+) The pressure-dependent daughter/parent line intensity
ratios are displayed in Table VI and plotted in Fig. 6. Figure
6(b) shows only the inelastic data, which are labeled and
shown on an expanded vertical scale relative to Fig. 6(a).
The ratios of collisional daughter to parent line intensities
(integrated and normalized) are plotted against argon pres
sure. Eqmiti(;m (12) predicts the form of this dependence.
The solid lines are the linear least squares fits to the data. The
nonzero intercepts ofthe linear fits to the inelastic data are
due to collisions of CaF with residual gas (other than Ar) in
the cell. The ambient cell pressure (before Ar was added)
was typically 20 mTorr. The thermal rate constants and ve
locity-averaged cross sections, which are derived from the
slopes of these lines, are displayed in Table VII, along with o.oof~;;~:::!=:.:::::=:::::::: <b1(1.5) «n
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6
Argon Pressure (Torr)
FIG. 6. Pressure-dependent daughter/parent line intensity ratios from Ta
ble VI. The solid lines are linear least squares fits to the data. The nonzero
intercepts of the linear fits are due to collisions of CaF with residual gas in
the cell. (a) complete data set, (b) inelastic data only.
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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TABLE VII. Measured thermal rate constants (k) and velocity-averaged cross sections (u).· Initial CaF
level: J = 1/2, M = + 1/2,/
M' probe
sublevels transition Ie"
l' t:J probed symmetry (E2I,+ -A 20,/2) ( X to-II cm3/s) U(A.2)b
1/2 0 -1/2 e Q2,(0.5)u+ 8.1(1.8) 9.1 (2.0)
+ 1/2 e Q2,(0.5)u- 5.1(.98) 5.7(1.1)
3/2 +1 -3/2, -1/2, t Q,{ l.5)u+ 3.4(.71 ) 3.8{0.8 )
+ 1/2
-1/2, + 1/2, t Q,(l.5)u- 8.2(2.0) 9.2(2.2)
+ 3/2
-3/2, -1/2, e Q2,(l·5)u+ 1.3(.36) 1.5(0.4 )
+ 1/2
-1/2, + 1/2, e Q2'( l.5)u- 0.89(.18) 1.0(0.2)
+ 3/2
·Constants used: J.l=23.877 amu=3.994xto-23 grams. 'TR(A20) = 21.9(4.0) X to-9 s (Ref. 23).
kT( T= 900 K) = 1.249 X to-13 ergs.
b 1 u uncertainties in parentheses. These arise primarily from the uncertainty in the experimental value of'T R
(A 20).
the constants used to arrive at these results. The linear rela
tionship predicted in Eq. (12) is well satisfied by the data.
The assumption of single collision conditions made in Sec.
VI is experimentally validated. The experimental uncertain
ties in the intensity ratios of Table VI are estimated to be 5%,
based on the reproducibility of the data over a number of
runs.
The elastic data, the uppermost data set in Fig. 6 (a), are
anomalous. They yield an unexpectedly large intercept and
an unphysical negative cross section. This behavior can be
qualitatively explained by taking into account the two pre
viously mentioned experimental defects: (I) the a+ polar
ized pump laser beam had approximately 5% of the wrong
(a-) circular polarization state, so that unwanted
AM = -1 transitions occurred in the preparation step (see
Fig. I), and (2) the pump laser partially saturates the A ..... X
transition, so that the ratio of the prepared population in the
A state J = 1/2, M = + 1/2 sublevelto that in the J = 1/2,
M = -1/2 sublevel is not linearly proportional to the a+ 1
a-polarization ratio of the pump beam. Under conditions
of saturation of the A-X transition, the M-sublevel popula
tions tend towards equalization. With increasing pressure,
as the mean relaxation time of the A state decreases and
hence the degree of saturation decreases, the M = + 1/21
M = -1/2 population ratio asymptotically approaches the
a+ la-intensity ratio, giving the observed negative slope of
Fig. 6 (a). This simple model neglects collisional coupling
between these two sublevels and between those of the ground
state, treating the a+ and a-transitions as independent of
each other. It also neglects loss of population due to relaxa
tion to other levels. We have made an attempt to model the
data using this picture and have obtained qualitative agree
ment with the observation. Naturally, the nature of these
data prevented us from extracting quantitative information
concerning the probability of elastic reorientation.
In Fig. 7 the experimental cross section ratios are com
pared with those predicted in Table V. These three predicted
inelastic cross section ratios shown lie within the experimen-tal range of uncertainty. The experimental uncertainties are
primarily due to two sources: (I) the large experimental
uncertainty in 7'R (A 2n1/2) (_18%23), and (2) the propa
gation of errors due to the compound nature of the cross
section ratios (they are ratios of line intensity ratios). In
contrast to this favorable agreement, the predicted propor
tionalities between theJ = 1/2,J-J' = 3/2,/andJ = 1/2,
/-J' = 1/2,e cross sections, as derived from Table V, are in
very poor agreement with the experimental values. These
proportionalities should obey an energy sudden scaling rela
tion for 2n states similar to that derived by Alexander [Ref.
28, Eq. (60)] and observed by Dufour et a/.s for the CaF
(A 2n 1/2) orientation-averaged cross sections. This predicts
the J = 1/2, /-J' = 3/2,Jorientation-averaged cross sec
tion to be twice that ofJ = 1/2,/ -J' = 112, e, which agrees
with Table V if one sums over M'. It can be seen from Table
0(0+)
0(0 -)
3
2
o 2.0 If-7fllf~el
1.6(5)
• predicted
~ experiment 1.5 1.5(5)
FIG. 7. Experimental and theoretical cross section ratios. The initial state is
A 20'/2 V = 0, J = 1/2,/ u+ and u-refer to probe laser circular polariza
tion states.
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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VII that the measured cross sections into the J' = 3/2,fsub
levels are comparable to those into J' = 112, e, in disagree
ment with the predictions. Nothing aside from a systematic
error in the present measurements or analysis seems capable
of accounting for this discrepancy.
VIII. SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION
We have measured thermal rate constants and velocity
averaged cross sections for collision-induced angular mo
mentum reorientation and rotational energy transfer within
the A 201/2 state of CaF, in collisions with Ar atoms. An
optical-optical double resonance (OODR) configuration
was used with two circularly polarized cw dye lasers. A spe
cific A 201/2 magnetic sublevel, J = 112, M = + 112, was
chosen as the initial state in these collisions.
We have compared our results to the theoretical predic
tions of Alexander and Davis,7 who have used the infinite
order-sudden approximation along with spherical tensor
techniques to describe collisions of open-shell molecules
with inert partners. Satisfactory agreement of the experi
mental results with the Alexander-Davis theory has been
found when comparing ratios of cross sections correspond
ing to collision-induced transitions into different magnetic
sublevels ofa given final rotational level, as shown in Fig. 7.
Experimentally obtained ratios of cross sections correspond
ing to collision-induced transitions into different final rota
tionallevels agree poorly with the predicted values. An at
tempt to measure the cross section for elastic depolarization
in the A 20 1/2' J = 112 level failed due to imperfect circular
polarization and the partially saturating intensity of the
pump laser.
As mentioned in Sec. I, Dufour et al.5 have measured
orientation-averaged (and velocity-averaged) cross sections
within CaF(A 20) under nearly identical sample condi
tions, through analysis of dispersed fluorescence. Among
their measured cross sections were those corresponding to
the same initial and final rotational levels as in our experi
ment. These orientation-averaged cross sections, OjE_J'E"
are related to the present M-dependent ones, ° JME_J' M'E' , by
1
°JE_J'E' = -2J 1 L °JME_J'M'E' , + MM' (13)
which represents a sum over M' and an average over M. The
only orientation-averaged cross section which is possible to
predict from our data is 0J= 112J-J' = 112,e' since this experi
ment lacked complete M-state specificity in the J = 112,
j-J' = 3/2 cross sections, making it impossible to perform
the sum in Eq. (13). Our prediction of 0J= 1/2J-J' = II2,e is
obtained by summing the measured cross sections of Table
VII corresponding to transitions into the J' = 112,
M' = + 112 and -112 sublevels. The result is
°2 14.8(3.1)A, compared to the result of Dufour et al.,
5.2(0.5)A2.5 This disagreement is disturbing, but we have
not found any errors in either experiment which might ex
plain it.
A possible method of achieving complete M-state speci
ficity for J' > 112 levels is to apply a small magnetic field.
Since the CaF A 201/2 state is close to the case (a) limit, it is
not magnetically sensitive. Its magnetic sublevel degeneracy would therefore not be split in the field. The X 2 1: + state
magnetic sublevels, on the other hand, will tune in the mag
netic field. This would allow individual magnetic sublevels
of theA 20112 state to be selectively populated by a circularly
polarized laser through appropriate choices oflaser frequen
cy. M-specific cross sections could be determined through
analysis of the dispersed A-X fluorescence, as in the work of
Dufour et al. A preliminary calculation29 has shown that the
required magnetic fields are quite modest ( < 200 Gauss).
Since the A 201/2 state is not affected by the magnetic field,
the collision dynamics within this state would be unchanged
from the zero field case.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a grant from the National
Science Foundation(CHE86-I4437). We would like to ac
knowledge M. Alexander for encouraging this work. Assis
tance from D. Baldwin and S. Cameron is gratefully ac
knowledged.
APPENDIX: THE EFFECT OF CaF HYPERFINE
STRUCTURE
It was stated in Sec. I, and the subsequent analysis was
based on the assumption, that the hyperfine structure in the
CaF A 201/2 state, due to the 19F nuclear spin of I = 112,
could be neglected, as far as the collisional propensity rules
of Sec. V are concerned. The justification for this will be
presented in this section.
The condition for neglecting the hyperfine structure is
that the A 20112 state be "well described" by the quantum
numbers J and M and not by F and M F (F = J + I). The
important parameter for determining whether CaF is de
scribed by J or by F in the A 20112 state is the ratio of the
characteristic coupling time between I and J (given by the
inverse of the hyperfine splitting) to the lifetime (deter
mined by the inverse of the homogeneous linewidth of the A
X transitions) . If this ratio is large, then I has very little effect
on the angular momentum coupling and J is the correct
quantum number for describing the state. It will be argued
below that the hyperfine splitting in the CaF A 201/2, and
3/2 levels is less than about 6 MHz, giving a ratio of I,J
coupling time to A-state relaxation time of -200 MHz/6
MHz> 30. This implies that J is the important quantum
number in the A state and that the nuclear spin has a negligi
ble effect on the collision dynamics.
Detailed and accurate molecular beam, laser-rf double
resonance experiments have been performed by Childs et
al.30 in which the hyperfine structure of the X 2 1: + state of
CaF was determined. Even though they used the A-X transi
tion in die laser excitation step, their double resonance tech
nique was totally insensitive to the hyperfine structure of the
A 20 state. Bernath et al. 31 determined an upper limit on the
hyperfine splitting of the A 203/2 state using sub-Doppler
intermodulated fluorescence spectroscopy. They found
a + (b + c) < 10 MHz,
2 (AI)
where a, b, andc are the nuclear spin-electron orbital, iso
tropic nuclear spin-electron spin, and anisotropic nuclear
J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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141.212.109.170 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 15:21:4088 J. B. Norman and R. W. Field: Angular momentum reorientation
spin--electron spin hyperfine parameters, respectively. It is
well known32 that this compound parameter determines the
hyperfine splitting in a case (ap) 2113/2 state. In a 211 1/2 state
the hyperfine splitting is described by the same three con
stants plus an additional constant, called d, which arises
from the part of the nuclear spin--electron spin Hamiltonian
which obeys the selection rules Il.A = ± I, ± 2. It connects
the + nand -n basis functions of 2111/2, but does not
connect those of 2113/2, Up to first order in J (neglecting
Il.J =FO matrix elements), the expression for the hyperfine
energies in a case (ap) 211 1/2 state are32
Ehf(elj) = [a-(b;C) ±d(J++)]
F(F + I) -J(J + 1) -1(1 + I)
X 4J(J + 1) , (A2)
where the plus sign refers to the e component and the minus
sign to the/component ofthe A doublet. Treatment only to
first order is certainly justified, since the hyperfine splitting
is much smaller than the rotational spacing.
CaF is known to be well described by an ionic molecule
picture.33,34 There is one unpaired electron which is well.lo
calized on a Ca2+ center and which has 4P1T and 3d1T orbItal
character35 in theA 211 state. The implications of this picture
for the hyperfine structure of CaF are straightforward. Since
the only unpaired electron in CaF is located on the opposite
nuclear center from that of the nuclear spin, a very weak
hyperfine interaction is expected. Both the nuclear spin
electron spin and nuclear spin--electron orbit angular mo
mentum interactions are expected to be small based on these
considerations. This is consistent with Eq. (AI).
There are two well known relations among the hyper
fine parameters of a diatomic molecule, which apply under
certain conditions that are well satisfied here.32 The first is
b = -c/3. c is a spin-spin parameter and b includes spin
spin and Fermi contact interactions. If the Fermi contact
term vanishes, (as it does for a p1T or d1T orbital) the above
expression results. The other relation is c = 3 (a -d), which
applies when both the spin and orbital angular momenta are
carried by only one electron. This is clearly the case for
CaF(A 211). If these expressions are used in Eq. (A2) (with
1= 1/2), the result is
E (el'j) = d [1 + (J + 1/2)]
hf 4J(J + I)
X [F(F + I) -J(J + I) -!] . (A3)
Table VIII displays the hyperfine splittings in the A 2111/2
state for J = 1/2 and 3/2, which are derived from Eq. (A3).
The most striking feature 0/ Table VIII is that the hyperfine
splitting in the J = 112, / symmetry level 0/ the CaF A 2[[//2
state is predicted to vanish. This is the parent level in this
experiment, populated by the pump laser. An upper l!~it for
d can be estimated from the results of Bernath et al. They
have shown that the hyperfine splittings in the highly ionic
calcium monohalides increase in going from CaF to Cal and
have measured an upper limit of Id I < 6 MHz for both CaBr
and Cal. 34 This should be compared to the homogeneous
broadening in this experiment, which is -200 MHz. TABLE VIII. Hyperfine splittings in CaF (A 20,/2)' d = 6p(#1 (sin2 8 I
rl)ca< (4p7T) ,a
J ell F Ehf
1/2 e 0 -d
I (1/3)d
I 0 0
I 0
3/2 e 0 ( -9/1O)d
I (-1/2)d
I 0 (3/1O)d
I (l/6)d
a Po = Bohr magneton, PI = '9F nuclear magnetic moment, (J = angle be
tween molecular axis and radius r from nucleus to electron. See Ref. 32.
Alexander and Dagdigian have extended the spherical
tensor calculation of cross sections in thermal cell environ
ments to include molecular hyperfine structure.36 They ar
rived at an expression which is analogous to Eq. (I):
= ~(2F+ 1)(2F' + 1) k2
{J J' K}2(F Xh F' F I -MF K )2
-Q
XPJflE,rfl'E' , (A4)
where PJflE,J'fl'E' was defined in Eq. (3). Since the same J
dependent tensor opacity appears here as in the case of zero
hyperfine structure, the same propensity rules on K will ap
ply, as given in Tables II and IV. An additional propensity
rule can be obtained from Eq. (A4), however. That is, the
largest cross sections will correspond to transitions for
which Il.J = Il.F, and this propensity will become increasing
ly strong as J and J' increase.36 Details can be found in Ref.
36. This propensity is independent of dynamical limit and of
the atom-molecule interaction potential.
It has been the purpose of this section to demonstrate
the inappropriateness of applying hyperfine collisional pro
pensity rules to the CaF A 2111/2 state. Equation (A4) pro
vides a quantitative test of this assertion. For example, con
siderEq. (A4) as applied totheJ = 1/2,F,MF,j .... J' = 1/2,
F' ,M F', e collisional transitions, that is, to the Il.J = 0, el/
symmetry changing transitions. If hyperfine propensity
rules are relevant, the predicted ratio of cross sections corre
sponding to probing the J' = 1/2, F', M F' , e levels with a'+
and (7'-probe laser polarization is 0.75. If hyperfine struc
ture is neglected this ratio becomes 1.5. The measured value
is 1.5 ± 0.5. As Fig. 7 shows, the experimental results are
consistent with the zero hyperfine case.
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18A. S. Davydov, Quantum Mechanics, Volume 1, Chap. XI (Pergamon, London, 1965).
19G. A. Parker and R. T Pack, J. Chern. Phys. 68,1585 (1978); R. T Pack
ibid. 60, 633 (1974); G. A. Parker and R. T. Pack, ibid. 66, 2850 (1977).
2"T. Orlikowski, Mol. Phys. 59, 1215 (1986).
210. Nedelec and J. Dufayard, Chern. Phys. 71, 279 (1982); C. Linton, J.
Mol. Spectrosc. 69, 351 (1978); R. Copeland and D. R. Crosley, J. Chern.
Phys. 81, 6400 (1984).
22G. Herzberg, Molecular Spectra and Molecular Structure. /. Spectra of
Diatomic Molecules (Van Nostrand-Reinhold, Princeton, New Jersey,
1950).
23p. J. Dagdigian, H. W. Cruse, and R. N. Zare, J. Chern. Phys. 60, 2330
(1974).
24J. B. Norman, Ph.D. thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1988.
25R. J. Ballagh and J. Cooper, Astrophys. J. 213, 479 (1977).
26A. Omont, E. W. Smith, and J. Cooper, Astrophys. J. 175, 185 (1972).
27C. H. Green, and R. N. Zare, J. Chern. Phys. 78, 6741 (1983).
28M. H. Alexander, J. Chern. Phys. 76, 5974 (1982).
29David P. Baldwin (private communication).
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365 (1981); W. J. Childs and L. S. Goodman, Phys. Rev. A 21, 1216
(1980).
31p. F. Bernath, P. G. Cummins, and R. W. Field, Chern. Phys. Lett. 70, 618
( 1980).
32R. A. Frosch and H. M. Foley, Phys. Rev. 88,1337 (1952); C. H. Townes
and A. L. Schawlow, Microwave Spectroscopy, Chap. 8 (Dover, New
York, 1975).
33S. F. Rice, H. Martin, and R. W. Field, J. Chern. Phys. 82, 5023 (1985).
34p. F. Bernath, B. Pinchemel, and R. W. Field, J. Chern. Phys. 74, 5508
(198\).
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J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 92, No.1, 1 January 1990
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1.100649.pdf | Catastrophic loss of superconductivity in ionirradiated films of YBa2Cu3O7−δ
D. B. Chrisey, G. P. Summers, W. G. Maisch, E. A. Burke, W. T. Elam, H. Herman, J. P. Kirkland, and R. A.
Neiser
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 53, 1001 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.100649
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.100649
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136.165.238.131 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 01:01:09Catastrophic loss of superconductivity in lon-irradiated fUms of
YBa2CU301_ 8
D. B. Chrisey,a) G. P. Summers, and W, G, Maisch
Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375-5000
E A, Burke
Mission Research Corporation, San Diego, California 92123
W, To Eiam
Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375-5000
H Herman
,YUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794-2275
J, p, Kirkland and R A Neiser
Sachs/Freeman Associates Inc" Landover. Afaryland 20785
(Received 9 May 1988; accepted for publication 11 July 1988)
We have investigated the effects oflaw fluence ( < 1014 em -2) 63 MeV He and 65 MeV He2 t
irradiation of prototype thin films of YEa2 CU.l 07_ 15 produced by a plasma-arc spray
technique, The observed change in the resistance versus temperature behavior is much more
dramatic than that observed for films produced by other techniques and resembles
qualitatively a bond percolation threshold. The radiation sensitivity ofthcse plasma-arc spray
films is conduded to be due to poor intergrarmlar characteristics. This information is being
used to modify the processing steps to improve the properties of films produced by, this
technique.
The discovery of high Tc supercondl.lcting materials l.2
has prompted much research activity worldwide. Since suc
cessful applications in harmful radiation environments win
require that the superconducting properties be maintained
during irradiation, understanding the radiation sensitivity of
these materials is an important consideration, This is espe
cially the case since preliminary radiation damage measure
ments of e-beam (electron-beam) deposited,-5 and laser
evaporated6 thin films (~·ll-lm), and sintered peUets7 of
YBa2 Cu} 07 (j indicate a 1-2 order of magnitUde increase
in sensitivity as compared to the old high Tc compounds, i.e"
theA-15 compounds, This increased sensitivity has been as
cribed to the granular nature ofthe films and the presence of
insulating behavior in other phases, and not to the intrinsic
sensitivity of the bulk material:l,7 More recent measure
ments by our group on thick films (-200 pm) of
YBa2 Cu] 07 _ b produced by a plasma-arc spray technique7,g
indicate a sensitivity much greater than that observed for the
thinner e-beam and laser-evaporated films. Although the
plasma-arc spray technique was in the eady stages of devel
opment as applied to superconductors, tests of radiation sen
sitivity were performed to determine directions for improve
ments, In this letter we present new data showing this
increased radiation damage sensitivity and account for it in
terms of recent ideas about radiation-enhanced decoupUng
of the granules and a qualitative application of bond percola
tion theory,
The preparation of thin films of YBa2 eu, 0, 00'" by the
plasma-arc spray technique is described in detail in Ref. 9. A
large piece of plasma-arc spray film was cut on a low-speed
diamond saw into seven samples of approximately the same
,,) Office of Naval Technology Postdoctoral Fellow. size and geometry (2.3 mm X 7.4 mm), Three of these sam
ples were irradiated with 63 MeV H ' ions to fiuences of
7.5 X 1012, 2,06 X 1013, and 7.5 X lOllcm -2, respectively, and
another three were irradiated with 65 MeV He2 + ions to
fiuences of 3,76XlOlI, l.03XW12, and 3075XlOl2 cm,2,
respectively, Irradiations were performed at room tempera
ture and in air at the UC-Davis cyclotron. After irradiation,
silver paint electrical contacts were made and the resistance
temperature behavior was measured for each of t.he films.
The data were then compiled to produce a single plot show
ing the progression of radiation damage for each type of irra
diation, i.e., minor differences in resistance measurement ge
ometry were ignored, The resistance measurement was
made between room temperature and liquid-helium tem
perature using a four-point ac technique with a measure
ment current of 10 pAc
The results for the H + -and He2t--irradiated samples
are shown in Figs, 1 and 2, respectively. Similar conclusions
can be drawn from both sets of results, These are that ( 1) the
Tc onset does not change with increasing particle iluence,
(2) at low ftuences '(. completion does not change signifi
cantly with increasing particle fluence with the exception of
the most heavily irradiated samples, (3) the transition from
the nonnal to the superconducting state occurs in one step,
Le" there is no sign of a second transition, (4) the room
temperature CRT) resistivity is very sensitive to radiation
damage and increases linearly with increasing particle
fiuence, and (5) at approximately the same value of nonion
izing energy deposition between the second and third irra
diations, for both H' and He2l , the zero-resistance state of
the film as measured was lost catastrophically. All of the
changes produced by the irradiations were due to displace
ment damage effects characteristic of ion bombardment be
cause irradiation of a piece of the same materia! to a dose of
1001 Appl. Phys. Lett. 53 (11),12 September 1988 0003-6951/88/371001-03$01.00 (i;) 1988 American Institute of Physics 1001
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136.165.238.131 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 01:01:09; I \
63 MeV H + -YBa2 CU3 0)(
20 30 50 100 150 200 250 300
TEMPERATURE (K)
FlG. L Resistance vs temrcratnre for YBa,Cu,O, pl:lsma-arc-sprayed
tllms (x;::;7) irradiated with 63 MeV H' ions, Note that the temperature
axis is actually the temperatur~-seflsing diode voltage which becomes ex
tremely nonlinear helow 40 K,
200 Mrad (Si) with 53 MeV e caused no appreciable
change in either the RT resistivity or Tc r the largest 63 Me V
H + and 65 MeV Hel
~ irradiations produced a dose of 14
and 8 Mrad (Si), respectively 1. Furthermore, this increased
radiation damage sensitivity is not seen for the laser-evapo
rated samples fOf similar fiuences,6
The major differences in the radiation hehavior between
plasma-<!rc spray films and e-beam-deposited and laser
evaporated films are observations (3) and (4) above. The
R T resistance increases faster than would be expected based
OIl results on thinner films, and yet no second transition
gradualty lowering 1:. completion with increasing fiuence is
seen. This means that an unperturbed superconducting path
~I
~ r-!D,
~I w'
~I
~~ LU, re
10 I I! I I
65 MeV He2 + -YBa2 CU3 Ox
UNIARAD!ATED ()( 10) I I
I
20 30 50 100 150 200 250 300
TEMPERATURE (K)
FIG. 2. Resistance vs temperature for YBa, eu, 0., plasma-arc sprayed
films (x::::; 7) irradiated with 65 M{'V He' I ions. Na!e that the temperature
axis is actually the temperature sensing diode voltage which becomes ex
tremely nonlinear below 40 K.
1002 AppL Phys. L.ett., Vol, 53, No. 11, 12 September 1988 continues to exist through the sample even after the first two
irradiations. This path shorts out the rest of the sample be
low Tc as the RT resistivity is rapidly increasing with fiuence
above Te•
We attribute the difference in the radiation behavior
between the plasma-arc spray films and the e-beam-deposit
ed and laser-evaporated films to the different morphology of
the films. The plasma-arc spray films studied were relatively
open, cracked, and irregular structures less than 80% dense
and consisting of randomly oriented granules approximately
10,um across, e-beam-deposited and laser-evaporated films
consisl of mere uniform and closer packed granules about 1
,u.m in diameter and have the c axis preferentially oriented
perpendicular to the substrate and thus to the sample resis
tance measurement geometry. The critical current Jc, a
property which is strongly dependent on the intergranular
characteristics of the films, is evidence supporting the micro
scopic differences in fUm morphology. e-beam-deposited
and laser-evaporated thin films have values of J, on the Of
der of !Of> A/cm2, whereas these plasma-arc spray fiims have
values of Jc less than 102 A/cm2.
The existence of an unperturbed, continuous supercon
ducting path through the sample, which is present until it is
destroyed by a small incremental particle ftuence (or energy
deposition), suggests that it would be instructive to view the
damage results in the light of bond percolation theory. In
particular, the observed catastrophic loss of superconductiv
ity is strongly reminiscent of a percolation threshold. Treat
ing the superconducting path between the voltage electrodes
as forming an infinite cluster, a bond percolation system can
be defined. Broken bonds between the clusters are formed by
nonsuperconducting junctions between individual grains
due to an insulating amorphous layer, structural defects,
lowered oxygen content at the grain boundaries, or the pres
ence of a different phase. Particle irradiation increases the
number of nonsnperconducting or broken bonds until the
superconducting path is finally destroyed by a small incre
mental fiuence. At this point the zero resistance of the sam
ple WOUld be lost catastrophically, as is observed. However, a
drop in resistance with decreasing temperature would still
occur at 1:, onset because most of the final unperturbed su
perconducting path would stili be intact. Indeed the magni
tude of the resistance drop might be expected to be compara
ble to that observed just prior to the incremental fluence that
finally breaks the superconducting path, This effect can be
seen in Fig. 2 and to a lesser extent in Fig. 1. Data suggesting
that the volume fraction of superconducting material re
mains unchanged, even though radiation destroys a zero
resistance state, have also been seen elsewhere.4•b,7
The similarity between the sudden loss of superconduc
tivity observed in these films ~md other percolation phenom
ena is very compelling, \(}. 13 What is particularly interesting
is that the percolation threshold appears to be reached by the
deposition of a certain nonionizing energy, independent of
the incident particle type. Assuming there is a percolation
threshold, calculated values of the energy loss can be used to
narrow the range of critical ftuences. The calculated nonion
izing energy loss for 63 MeV H "-is 3.40 keV cm2/g (see Ref.
14) . Current estimates of the ratio of nonionizing energy loss
Chrisey et al. 1002
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136.165.238.131 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 01:01:09by 65 MeV He2
t iOilS relative to 63 MeV H C ions is 5.4-5.7,
and from Figs, 1 and 2 the measured minimum critical
fiuence ratio was 2.06 X 1013/3.75 X 1012 = 5.5. Using 5.5
from above as a minimum and 5.7 from the energy loss as a
maximum, the range of critical fiuences required to destroy
superconductivity for incident 63 MeV H + and 65 MeV
He! + can be narrowed to 2.06-2.14 X 1013 em 2 and 3.61-
3.75>< 1012 em ~2, respectively. This means that the thresh
old was reached just after the second H f-irradiation, where
as it was reached just before the end of the third He2 + irra
diatiem. The degradation of the resistive drop of the largest
t1uence H + irradiation at 7:. onset with respect to that for
the He2 + irradiation is evidence supporting this idea,
In heavier ion irradiation of YBa2 CUI 07 _ b thin films
Clark et al.3 demonstrated a higher sensitivity based on the
mean amount of nonionizing energy deposited per atom
when the zero-resistance state was lost. Clark et aI.'s value of
approximately 1 e V I atom has since been obtained eIsew here
with a wide range of ions and energies.4-6 On the other hand,
the amount of energy deposited for the largest fiuence on the
plasma-arc spray films is on the order of 10-5 eV/atom!
We have chosen to apply the bond percolation theory to
explain our results because of its success in describing trans
port phenomena in a wide range of situations such as com
posite media, iO amorphous solids, II and granular supercon
ductors.12 Furthermore, the percolation-like threshold in
the effect of radiation on the transport properties of the plas
ma-arc spray films reemphasizes the importance of obtain
ing good electrical conductivity in the intergranular regions.
With this in mind, the plasma-arc spray technique is being
1003 AppL Phys, Lett.. Vol. 53, No. 11, 12 September 1988 improved to produce denser and mechanically stronger
films with full oxygenation at the grain boundaries.
'J. G. Bednorz a.nd K. A. Miiller, Z. Phys. B 64, 1S9 (1986).
2M. K. Wu. 1. R. Asburn, C, T. Tomg, P. H, Hm, R. L. Meng, L Gao, Z. J.
Huang, Y. Q. Wang. and C. W. Chu, Phys. Rt:v. Lett, !m, 90S (1987).
3G. J. Ciark, A. D. Mafwkk, R. H. Koch, and R. B. Laibowitz, Apr!. Phys.
Lett. 51, 139 (1987).
4A. E. White, K. T. Short, D. C. Jacobsen, J. M. Poat<:, R. C. Dynes, P. M.
Maukiewich.. W. J. Skocpol, R. E. Howard, M. Anzlowar, K. W. Baldwin,
A. F. Levi, J. R. Kwo, T. Hsieh, and H. Honig, Phys. Rev. B 37. 3755
(l98g).
'G. J. Clark, Po K. LeGnues, A. D. Marwick, R. B. Laibowitz, and R.
Koch. AprL Phys, Lett. 51,1462 (987).
nD. B. Chrisey, W. C. IVhisch, G. P. Summers, A. R. Knudson, J. C. Ritter,
E. A. Burke, M. L. Mandich, A. M. DeSantolo, M. F. JarroJd, J, E. Bower,
and S. Sunshine (unpublished).
'IJ. R. Cost, J. O. Willis, J. D. Thompson, and D. E. Peterson, Phys. Rev, B
37,1563 (1988).
"W. G. Maisch, G. P. Summers, A. B. Campbell, C. J. Dale, J, C. Ritter, A.
R. Knudson, W. T. EIam, H. Hermall, J. P. Kirkland, R. A Neiser, and
M. S. Osofsky, IEEE Trans. Nuc!. Sci. NS-34. 1782 (1987).
9R. A. Nciser. J. P. Kirkland, H. Herman, W. T. Elam, and E. F. Skelton,
Mater. Sci. Eng. 91, U3 (1987).
,oR. B. Laibowitz, E, t. Alessandrilli, and G. Deutscher, Phys. Rev. H 25,
2965 (19x2). '
t 'R. ZalIen, The Physics a/Amorphous c'l'olids (Wiley, New York, 1983).
12G. Deutscher, O. Elltin-Wnhlman, S. Fishman, and Y. Shapira. Phys,
Rev, B. 2t, 5041 (1980).
"D. U, Gubser, T, L Francavma, S. A. Woli: and J. R. Laibowitz, cds.,
Inhomogeneous Superconductors-J979 (Al1letican Institute of Physics,
New York, 1980).
14Th.: calculated value for the nonionizing energy loss includes both elastic
,md inelastic effects as well as the Lindhard partition. Details of the calcu
lation can be found elsewhere. E. A. Uurke. D. B. Chriscy. G. P. Summers,
and W, G. Maisch (unpublished).
Chrissy at al. 1003
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1.584561.pdf | The electrical characteristics of metal/SiO2/InSb capacitor fabricated by
photoenhanced chemical vapor deposition
TaiPing Sun, SiChen Lee, and ShengJenn Yang
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B 7, 1115 (1989); doi: 10.1116/1.584561
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.584561
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvstb/7/5?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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J. Appl. Phys. 68, 3701 (1990); 10.1063/1.346334
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 128.193.164.203 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 19:57:02The electrical characteristics of metai/Si0 2/1nSb capacitor fabricated
by photoenhanced chemical vapor deposition
Tai-Ping Sun and Si-Chen Lee
DepartmentojElectrical Engineering, National Taiwan University. Taipei, Taiwan, Republico/China
Sheng-Jenn Yang
Chung Shan InstituteojScienceand Technology, Lung-Tan, Taiwan, Republica/China
(Received 9 February 1989; accepted 26 Apri11989)
The AuCr/Si02/lnSb metal-oxide semiconductor capacitor was fabricated using photo
enhanced chemical vapor deposition. The Si021ayer with a thickness of 1000 A was deposited on
InSb substrate at 200 °Co The electrical and structural properties were analyzed by capacitance
voltage and Auger electron spectroscopy, respectively. The high-frequency (I-MHz)
capacitance-voltage measurements were usually performed after positive or negative bias
temperature stressing. Both the flatband voltage shift and the change of hysteresis of capacitance
voltage curve indicate the existence of enormous negative mobile charges in the bulk Si02• These
negative charges can move in Si02 freely even in the room temperature. Auger depth profile
reveals that these negative mobile charges are metallic indium and antimony ions,
t INTRODUCTION
Among many compound semiconductor materials, InSb has
the important characteristics of narrow band gap and high
electron mobility.l This material can absorb infrared radi
ation in the 3-5 J-lm region that passes through the at
mosphere easily.1 Recently, metal-oxide semiconductor
(MOS) deviees formed on InSb are finding wide application
in the fabrication of advanced discrete and integrated de
vices for infrared detector.3,4 The most critical step in fabri
cating this type of MOS devices is the deposition of the thin
oxide film on the InSb. It is important to look for a low
temperature method, since the melting point of compound
InSb is low, and the material may dissociate at elevated tem
peratures.s Several low-temperature methods have been ap
plied to deposite oxide on InSb, such as direct anodic oxida
tion on surface,6-13 low-temperature chemical vapor
deposition (LTCVD),14-18 plasma enhanced vapor depo
sition (PECVD), I CJ and photo-enhanced chemical vapor de
position (photo-CVD). 20,21 Among these the oxide made by
L TCVD has been analyzed by high-frequency (I-MHz) ca
pacitance-voltage (C-V) measurement. 14-16 It is found that
after the samples were prepared, most ofthem exhibited hys
teresis phenomena arid a shift of the flat band voltage as
compared to the ideal case in the C-V curve.8.14.18 There
have been a few discussions on detail mechanismss,22.23.24
which cause this kind of C-V curve.
In this paper, we present our detailed studies on the elec
trical properties of the AuCr/SiOl/lnSb MOS capacitor.
The lOOO-A-thick Si02 layer is deposited on an-type InSb
substrate by photo-CVD. Evidence is provided to show that
the C-V characteristics of the MOS capacitor are affected
most severly by the negative mobile charges in Si02 layer
which are identified to be indium and antimony atoms using
Auger depth profiling technique. The results are important
for the interpretation of electrical characteristics of this
MOS capacitor. II. EXPERIMENTS
The substrates used for fabricating capacitors are (111)
oriented, n-type InSb with a carrier concentration of
1.S X 1014 em 3. In this experiment, the Si02 films were pre
pared by mercury-sensitized photo-CVD. This photo-CVD
system PCVD 1000 is made by Tylan. Prior to the deposition
of Si02, the growth chamber was pumped down to a few
mTorr and purged with nitrogen before introducing the
reactant gases. When the desired work temperature 200°C
was reached, the SiH4 + N20 gases mixed with mercury va
por were introduced into the reaction chamber. The flow
rates of SiH4 and N20 were 2 and S5 standard cml/min
(seem), respectively. The operation pressure is 1 Torr.
When the gas flow was stabilized, the ultraviolet (UV) lamp
was turned on and the Si02 film started to grow. After depo
siting -1000 A, the UV lamp was turned off. This complet
ed the entire growth processes. The oxide thickness was mea
sured by ellipsometry. A 200 A of Cr and 3000 A of Au were
evaporated on the oxide layer to form the metal gate. The
area of the gate is 2X 10-3 cm2• Finally, each MOS device
was scribed into an individual piece and bonded to a To-5
header. Indium was used as the alloy contact at the back side
of InSb substrate. The device is cold shielded from back
ground radiation in order to prevent photogeneration of
electron-hole pairs in the InSb, thus one may assume that the
device is in thermal equilibrium. The device structure is
shown in Fig. 1. After the bonding process, the sample is
ready for measurements.
First, the metal and InSb substrate of the MOS capacitor
were shorted at room temperature to do the discharge test.
Second, the high-frequency (l-MHz) capacitance are mea
sured at 77 K with an automatic capacitance meter (HP
4280). Third, the leaky current through the oxide was mea
sured at 77 K to characterize the oxide quality. Sometimes,
before the C-V measurement, the bias temperature stressing
(BTS) i.e., the device temperature was raised to 50 °C for a
1115 J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 7 (5), Sep/Oct 1989 0734-211X/89/051115-07$01.00 @ 1989 American Vacuum SoCiety 1115
Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 128.193.164.203 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 19:57:021116 Sun, Lee, and Yang: Electrical characteristics of metai/Si0211nSb 1116
Au
~Cr
InSb SUb.
/
FIG. 1. Schematic structure of a InSb MOS capacitor.
period of time with a bias applied on, was performed to study
the mobile charge effect in the oxide. The block diagram of
the measuring system is shown in Fig. 2. The automatic ca
pacitance meier is controlled directly by a HP computer
9836. The depth profile of the MOS device was analyzed by
Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). The AES measure
ment were performed using a Perkin-Elmer electron
spectrometer with a 3-KeV, O.5-flA electron beam.
III. RESULTS
A. Electrical measurements
1. Current transient characteristics
Figure 3 shows the current transient characteristics of the
discharge test for the sample No. 1027. Apparently after the
metal and semiconductor contacts of the MOS capacitor are
short circuited at room temperature a current of ~ 30 nA is
flowing out of the metal contact for ~ 100 s, then it gradually
dies down. This phenomenon strongly suggests that the
MOS capacitor is under nonequilibrium for a long period of
time after short circuit. The leak current through the oxide
measured at 77 K is 5.1 pA (at 2.5 V), which corresponds to
an oxide resistivity ofO.98X 1014 n cm.
2. C-V characteristics
All the C-V measurements were done at 77 K. The C-V
scan was selected from -20 to + 20 V and then back to
-20 V with a sweep rate of 100 mV Is. First, the Auer/
Si02/InSb capactor is biased to strong inverstion region
( -20 V) for a hold time of 5 min. Since the hold time has
some effect on the occupation of slow states near Si02/lnSb
6205
ua\ DC
power supply
FIG. 2. Block diagram showing the bias temperature stressing test system
for MOS capacitor.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. S, Vol. 7, No.5, Sep/Oct 1989 « 10' c
-
I ~ I-
Z w
100~ 0:: InSb '" 0::
::J
t u
I
100 10' 102 103
T 1 ME, t (sec)
FIG. 3. The short current as a function of time for MOS capacitor No. 1027
at room temperature.
interface and thus the C-V curve, it must be selected proper
ly. For measurement with gate voltage VG being scanned
from negative, 5 min is good enough to stabilized the rising
part of the C-V curve. Figure 4 shows the typical measured
and ideal characteristics for a MOS capacitor No. 1105. The
ideal one is calculated by assuming zero interface state and
mobile charges. The major characteristics of these C-V
curves are described as below:
(i) Since all C-V curves exhibit a large hysteresis, they
appear to have two flatband voltages, i.e., VFB(i) and VFB(r)
corresponding to the left forward and right returning C-V
curves. It is clear that both ftatband voltages are more nega
tive than the ideal one, and the semiconductor surface must
be accumulated with electrons at zero applied voltage. This
indicated that there were large numbers of positive fixed
charges trapped in the oxide probably near the Si02/InSb
interface. H,IS.19,24
(ii) The magnitude of the return voltage affects the return
C-V curve significantly. Figure 5 shows the return voltage
dependence ofthe C-V curve of a MOS capacitor No. 1128.
It is first biased at -15 V for ~ 5 min, then the voltage is
LL
a. 80
u
w" 60
u z «
I-40
u
(f
<l: u EXP
------ I DEAL
B I AS, V (vo It)
FIG. 4. The ideal and experimental C-V curve ofa MOS capacitor No. 1105
fabricated on n-type InSh with 1000 A SiO, layer as the insulator.
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lJ.. 80 0.
U,60
w
U
Z
;:: 40
u «
~ 20
u RETURN
VOLTAGE (V) --10 ----20 ~-------.-. _._.-30
OL--~2-4~---1~2~--~O--~~12~~~2~4~
BIAS. V (volt)
I'IG. 5. The C-V characteristics of an InSb MOS capacitor No. 1128 under
different return voltages.
swept from 15 to 10 V, and then immediately back to
-15 V without a hold time. Before the second sweep the
capacitor is biased at --15 V for a hold time of 5 min to
restore the capacitor to the same initial state as that of the
first trace. Then the return voltage is increased to 20 V for
the next C-V sweep. As can be seen from this figure, the
forward C-V curves for both traces are similar, but the re
turning C-V curve shifts toward more positive voltage for
the second trace. When the return voltage is increased to 30
V. the same trend is also observed. This is consistent with the
theoryX that the density of interface slow states in the oxide is
so high that when the gate voltage is made more positive (in
the accumulation regioIl), more electrons, are trapped by
the slow states which causes the right Hatband voltage to
shift more positively. On the other hand, most of the elec
trons trapped at positive voltage can be removed by applying
a large negative voltage at the gate for a hold time of 5 min,
thus resulting in a hysteresis in the C-V curve.
(iii) The C-V curve shown in Fig. 4 does not have a sharp
transistion between the accumulation region and the deple
ticm region as that of the ideal one indicating a large density
of fast surface states at the oxide semiconductor interface.
B. Bias"temperature stressing (BTS) test
To study the mobile charge effect, the MOS capacitors
were subjected to BTS test before C-V measurement. During
the test the caDacitor was treated at 50°C with positive and
negative bias ;emperature stressing each for 5 min and the
cu;rent-time characteristics of the MOS capacitor are re
corded. Then aU the C-V surves were measured at 1 MHz at
77 K. The return voltage during the C-V sweep is kept at
+ 20 V. Hysteresis voltage Ll V1'B was defined to be the dif
ference between the flatband voltages VFIl( I) and VFB( r) •
From it, the equivalent slow state density
EoxLlVFB
Nss = qd
can be calculated, where d and fox are the thickness and
dielectric constant of the oxide, q is the electron charge.
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. 13, Vol. 7, No.5, Sep/Oct 1989 ~
~
0 16
~
III w.. 8 >.
w (9 «
~ 0
0 >
0 -B z « en I-« -16 ...J
ll...
-30 -24 -18 -12 -6 o
BIAS,V (volt)
FIG. 6. The fiat band voltage shift ofa MOS capacitor No. 1166 after higher
und higher negative IlTS tests.
1. Negative bias~temperature stressing test
Figures 6 and 7 show the f1athand voltages and equivalent
slow state density N ss ofMOS device No. 1166 after various
negative bias temperature stressing. It is found that when the
device is successively bias-temperature stressed from -0.5
to --30 Veach for 5 min, the flatband voltage shifts first
positively and then moves back to more negative voltage and
the equivalent slow state density increases monotonically,
i.e., from 6.5X 1011 to 2.5x 1012 cm-2• Figure 8 shows the
measured current during negative BTS at --6 V as a func
tion of time for a typical device No. 1179. Similar to the case
shown in Fig. 3, the current is large (4.5 llA) initially and
then rapidly decreases to 1 nA after 300 s. This indicates that
the MOS device is under extreme non equilibrium after short
circuit. Therefore, the low-temperature (77 K) C-V mea
surement is done only after the short circuit current during
BTS test reduces to below 1 nA, after the negative bias tem
perature stressing for 5 min. If the G"-V measurement is done
earlier, i.e., short circuit current during BTS test is still at the
uA level, the C-V curve tends to display large distortion, as
'shown in Fig, 9 for a MOS capacitor No. 1195, indicating a
large nonuniformity being created inside the Si02 layer.
~ 103
-'-,--- ~---~--, -~---r ----'-~-l
z
~ O~----~8 ______ ~ ____ ~
j
-6 o
BIAS ,v (volt)
Fit •. 7. The equivalent slow slate density as a fUllction of higher and higher
negative 31'S ("SIs.
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~1
101~0~O----~~10~'~--~--'~OA2----~~103
TiME. t (sec)
PIG. 8. The discharge current of a MOS capacitor No. 1179 as a function of
time at 50 °C during negative BTS at - 6 V.
100
U-80 0.
U
w 60
u z « I-40 u rt « 20 u
0 -16 -8 0 8 16
B 1 AS. V (vo It)
FlG. 9. The distorted C-V curve of an luSh MOS capacitor No. 1195 after
negative BTS of -6 V at 50 'C for 3 min.
~ --16 "" VFB(r) 0
Z-0 VF8(J} J 8
w
~
~ 0
0 >
0 z -8 «
ell I-
:3 -16
I.L
0 2 3 4
BIAS.V(volt)
FIG. 10. The flathand voltage shift of aMOS capaeitor No. 1223 after higher
and higher positive BTS tests.
Jo Vac. Sci. Techno!. e, Vol. 7, Noo 5, Sep/Oct 1989 ~ 103r-~---.---r--~--r-~---r--~
I./l
Z
W o
v v v
1 2 3 4
B I AS, V (vo I t)
FiG. 11. The equivalent slow state density as a function higher and higher
positive BTS tests.
2. Positive bias-temperature stressing test
Figures 10 and 11 show the fiatband voltages and equiva
lent slow state density N ss of a capacitor No. 1223 after
various positive bias-temperature stressing. It is clear that
the fiatband voltage shifts to more negative voltage after suc
cessively higher and higher positive bias-temperature stress
ing. The equivalent slow state density, however, increases
only slightly, i.e., from 6.5 X 1011 to 7.8 X 1011 cm-2• Figure
12 shows the short circuit current during the positive bias
temperature test ( + 3 V) as a function of time for aMOS
capacitor No. 1255. The current is 5 pA initially and lasts for
80 s, then something drastical happens. The current first
reduces to 1 f.lA then rapidly rises to 3 rnA in 10 s. If the 77 K
C-V curve is measured at this stage, it exhibits a large distor
tion as shown in Fig. 13. The oxide capacitance at strong
accumulation region apparently decreases indicating that a
parallel conducting channel has been formed.
C. AES measurement
The AES was used to study the chemical composition of
the oxide film including the mobile charges. The measured
104
,..... 103
«
.3
~. 102
w a::
0::
::J 101 U
10°
10° 101 102 103
TlME,t (sec)
FIG. 12. The discharge current of a MOS capacitor No. 1255 as a function of
time at 50"C during positive llTS at + 3 V.
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u:-80
Cl
u
w 60
u Z <t: I-40 u :.
<t: 20 u
0 -16 ORIGINAL
DEGRADED BY STS
-8 0 8
B I AS, V (vo It) 16
t"lG. 13. The original C-V curve of all luSb MOS capacitor No. 1288 and
that after positive BTS of + 3 V at 50 "(' for 5 min.
intensities of various elements were corrected to get their
atomic percentage. The error was within 10%. Three sam
ples were used for this purpose; sample No. 1301 without
BTS test (Fig. 14), sample No. 1302 measured immediately
after the negative BTS at -6 V (Fig. 15), sample No. 1303
measured immediately after the positive BTS at 3 V (Fig
16). As shown in Fig. 14, significiant concentration of both
In and Sb are detected at the surface and in the bulk of the
Si02 film indicating that In and Sb atoms outdiffuse from the
InSb substrate during the Sial deposition. Hg signal was not
detected so the deposition films were free of Hg contamina
tion ( < 1.0 at. % ). After negative bias-temperature stress
ing, as shown in Fig. 15, the In and Sb atoms were driven
back to the Si02/InSb interface such that the interior ofSiO}
is free ofln and Sb. After positive bias temperature stressing,
however, as shown in Fig. 16, the In and Sb atoms spread to
entire Si02 layer and even to the AuCr metal electrode and
thus form a conducting channel in the oxide layer. This indi
cates that the negative mobile charges are both In and Sb
atoms, they seem to move in pairs.
.-..
~100 .. _ .. _ .. --.....,
Au '. Z \ 0 -80
~
0:: \ t-60 z
UJ u z 40 0 u
u 20
~ 0 t-0 <t: 0 20 40 60 80
SPUTTER TIME (min)
FIG. 14. Depth profile of a lOoo-A-thick oxide on n-type InSb without BTS
tests.
J. \lac. Sci. Techno!. B, Vo!. 7, No.5, Sep/Oct 1989 ~
~100
z
Q 80 I-00_"-Au .\
0:{
0:: I-60 z w u z 40 0 u
u 20
~
0 I-
°0 <t: 20
SPUTTER TIME (min)
fiG. 15. Depth profile of a 1000-A.-thick oxide 011 IHype InSh after negative
BTS of 6 V at 50 T for 5 min.
IV. DISCUSSION
Based on the results of the AES analysis and the C-V
characteristics of the MOS capacitor, we propose the follow
ing model to describe the oxide and interface properties of a
photo-Si02 film on InSb. The initial charge distributions in
photo-CVD MOS capacitors can be described by the sche
matic diagram shown in Fig. 17. QF are the positive fixed
charges at the Si02/lnSb interface, QAt are the negative mo~
bile charges (In and Sb atoms) in silicon oxide. Referring to
the Fig. 17, the left flat band voltage VI/BU) can be written
as25
_ .l. _ XOQF _ X1Q~f ~,_ dQss
VFB(I) -<i'M~ ,
. , ,. ofox €ox cux
where Xo and Xl are the distance between metal and weight
center of the fixed charges and mobile charges, respectively,
d is the oxide thickness, Qss the net interface slow state
charges, ¢MS the work function difference between metal
AuCr and InSb. The work function difference ¢MS is -001 V
for the MOS capacitor with a AuCr gate.8020 The fixed
charge QF is positive, situated near the Si02/InSb interface,
so a large Xo contributes a large negative value to flatband
voltage. The mobile charges QM is negative, so a large Xl
contributes a large positive shift to the flatband voltage. It is
~100 -.!'
~
z 80 0
~
0:: _ .. _"'" Au \
\ I-60 z w u z 40 0 u
u 20 L
0 l-<t: °0 20 40 60 80
SPUTTER TIME (min)
FIG. 16. Depth profile of a 10oo-A-thick oxide on n-type InSb after positive
HTS of + 3 V at 50 T for 5 min.
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Xl ~--il\ ~ d j
~
~ QM
Au Cr Si02 InSb
FlU. 17. Schematic diagram of the initial charge distribution in aMOS
structure, where Q, is the fixed charges, QM is mobile charge, and Qss the
net interface slow state charges.
clear from Fig. 4 that all four terms sum up to give negative
contributions to the fiatband voltage of the MOS capacitor
before the BTS test indicating the initially dominant role of
positive fixed charge.
During the negative BTS aging, the mobile charges are
gradually driven to the SiOz/InSb interface, by applying
higher and higher negative biases, this results in an increas
ing Xl and thus an increase of the flatband voltage (Fig. 6)
since QM is negative. However, when the mobile charges are
driven so close to the interface that it can communicate elec
trons with the semiconductor, part ofthe mobile charges will
convert to slow interface states. This decreases the mobile
charge QM and causes the left flatband voltage to shift back
toward more negative voltage. This is consistent with the
observation that the equivalent interface slow state increases
monotonically (Fig. 7).
When the negative voltage is applied to this MOS capaci
tor during BTS test, the electric field inside the Si02 layer is
altered, the negative mobile charges will respond to this
change and move, which induces a large current flow in the
outside circuit. So an initial current of approximate 5 J1A is
flowing for -20 s, as shown in Fig. 8. When the mobile
charge gradually approaches a new steady-state distribu
tion, the current will decrease to very small value. The same
thing happens, when the InSb and metal electrode were
shorted, at room temperature (Fig. 3) indicating the free
movement of the negative mobile charge in Si02 layer even
in the room temperature.
During the positive bias stressing the negative mobile
charges QM are attracted to the metal side, so XI decreases
and the flatband voltage shifts to more negative voltage (Fig.
10). It is also found that the MOS capacitor breaks down
easily (Fig. 13) at very low positive voltage (3 V). This is
because the negative mobile charges (In and Sb) have been
attracted to the metal electrode, and probably form a fila
mentary conducting channel inside the Si02 which degrades
the electrical properties of the MOS device. This is consis
tent with the observation in Fig. 10 that during the positive
BTS test, the current suddenly increases to abnormally high
value of 3 rnA after applying 3 V bias for 80 s. If the C-V
characteristics of the MOS capacitor is measured before see-
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. 8, Vol. 7, No.5, Sep/Oct 1989 ing this abnormally high current, it looks normal, otherwise,
it is seriously degraded as shown in Fig. 13. The InSb surface
seems to be dissociated by the applying positive bias, so huge
number of negative In and Sb pairs are attracted to the metal
gate. During the process, only a few convert to interface slow
states. (Fig. 11). This indicates most of them are stilI in
direct contact with the substrate when they move toward the
metal contact, so they don't convert to a slow state. This is
unlike what happens during negative BTS test, when the
small number of residual In and Sb pairs after photo-CVD
depostion (they don't form conducting channel) are driven
back to the Si02/lnSb interface. They first convert to slow
state, i.e., communicate electrons with substrate, then to fast
states as they gradually approach the InSb surface. How
ever, the interface slow state traps slightly increase rather
than decrease as the negative mobile charges left the inter
face (Fig. 11). It suggests that there are certain number of
intrinsic interface slow states formed during the photo-CVD
process which won't move under any bias condition. The
slight increase of slow state density is due to the conversion
of small amount ofIn and Sb pairs when they are dissociated
from the substrate. Notice, however, most of the In and Sb
pairs form filamentary conducting channels which are in
direct contact with substrate.
v. CONCLUSIONS
We have studied the chemical and' electrical properties of
photo-Si02 oxide on InSb by means of AES analysis and
MOS device characterization. The results indicate that the
C-V characteristics of the photo Si02/lnSb MOS capacitor
exhibits flatband voltage shift and hysteresis behavior due to
positive fixed charges, negative mobile charges, and enor
mous intrinsic interface slow states. Using the positive and
negative BTS technique in conjunction with AES analysis,
we clearly demonstrated that the negative mobile charges
are In and Sb atoms in pairs, which can be driven to move
easily by electric field in the oxide even at room temperature.
Therefore, when we short circuit or apply a bias to the MOS
device at room temperature a large current will flow for a
period of time reflecting the fact that mobile charges are
redistributed to reach a new steady state. When those mobile
charges are driven back to the SiOzilnSb interface by nega
tive bias, they convert to slow interface states. Those charac
teristics suggest that the photo-oxide grown on InSb is not
ideal. Therefore, proper modifications in the oxide growth
technique may be required to improve the oxide and inter
face property.
JR. K. Willardoll and A, C. Beer, In/rared Detectors (Academic, New
York, 1970), pp.15-17.
~R. D. Hudson, Jr., In/rard System Engineering (Wiley, New York, 1968),
p.265.
3R. J, Stirn and Y. C. M. Yeh, IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 24, 476
(1977).
4M. Gibbons and S. Wang, Proc. SPIE 443, 151 (1984).
'C. Y. Wei, K. 1,. Wang, E. A. Taft, J. M. Swab, M. Gibbons, W. Davern,
and D. M. Brown, IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 27, 170 ( 1980).
"Y. Shapira, J. Bregman, and Z. Calahorra, App!. Phys. Lett. 46, 48
(1985).
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'R. Y. Hung and E. T. Yon, J. Appl. Phys. 41, 2185 (1970).
sA. Etchells and C. W. Fisher, J. Appt. Phys. 47, 4605 (1976).
9R. Fujisada and T. Sasase, Jpn. J. App!. Phys. 23, L46 (1984).
lOR. Hujisada, T. Kakagawa, and T. Sasase, Jpn. J. App!. Phys. 22, L525
(1983).
"J. Bregman and Y. Shapira, J. Vae. Sci. Techno!. B 3,959 (1985).
I2Z. Calahorra, J. Bregman, and Y. Shapira, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. B 4, 1195
(1986).
I3J. Bregman, Y. Shapira, and Z. Calahorra, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. A 5,1432
(1987).
14G. W. Anderson. W. A. Schmidt, and}. Comas, J. Electrochem. Soc. 125,
424 (1978).
150. N. Pocock, Ikasai, D. E. Nutall, C. It Chen, and R. N. Ting, SPrE. J.
227,129 (1980).
16J. D. Langan and C. R. ViSWlinathan, J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. 16, 1474
(1979).
17M. Okamura and M. Minakata, J. App!. Phys. 57, 2060 (1985).
J. Vac. Sci. Techno!. S, Vol. 7, No.5, Sep/Oct 1989 I"y. Avigal, J. Bregman, and Y. Shapira, J. App!. Phys. 63, 430 (1988).
19U. Kachens and Umerkt, Thin Solid Film. 97,53 (1982).
2°K. F. Huang, J. S. Shie, J. J. Luo, and J. S. Chen, Proc. SPIE. 558, 11
(1985).
21 A. Bahraman, Extended Abstract of the 18th International Conference on
Solid State Devices and Materials (Japan Society of Applied Physics,
Tokyo, 1986), p.189.
22p. P. Heiman and G. Warfield, IEEE Trans. Electron Device 12. 167
(1965).
21J. Buxo, D. Esteve, J. Farre, G. Sarrabayrouse, and J. Simonne, Appl.
Phys. Lett. 33, 969 (1978).
24D. N. Pocock, C. H. Chen, J. B. Underwook, E. 1. Dillard, SPIE. J. 267, 31
(1981 ).
25E. H. Nicollian and J. R. Brews, MOS Physics and Technology (Wiley,
New York, 1982).
265. M. Sze, Physics of Semiconductor Devices, 2nd. (Wiley, New York,
1981), Chap. 7.
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1.575857.pdf | The decomposition of [Mn(CO)5]2(μSiH2)
G. T. Stauf, P. A. Dowben, K. Emrich, W. Hirschwald, and N. M. Boag
Citation: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A 7, 634 (1989); doi: 10.1116/1.575857
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1116/1.575857
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/7/3?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AVS: Science & Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
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Redistribution subject to AVS license or copyright; see http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Download to IP: 130.113.69.47 On: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 00:33:57The decomposition of [Mn(CO)sh(J.I,-SiH 2)
G. T. Stauf and P. A. Dowben
Laboratory for Solid State Science and Technology. Syracuse University, Syracuse. New York 13244-1130
K. Emrich and W. Hirschwald
Institutfiir Physikalische Chemie, Freie Universitiit Berlin. Takustrasse 3, 1000 Berlin 33, Federal Republic
of Germany
N.M. Boag
Department of Chemistry and Applied Chemistry. Salford University. Salford. England, M5-4 WT
(Received 16 August 1988; accepted 29 August 1988)
The prospect of using chemical vapor deposition to deposit mixed metals and silicides from a
single source compound is attractive but largely uninvestigated. Studies of decomposition
energies of such compounds are nearly nonexistent. One such compound which has successfully
been used to make a silicide coating is [Mn(CO)512 (,u-SiH2). We have used electron impact
mass spectroscopy, photoionization mass spectroscopy, and photoabsorption to determine bond
energies within this compound. The combination of methods allows a high degree of confidence in
the resultant ionization and fragment appearance potentials. Some possible mechanisms of
decomposition are discussed. A complete ionic decomposition thermodynamic cycle has been
generated, and the results are used to illuminate the coating processes previously observed.
I. INTRODUCTION
Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) from organometallic
compounds is a common way of creating metal and metal
silicide coatings. I Deposition may be induced by pyrolysis,
plasma processes, or by photolysis. Silicides, metal/silicon
compounds in various phases and combinations, have found
favor of late in the semiconductor industry when low-resis
tance interconnects capable of withstanding high tempera
tures are needed. While some commonly used organometal
lic source compounds such as alkyis, chlorides, and hydrides
have been heavily investigated, little research has been done
on more unusual sources. At the moment, when a multicom
ponent coating is desired, a two-or three-gas flow-metering
system is used. If a molecule such as [Mn (CO) 5 ] 2 (II-SiR2 )
which contains both the Mn and Si in a 2: 1 stoichiometric
ratio could be induced to decompose, however, wasteful ex
cesses which are now used to compensate for differing reac
tion rates would be avoided.
Such reactions may not be as simple as they would seem
on the surface, however. For example, recent work on the
one-photon photolysis of gaseous Mn2 (CO) 10 has shown
that there are two different decomposition pathways: sepa
ration ofa CO or the cleavage of the Mn metal-metal bond.2
Another complication is that decomposition may be a mul
tistep process. This sequential removal of ligands3 has been
observed to be the case with the pyrolysis of Ga(CR3)3
( Ref. 4) and In ( CH 3 ) 3 •5 These elimination reactions can be
a considerable problem, for example, with the release of si
lane from metal silyl carbonyls.6
2[Mn(CO)s (SiH3)] -SiH4 + [Mn(CO)s b (SiR2) •
Alternatively, tl1e pyrolysis process can result in more com
plex elimination reactions,7 such as in the case
CO(CO)4 (SiR3) .... OeSiR3)2 +? ,
which leads to disiIoxanes when R = H,8 methyl,9 or ethyl. 10 Coatings formed from this reaction have a cobalt-to-silicon
ratio of 5:3, while the pyrolysis of Fe(CO)4 (SiR3)2 which
follows a similar mechanism resulted in films with an iron
to-silicon ratio of 1:0.9.7
In order to control the decomposition of such a molecule,
an understanding of the energetics of decomposition and
bond breaking is certainly necessary. With few excep
tionsl1.12 these are poorly understood. With the aim of
understanding decomposition energetics we have therefore
undertaken an electron impact mass spectroscopy, pho
toionization mass spectroscopy, and gas-phase photoab
sorption investigation of r Mn (CO) 5 ] 2 (II-SiR2 ).
We have also demonstrated the actual feasibility of silicide
coating formation with this compound via pyrolysis. The use
of x-ray electron spectroscopy (XES), Auger electron spec
troscopy (AES), and Rutherford back scattering spectros
copy (RBS) confirmed that the material formed was Mn2 Si.
Such a metal silicide thin film is difficult to form without the
use of metal organic CVD (MOCVD). The microstructures
of the films were also studied via x-ray diffraction (XRD)
and scanning electron microscopy (SEM).
II. EXPERIMENTAL
The [Mn (CO) 5 J 2 (,u-SiR2 ) complex was prepared as de
scribed previously13.14 and purified by crystallization fol
lowed by low-pressure sublimation.
The electron impact mass spectroscopy experiments were
undertaken using a molecular beam of sample vapor genera
ted in an alumina Knudsen cell. This beam was directed into
the electron impact ion source of a Varian MAT single-sec
tor magnetic field mass spectrometer, as described previous
ly.ls.lt> Calibration, data reduction, evaluation procedure,
and analysis of the fine structure of the ionization efficiency
curves (lEC's) were undertaken using procedures outlined
elsewhere. 17.18
634 J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 7 (~), May/Jun 1989 0734-2101/89/030634-06$01.00 Cc) 1989 American Vacuum Society 634
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The fragmentation of [Mn(CO)s12 (,a-8iR2) was also
studied inside a high-temperature photo ionization system
using synchrotron radiation in the photon energy region 6-
24 eV.15 The synchrotron radiation source was the electron
storage ring BESSY (Berliner Elektronenspeicherring Ge
sellschaft fuer Synchrotronstrahlung mbH) in Berlin, Fed
eral Republic of Germany. The ions were detected using a
Balzers QMG 511 quadrupole mass spectrometer.
Photoabsorption data on the gaseous species was collected
at the Tantalus Storage Ring at the University of Wisconsin
Synchrotron Radiation Facility, as has been discussed else
where.ls
Pyrolysis of gaseous [Mn(CO), L (,a-SiHz) was under
taken in a glass vacuum system pumped by a three-stage oil
diffusion pump, capable of reaching a base pressure of
1 X 10 -5 Torr. Solid crystals were allowed to sublimate at
room temperature on one side of the deposition chamber,
while on the other side the line to the vacuum pump carried
away excess reactants and products. The substrates were
pure nickel foils (Driver Harris Company) resistively heat
ed with an alternating current. The temperature of the foil
was monitored via a Chromel-Alumel thermocouple spot
welded to the back of the foil.
Coatings were examined while still on their substrates by
SEM, XES, AES, and RBS. The instruments and procedures
used have all been previously described. 19
X-ray diffraction studies were made in transmission
mode. The coating was removed from the substrate and
placed on cellophane tape, then exposed for up to 15 h to
ensure that any crystal structure would be revealed. The x
ray source was Cu Ka radiation (1 ,542-A wavelength).
ill. RESULTS
The mass spectroscopy revealed the fragmentation behav
ior to be expected from this molecule. Basically, it lost
successive carbonyls until it was down to a Mn2 Si core. The
>'-
~
-e o
::>:1
-I 'Vi
C
III
C .....
c o
H
400 250 200
m/e rat io, amu
J. Vac. Sci. Techno\' A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989
-,".-,".-.-.-.- •••••••••• n> ".' •• Y •••••••••• , .-...... ~ •• -•• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •• ,.-.-... -.: ••• -.-••••••••••••••••••••• v .•...•.•..• ~.· .•• ·.·.·..-.-.-.·.·.-.- ..••• _rH •• _.~~ ••• , • 150 635
complete electron impact mass spectra at 25 e V can be seen
in Fig. 1. It can be seen in this figure that the ion signals for
(Mn2 SiR2 ) (CO) 7+ and (Mn2 8iR2 ) (CO) 6-1 were too
small to obtain accurate appearance potentials CAP's), so
AP energies for these fragments were derived from the pho
toionization experiments. We did not find fragments differ
ing only by one or two hydrogens to have very different ap
pearance potentials. Even at the highest energy setting
available on the mass spectrometer (70 e V) no additional
fragments were seen, although more hydrogen loss was ob
served. Total Mn2 Si fragment abundance at this energy.
with or without H2 attached, was 27%. The ionization po
tentials (IP's) and appearance potentials we found are sum
marized in Table I. In most cases electron impact ionization
and photoionization results were averaged to find the AP's
listed in the table. Good agreement between the two tech
niques was found, with the largest difference of 0.4 eV pres
cnt only in the case of (Mn2 SiHl )(CO) 3-+ •
It may be noticed that slope changes are mentioned in the
caption of Table I. These come from the IEC of the parent
ion. The IEC is a plot ofthe molecular or fragment ion inten
sity versus the electron (or photon) impact energy employed
to ionize the gaseous species, It rises linearly until impact
energy becomes high enough to access a new molecular orbi
tal, which causes an abrupt slope increase as a new ionization
pathway is reached. Of course, higher energy may also cause
bond breakage and a downward slope change. These slope
changes, or "breaks," also occur in fragment IEC's, but are
more difficult to interpret and so have been left off Table 1.
More detail can he found in Ref. 15,
It should be noted that while photon impact data provide
very accurate IP's of the parent and first AP's of the frag
ment ions due to its high degree of monochromacity, it is not
as useful for obtaining higher appearance potentials (slope
changes) from lEC plots due to poorer signal-to-noise ra
tios. Fortunately, a combination of the two ionization tech-
!OO 50 F1G, 1. Mass spectra from electron im
pact ionization 25-eV electron energy,
for lMn(CO), 12 (25-eV electron ener
gy) (p-SiH2)·
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TABLE I. The ionization and appearance potentials based on the ionization
efficiency curves of [Mn(CO),12 (/l.-SiH2). Arrows designate relative in
creases (I) and decreases ( ,) of slope in the parent lEC's. Initial AP's are
given both for electron and photoionization data, which are then averaged
below, while higher AP's are from electron impact data only. Values are
given in eV and rounded to tenths, as estimated error is ± 0.1 eV.
Species
[Mn(CO), h(SiH2)+
(parent ion)
Mn2SiH2 (CO) ':
MnzSiH2(CO)/
Mn2SiH2(CO)/
Mn2SiH2 (CO) 0"
Mn2SiH2 (CO) ,~
Mn2SiH2(CO)/
Mn2SiH2(CO)t
Mn2SiH2 (CO) t
Mn2SiHz (CO) t
Mn2SiH.+ AP (eV)
7.9 (electron)
7.9 (photo)
7.9 (avg.)
8.5
8.7
9.0
10.4
12.7
13.8
14.8
15.9
17.4
8.4 (avg.)
9.4 (avg.)
10.7 (photo)
11.0 (photo)
12.6 (avg.)
13.6 (avg.)
14.7 (avg.)
16.4 (electron)
17.1 (avg.)
18.9 (avg.) Relative increase ( !)
or decrease ( I) of ml e
slope in parent IEC ratio
420
392
364
336
308
280
252
224
196
168
140
niques acts to eliminate the uncertainties associated with ei
ther one alone.
The relative intensities of the parent and fragment ions are
seen plotted in Fig. 2. They are based on electron impact
data, because the magnetic sector mass spectrometer used 636
for the electron impact studies was capable of better mass
resolution than the quadrupole mass spectrometer used for
photoionization, and was able to easily distinguish a 2-amu
separation.
The gas-phase photoabsorption curve for this compound
exhibited several peaks or absorption bands. The energies at
which these were observed served to confirm the AP values
in Table 1.15
Having collected thermodynamic information from var
ious sources, we made coatings by pyrolysis of
(tt-SiH2) [Mn (CO) 512 as described above. Our results have
been reported in the literature. 19 This particular organome
tallic compound has not been previously studied for pur
poses of coating production. Pyrolysis of our complex was
found to start at -225 ·C. Coatings were black to the eye as
in the case of pure metal coatings we have previously made
by pyrolysis. 16
Scanning electron microscopy showed the coatings to be
smoothly granular and slightly cracked. We believe the
cracks to be the result of different thermal expansion coeffi
cients between the manganese-silicide coating and the Ni
substrate, as the coatings were rather thick (over 2ttm).
Despite this, the coatings showed fair adhesion.
X-ray electron spectroscopy showed by attenuation of the
Ni substrate signal that the manganese silicide coatings were
well over 1 pm thick after a deposition period of 1 h. This
means the deposition rate was at least 170 A/min. XES also
indicated a ratio of Mn:Si of approximately 2:1, based on
relative peak heights. 19
A coating formed at high temperatures (;:::; 550°C) was
examined by transmission x-ray diffraction, as described in
the experiment section. Even with long exposure only a cou
ple offaint, broad, evenly spaced rings became visible on the
photographic film, indicating that the coating had either an
amorphous microstructure or very fine microcrystallites
« 10 A).20
100 X.-----------------------Io~------------------------------~6
9
Relative 8 _ --'-.-..... li· /x
Abundance 7 ~. ~ 6 X-x ~ _-0----0
O (%) 5 x--.. 0--/' --0, / 0<:'
/0 ..... 0..... 4 /x ~,,-6:':'-_0--0--0
'0 3 X ....... ~q)-:::-7 I , 2 /' ___ ,.~ .... N
Q) 0 " I ;X' 1) .... ---g/ .. 6····· g 60 I 0, ~16~~lg7~1~8~~19~~20~~2~1~2~2~2~3~~24~~2~5~26·
o 2! 50 '0 Electron Impact Energy (eV)
E I "0
« 40~ I ..... ,0......
.~ I x '0...
§ 30 I \ "0_ --0_-,",
&!. Iv--. -0--0
20~ I x, /6'"'--A--:-:~:-::-:'"'~-~·..:.l!~.:·:.:.g:.;.:·:..:.Z:.::..:.:.X:.:.:.:.:.X
x............. CJ.--·-O·-·-:;~:'_._ ... 'i/.... I
I Or x-:;;-< "," 0"""'-0. _._
r 0 x_ .. , .. 1il 0--·-0-'-0 .
. / ... L>-X~v __ v..x -'-0'-'-0'-'-0-'-0 I ." , ." ~ --x--x--x~_x I OL6I O-·CJ! I 4'" I'i/ ... r··'i/I 1 I 1 1 I I 1 1 -I-X-I-X
7 8 9 10 II 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 ~ 70 90
80
Electron Impact Energy (eV)
J. Vac. Sci. Techno/. A, Vol. 7, No.3, MaylJun 1989
.... '1 .. FIG. 2. The breakdown diagrams for
[Mn(CO)s], (WSiH,) derived from elec
tron impact lEC's. Relative intensities are
plotted as a function of electron impact ener
gy, with an intensity of 100% implying that
this is the only observed fragment. Main plot:
X-parent (Mn2SiH2)(CO),b ion, 0-
(Mn2SiH2)(CO).;', D-'-(Mn2SiH2)(CO),;',
/':,.---(Mn2SiH2) (CO),+, and \7'.'
(Mn,SiH1)(CO)4~' Corner inset plot: x
(Mn2SiH2) (CO)t, 0--(Mn2SiH2) (COlt,
D---(MnzSiHz)(CO), ,/':,.---(Mn2SiHz) '.
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Auger electron spectroscopy was the primary method
used for compositional analysis of the thin films. AES spec
tra were collected for coatings made at a variety of different
substrate temperatures. Argon ion sputtering was used in
each case to remove the top 200-300 A of the surface in order
that the underlying material composition could be assessed
without surface contamination, providing of course that ion
induced mixing and preferential sputtering are negligible. 21
Auger analysis was performed at intervals during the sput
tering process, thus producing a depth profile of elements.
With the aid of these spectra, a plot of average bulk composi
tion of the films versus substrate temperature at formation
was created. This plot can be seen in Fig. 3.
Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy also provided
very useful information on coating structure and composi
tion. When He f incidence angles 0[7° and 45° were used, the
resulting spectra were virtually identical, indicating homo
geneity throughout the bulk of the coating. Computer mod
eling of the spectra suggests that the thin films ~eposited at
5OO"C are composed of a surface region, 775 A thick, for
which the composition (at. %) is 38% Mn and 19% Si, the
rest being oxygen. Below this surface layer, the bulk of the
sample is estimated from modeling to be 44% Mn, 22 % Si,
and 33% 0 for the films deposited at 400, 450, and 500°C,
respectively.
The Mn, Si coating was found by RBS to be 3.4 {lm thick,
following ~ I-h exposure of the nickel foil at 500 0c. This
corresponds to a deposition rate of 570 A/s. The films made
at lower temperatures (though still above 250°C) were
thicker than this. Carbon concentration was found to be 5%
or less for films deposited at 400, 450, and 500 ec, while
oxygen was < 33%.
The manganese edge was found to become less abrupt and
cornerlike at higher film deposition temperatures. This is
explained by an increasing amount of oxygen ~ with increas
ing temperature from 400-500 DC) in a 2000-A selvedge re
gion near the surface.
100 x __ x ______
i~/~ x __ x_l!.
.i?j 60
Co
~:~ x\ :-D~a<-D
~ 20 0 y ----6 &->~~~
~ I 0 +"r;:/o~+ "'--+ o
o -L...-L.. f I I ! J ' ! I 1.0
200 300 400 500
Foil Deposition Temperature (degrees C)
FIG. 3. The composition (AES) of films formed via the thermal decomposi
tion of (WSiH2) [Mn(CO), 12 as a function of the foil temperature. Sput·
tering as mentioned previously was performed to remove surface contami.n
ation, but no correction has been made for ion mixing or preferential
sputtering. The attenuation of the XES nickel signal has also been plotted
( >< ) to provide an indication of the coating thickness. )< -inverse Ni seen
(right axis), 0-Mn signal seen, 0-Si signal, 6-carbon signal, and +
oxygen signal.
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A. Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 637
IV. DISCUSSION
Table I shows both the higher appearance potentials of the
parent IEC and the AP's of the fragment ions. An increase in
the slope ofthe parent ion IEC is seen at 8.5 eV, close to the
8.4 e V at which the (Mnl SiHz ) (CO) 9+ ion appears. This
indicates that the fragmentation mechanism involves a pre
dissociation excitation, i.e., dissociation associated with an
electronic excitation to an antibonding orbital. This partial
filling of an antibonding orbital would weaken the carbonyl
metal bond leading to creation of the (Mn2SiH2) (CO)9+
ion. A downward slope change would indicate a direct bond
breakage between the parent and the associated carbonyl
fragments, since it decreases the amount of parent ion pres
ent while increasing the amount of the fragment ion seen.
These conclusions have been presented in more detail pre
viously,15 and have been supported by our photoabsorption
experiments.
From the IP and AP information in Table I, we were able
to construct an ionic thermodynamic cycle for this com
pound. 15 This thermodynamic cycle is shown in Fig. 4. We
can then conclude that the total energy to go from the parent
carbonyl to the Mnl SiH, core is
D [(Mn2SiH2)(CO) l~ -IO(CO)]
= AP [MN2SiHt ] -IPl (Mn2SiH2)(CO) HI]
= 18.9 -7.9 = 11.0 eV .
From the relative abundances of the parent ion and differ
ent fragment ions (shown in Fig. 2) the (Mn2 SiH2 ) (CO) lb
Mn2SiHZ(COllo-....:.7:.,::.9-_. Mn2SiH2(CO);o ----,
I ~O.5
MnzSiH2(CO);
18.9 ~ 1.0
Mn2SiH2(COl:
~IA
Mn2SiHz (COl;
!0.2
Mn2SiH2(COl:
~ 1.6
Mn2SiH2(COl;
~ 1.0
MnzSiH2(COl: ! 1.1
MIl2SiH2(COl;
I .1.7
MnzSiH2(COl;
!O.7
Mn2SiHz (cot
~ 1.8
L-_____ .-Mn
2SiH
2+ 11.0
FIG. 4. The decomposition thennodynamic cycle for ionic fragmentation of
[Mn(CO), L (Il·SiR2), constructed from the AP/IP information in Table
I. The average AP and IP values listed (average between electron and pho
toionization data) were used. All numbers are in units of e V.
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parent ion is seen to readily dissociate at energies greater
than the appearance potential at-8 eV. The first (and at
low energies certainly the major) fragment formed is
(Mnz SiR2 ) (CO) 9+ • Other fragments put in appearances at
higher energies, and for the most part remain relatively con
stant in percentage composition. An exception is the Mnz
SiR2t fragment, which increases in percentage abundance
with increasing electron impact energy range near 26 eV.
This indicates that even in the high electron impact energy
environment of a plasma, the core manganese-silicide clus
ter would survive the stripping away of carbonyl ligands,
offering hope of deposition as a thin film with a wen-defined
metal-to-silicon ratio of 2: 1. The bonds between the two
Mn's and the Si are obviously stronger than the bonds be
tween each Mn and its CO ligands. The activation energy for
CO cleavage from r Mn (CO) 5 J 2 (fL-SiH2 ) is similar to that
observed for other metal carbonyl species,22-z6 indicating
that this molecule is fairly representative of the metal car
bonyls despite having a three-atom metal center (p-SiMn2 ).
The application of thermodynamics to thin-film deposition
is obvious in this instance; with the right deposition param
eters, the CO ligands will be removed while leaving the prop
er stoichiometric Mn:Si ratio.
Results of pyrolytic coating experiments support these
statements. The primary means used to analyze composition
and contaminants in these thin films were AES and RBS.
Table II provides a summary of these results for coatings
made at various temperatures. Discussion of the apparently
rather high contamination levels follows.
From AES, the onset of thermal decomposition of
(,u-SiR2) Mn (CO) 5 ] 2 on the surface of a nickel foil is at
~225 0c. At this temperature it seems that [Mn(CO)s]2
(SiRz ) is undergoing disproportionation with loss ofSi, pos
sibly in the form of silane, as discussed previously. This is
leading to films with considerable carbon incorporation, and
a manganese-to-silicon ratio of ;::::4:1. Raising the tempera
ture of pyrolysis eliminates this effect, however, producing
the ratio 2: 1 which is the same as in the source molecule.
Pyrolysis of a similar compound, Mn (CO) 5 (SiR3 ), at 773
K in a flow system, has been seen to result in a mixture of the
MnSi-Mns Si3 phases.7
The presence of carbon and oxygen in the MIlz Si coatings
at higher deposition temperatures could be the result of sev
eral different processes. One is incorporation of methane and
T AR!E n. Summary of Rutherford hack scattering and Auger electron spec
troscopy results for contamination and Mn:Si ratios.
Mn-to-Si ratio Contamination
Temperature -"---~"----"-~-.-----
(,Cl AES RBS AES RBS
200 1.94 13% O. 37% C
225 4.33 9% O. 76% C
250 3.30 17% O. 27% C
300 2.09 13% 0,18% C
400 2.16 2.0 15% O. 37% C <33%O,<5%C
450 2.67 2.0 24% 0, 20% C <33%O,<5%C
500 2.10 2.0 22% 0.18% C <33%0.<5%C
J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A, Vol. 7, No.3, May/Jun 1989 638
carbon monoxide from background gases in the chamber,
quite possible at a vacuum of only 10 5 Torr. The absence of
an XRD pattern suggests that the thin film is amorphous, so
impurity incorporation could occur readily without disturb
ing the silicide lattice structure.
Diffusion is another potential source of contamination. At
high temperatures, the diffusion of carbon and oxygen from
the thin film-nickel substrate interface will occur.27 Given
the cracked and granular nature of the thin film as seen in
SEM photographs, we would expect a large number of inter
faces akin to grain boundaries within the coating. These in
terfaces could provide excellent diffusion pathways for car
bon and oxygen for the films prepared at 400-500 °e.
The high metal content of the thin films results in a very
reactive surface, particularly with the metal manganese
which oxidizes readily. The cracks and grain boundaries of
the film provide additional surface area. Exposure to air,
following preparation of the sample, is probably thus the
origin of the heavily oxidized surface layer observed in RBS.
The change in the manganese edge shape, mentioned pre
viously, indicates that there is a gradual change in the oxy
gen concentration from the surface to the bulk in a selvedge
region 2000 A thick. This monotonically changing oxygen
concentration is representative of oxygen diffusion from the
surface after the film is deposited. If contamination were
taking place during coating deposition, a uniform distribu
tion would be expected. If it were a result of direct CO incor
poration, the RBS spectra would be expected to show com
parable amounts of carbon. The diffusion of oxygen into the
thin film does depend on the deposition temperature at
which the thin film is made. The oxygen diffusion layer was
seen to have a higher concentration of oxygen near the sur
face with films deposited at 500°C than at 400 °C.
As previously mentioned, Table II presents our contamin
ation analysis. While the Auger spectroscopy did detect oxy
gen and carbon impurities, RBS indicated a much lower lev
el « 5%) of ear bon than did AES (lowest number 18%).
The system in which the AES was carried out was pumped
with an oil diffusion pump, and it is possible that some of the
carbon detected was introduced by ion mixing of surface
impurities during the sputtering process. Since RBS is a less
surface sensitive process, we believe it to be more representa
tive of the true bulk composition of this coating.
V. CONCLUSION
It seems then that pyrolysis of (/l-SiR2) [Mn(CO)s]2
does create the desired Mn2 Si compound, if the right range
of substrate temperatures is maintained. The thin films that
result are isotropic and uniform in content, apart from the
oxygen impurities diflusing into the films from the surface.
The high manganese content renders them very susceptible
to oxidation upon exposure to air. If deposition and analysis
were performed in URV in situ, contamination levels might
prove to be less than the 5% carbon and 18% oxygen indi
cated by our RBS and AES analyses.
The consistent 2: 1 ratio of manganese to silicon from both
AES and RBS at reaction temperatures over 300 °C is also
very encouraging, as is the stability of the metal three-atom
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center. It indicates that pyrolysis of this complex results in
loss of CO, with no sHyl or silane by-products created.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was funded by the U.S. DOE through Grant
No. DE-FG-02-87-ER-45319, Bundesministeriun filr Fors
chung und Technology (BMFT) Contract No.
05313FXB3TPl, the Freie Universitat Berlin, and the Syra
cuse University Senate. We would also like to thank the staff
of the Synchrotron Radiation Center (SRC) at Stoughton,
WI and BESSY (Berlin, FRG). The SRC is supported by
the National Science Foundation through Grant No. DMR-
86-01349.
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1.100232.pdf | Sensitive, highly linear lithium niobate interferometers for electromagnetic
field sensing
C. H. Bulmer
Citation: Appl. Phys. Lett. 53, 2368 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.100232
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.100232
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Downloaded 29 Jun 2013 to 130.102.42.98. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsSensitive, highly linear lithium niobate interferometers for electroma.gnetic
field sensing
c. H. Bulmer
Na/lal Research Laboratory, Optical Sciences DilJisiofl, Washington, DC 20375-5000
(Received 29 July 1988; accepted for publication 3 October 1988)
An asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer in Ti:LiNbOJ has been demonstrated to have a
84 dB linear dynamic range and L 1 flY sensitivity, for a 3 kHz detection bandwidth and a 50
n resistance, at the 1.3;tm wavelength. This device is useful for electric and magnetic field
sensing. Optimum linearity is achieved with a 90° intrinsic phase bias. The dependence of
dynamic range and sensitivity on optical power, phase bias, and modulation voltage is
reported. The reasons for, and magnitudes of, deviations from optimum linear behavior are
described for many fabricated interferometers.
An integrated-optical modulator is of use for electro
magnetic field sensing as the active device can be smail, mini
mally perturbing, and highly sensitive. A linear modulator is
desired, which is passively biased for optimum performance.
The behavior of such a Ti-indiffused LiNb03 modulatorl
sensor has previously been reported. 1-3 In this letter we re
port linear dynamic range and sensitivity measurements at
the 1.3/im wavelength. We also describe the dependence of
dynamic range and sensitivity on modulator parameters and
optical power. The effect and causes of fabrication errors
which produce deviation from perfectly linear behavior are
discussed.
The device is a channel waveguide Mach-Zehnder in
terferometer, as in Fig. 1, where a difference in interferome
ter arm lengths, 6.L, gives rise to an intrinsic phase bias 4;0
given by
(1)
where nell' is the mode effective index which is the same in
each arm. The two arms differ in length but are otherwise
nominally identical; the branches are symmetric with a 0.60
half-angle. For optimum linearity ¢() = 90", which corre
sponds to 6.L = 152 nm at the operating wavelength.,{ = 1.3
11m. The total arm length is approximately 20 mm. The de
vice is formed in X-cut, Y-propagating LiNb03 in order to
both avoid pyroelectric effects causing temperature instabil
ity4 and also to obtain good voltage sensitivity. Electrodes
are placed symmetrically to either side of the waveguide
arms and a dipole antenna mighi be connected to the elec
trodes in order to modulate the optical output as a function
of electric field. Here we describe operation for a modulating
voltage V directly input to the electrodes.
For unity input power the output power Po is defined by
PI' = (/2) [1 + cos(tpo + 1TVIVr,»), (2)
with the modulation voltage V1T given by
V". = .,{gl(2on;~r33L), (3)
where 15 is an electrode efficiency facior, depending on the
overlap of the mode optical field with the applied electric
field, ffe is the extraordinary refractive index, r~B is the ap
propriate electro-optic coefficient, and Land g are the elec
trode length and gap width, respectively.
For sensing applications the input voltage Vis desired to
produce linear modulation of the optical output fundamen-
2368 AppL Phys. Lett 53 (24), 12 December 1968 tal frequency component. The lower end of the linear dy
namic range is defined as the point where V = VL produces a
fundamental signal equal to the noise due to the unmodulat
ed power level and the upper end as the point where V = Vu
produces any higher harmonic equal to the noise. The dy
namic range (DR) is then 20 log 10 ( VjVL). This is the
spurious-free dynamic range.s If rPo = 90° exactly, only odd
harmonics are produced by the input modulating voltage;
otherwise, even harmonics are also present in the output.
For tPo#90c the upper limit is generally set by the second
harmonic (V"2); the third harmonic magnitude (Vu3) is
dominant only for an error in tPo of S; OS. A given detector is
either thermal or shot noise limited, depending on the opti
cal power Ieve1.2 Figure 2 shows theoretical plots of DR as a
function of the optical power at the detector, for varying
error in the desired value of rPo = 900 and for bandwidth
B = 3 kHz, detector load resistance R = 50 n, and detector
responsivity r= 0.6 A/W (as for a typical GalnAs pin di
ode). Values are determined by expanding Eq. (2) as a har
monic series using V = Vc sin illt. For optical powers of < 1.7
m W, the detector is thermal noise limited. Powers of -1
mW at the detector are typically achievable with presently
available laser diodes. For thermal noise limited detection
and an error in ¢o such that linearity is second harmonic
limited, DR is directly proportional to the optical power at
the detector. The dynamic range decreases rapidly with in
creasing errror from ¢;o = 900, especially for small errors.
For instance, for 1 mW power, DR is 86.3 dB for zero error,
SINGLEMODE
CHANNEL
WAVEGUIDE
FIG. 1. Asymmetric interferometer with horizontal fidd electrode struc
ture.
2368
Downloaded 29 Jun 2013 to 130.102.42.98. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions~ 10 ----------------r-----r---------r-----r-----'-"--r ---~l
' fl THERMAL NOISE lIMITED--J ----~ SHOT NOISE lIMITW I
I 0' 1
lOOt- I __ -----j
I _--- O.~
I -___ 3'd KARMONIC LIMITED ---- ~~10 --2nd HARMONIC LIMITED _--:--_----
BOr /~------==--====-~ :.:
Bof /~~----===--~
I ~------~~~ I F-~-/---...__--- -----I ~ 70~ ~ ~--- I I ~~: I 6C~- ------>-----'------'-- ----__ . .L ____ .1 _________ __ L ____ J
C.l 1.0 10 100
OPTICAL POWER AT lJETEC';'OR ImW)
FIG. 2. Linear dynamic range as a function of optical power at the detector
and varying error [rom ,po = 90', for B == 3 kHz, R .= 50 n, and r =,0.6
A/W.
81.4 dB for 1° error, 78.4 dB for 2° error, and 74.4 dB foy 5°
error.
The modulator sensitivity is VL, which is the lowest in
put voltage which can be detected. The lower VI., the greater
the sensitivity. The sensitivity degrades only very slightly
with error in ¢o and depends mainly on the optical power
level at the detector and on the "electro-optic efficiency" of
the modulator, as determined by the modulation voltage V iT'
(In contrast the dynamic range is independent of V". as both
VL and V" vary by proportionate amounts for changes in
V".) The sensitivity VL is plotted in Fig. 3 as a function of
optical power for.po = 90e and V7T = 2 V (typical ViT for our
sensors; corresponding to L = 14 mm, g ~ 8 pm, and
8-0.6). For 1 mW power, the voltage sensitivity is -1 tlV;
for $0 = 900, VL = 1.06 /-l V and for $0 = 900 ± 100,
VL ~ L07 f1. V. The negligible change in VL for a 10° error
indicates how tolerant device sensitivity is to deviations from
.po = 90°.
Interferometers were fabricated from Ti strips, ~ 6.5
f1.ID wide and -46nm thick, diffused at 1000 °C for 10 h in a
wet oxygen atmosphere. Al electrodes, 0.5 fim thick and 14
mm long, were defined to either side of the channel wave
guides with a gap of ~ 8 pm. The TE (extraordinary) mode
was launched in the LiNbO, using a high-power laser diode.
The modulation voltage V7T was measured as 2.0 V. The an
gle .po was determined as 89S by measuring the voltages
5~
I
21
1.0~
I THER'IIIAL
NOISE
LIMITED
0.1 . I SHOT
NOISE
L1MIYED
:::[1'_
o.a~.l ----~--,:0 -J--~-1O_-------'-Ma
OPTICAL POWER AT DETECTOR (mW)
FIG. 3. Sensitivity as a function of optical power at the detector for
</>" = 90', Vr, =~ 2 V, B = 3 kHz, R 0= 50 n, and r = 0.6 A/W.
2369 App1. Phys. Lett., Vol. 53, No. 24, 12 December 1988
..... -.: ......•.•. -;-: ... ;;.: .... '.~.'~.'7 .-.';.;.;O;'."' •••• ~.: •••••• ·.v.·.·.·.;·; •.•.••••••••. ;-•.• -:0 .... '~.'. Vmax and V;,,;n required to drive the output to a maximum
and minimum, respectively; then V7T = i v'nax I + I Vrnin I and
.po = rrVmax/VTT• The total loss from input to detector was 9
dB and 0.85 m W light was incident on the detector. The loss
includes 3 dB loss intrinsic to the linear interferometer com
pared to an interferometer with symmetric arms or.po = 0°.
The dynamic range was determined by applying a sinusoidal
voltage at 8 kHz to the electrodes and measuring the output
harmonic magnitudes using a spectrum analyzer and lock-in
amplifier. (The modulator 3 dB bandwidth was separately
measured, using the swept frequency technique,6 as 570
MHz). The detector (0.65 A/W responsivity) was thermal
noise limited at Vth = -146 dB V for the terminating resis
tance R = 50 n and bandwidth B = 3 kHz. ( Vo.
= f4k~-tB.if, where T = 300 K and kb = 1.38 X 10-23 J/
K, was both calculated and checked experimentally). The
corresponding DR was 84 dB, limited by the second har
monic, and the sensitivity was 1.15 Ii V, as shown in Fig. 4.
These values are in excellent agreement with theory. Scaling
them for 1 m W incident light gives DR = 85 dB and a sensi
tivity ofO. 98!-t V. Scaling to any power or any detector can be
achieved by noting that VL a: Pth I P,
VU2 a: (PthIP)1/2, v,t3 0:. (PthIP)l!3,wherePth is the optical
power at the detector corresponding to thermal noise
(PtJ; = Vth / Rr) and P is the incident optical power.
The high dynamic range ( > 80 dB) and fi V sensitivity
were achieved by maximizing the output power and by maxi
mizing the modulator efficiency (8 = 0.65) or minimizing
V Also an interferometer with only a OS error from the 90°
phase bias was used; this smail error was critical for high DR
although not for good sensitivity. We aim to achieve good
linearity passively withollt, for instance, using a dc bias or
any subsequent fabrication tuning.7-9 Perfectly linear oper
ation requires a small but precise degree of asymmetry in the
interferometer geometry and errors in photolithographic
processing or mask making produce errors in ¢o .
Using a mask set with 25 interferometers spaced at 0.5
or 0.75 mm intervals across the LiNbO J substrate, we have
measured and compared f/Jo errors for given interferometers
on different substrates. For a given device .po can be mea
sured repeatedly to ± 0.40 accuracy. In our case random
fabrication processing errors seem to predominate rather
than mask errors. Many experimental variables can result in
:rf~5~·~··cr~·~;/~l
,of 1
~ ~ -i
~ -90 L
o -110
I -13G 1-
-:501 ------.-----84d8---------., IR~50D g~o3kH'1
Ii 1.15,N 18.2 mV i '
~ ___ L __ ....! ___ .l. ___ L ___ L __ -L ___ L ___ J __ L -' ___ ...L ___ L ___ L-...-:
-'20 -'00 -80 -60 -40 -20 G
INPUT IdB\I)
FIG. 4. Experimental interferometer response; ¢e'= 89S; 0.85 mW at de
tector.
C. H. Bulmer 2369
Downloaded 29 Jun 2013 to 130.102.42.98. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsnon uniformity between the two interferometer arms which
are spaced by 80 11m. For the 20 mm arm length, a mode
effective index difference between the arms of
i:>.nctr = 1.8 X 10--6 produces a 10° change in ¢o' Such a slnaH
dndf might be caused by variations in channel width, Ti
thickness, electrode dimensions and alignment, LiNb03 dif
fusion parameters, or LiNb03 material composition. We
achieve a-10% fabrication yield for devices with
88°~<p()<92°, corresponding to linear dynamic ranges of
> 78 dB, for 1 m W power and the detection parameters pre
viously stated.
On several substrates, after initial ¢() measurements, the
electrodes were etched away, new electrodes were defined
using the same mask, and the devices were remeasure(t This
procedure was repeated up to four times and changes in ¢;o
from one electrode set to another were noted. The average
magnitude of 6.60 was 2.6". Although this variation is small it
can significantly affect dynamic range. Any source of stress
can cause small variations in ¢;o and should be avoided for
optimum dynamic range. The addition of an insulating layer
over the electrodes results in small changes in ¢;o' A O.5-,lm
thick photoresist overlayer caused ¢(J of 50 interferometers
to change by an average ofl.O°. The addition ofLiNb03 edge
blocks used in end polishing has sometimes caused ¢() of
some interferometers to change by up to 6". Dicing a 25-mm
wide LiNbO-, substrate with many interferometers into
2370 AppL Phys. Lett., Vol. 53, No. 24, 12 December 1988 pieces approximately 3 mm wide caused no change in <Po of
half the devices. Overall the average change in <Po was 2.80
and the maximum change was g".
In conclusion, the theoretical dependence of inter fer om
eter linear dynamic range and sensitivity on optical power,
intrinsic phase bias <Po, and modulation voltage has been
described. An experimental device with 84 dB dynamic
range and 1.1 J.i V sensitivity has been reported. These char
acteristics make the interferometer useful as an electric field
sensor. Factors causing <Po to vary from the ideal asymmetric
90" value were described. They should be avoided, if possible,
for optimum linear performance of interferometric sensors.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to S. C. Hiser for
technical assistance, W. K. Burns for useful discussions, and
M. L Rebbert for photolithographic work.
'e. H. Bulmer, W. K. Burns, and R. P. Moeller, Opt. Lett. 5, 176 ( 1980).
2e. H. Bulmer and W. K. Hums, 1. Lightwave Techno!. I,T-2, 512 (1984).
'e. H. Bulmer and S. C. Hiser, SPIE 517, 177 (1984).
-'c. H. Bulmer. W. K. Burns, and S. C. Hiser. AppL Phys. Lett. 48, 1036
( 1986).
'B. H. Kolner and D. W. Dolfi, Appl. Opt. 26, 3676 (1987).
(,S. Uehara, App!. Opt. 17. 68 (1978).
70. Mikami, J. Noda, S. Zembutsu, and S. Fukunishi, App!. Phys. Lett. 31,
376 (lCJ77).
'0. Mikami and S. Zt'mbutsll, Appl. Phys. Lett. 35, 38 (1979).
"M, J. Ahmed and L. Young, App!. Opt. 22, 40~2 (1983).
C. H. Bulmer 2370
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1.97966.pdf | Abnormalglowdischarge deposition of tungsten
K. E. Greenberg
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 50, 1050 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.97966
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.97966
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/50/16?ver=pdfcov
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:16:28Abnormai~glow .. discharge deposition of tungsten
K. E. Greenberg
Sandia National Laboratories, Laser & Atomic Physics Division, P. O. Box 5800, Albuquerque,
New Mexico 87185
(Received 3 December 1986; accepted for publication 20 February 1987)
a-tungsten films that adhere well to silicon dioxide were deposited using a dc abnormal-glow
discharge through WF6, H2, and Ar. Film resistivities on the order of 30 I-lfi cm and deposition
rates as high as 200 A/min were obtained without heating the substrate externaHy. X-ray
diffraction, Auger electron spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and transmission
electron microscopy measurements indicate that electron scattering at the grain boundaries has
limited the conductivity ofthc plasma-deposited films. Tungsten films having resistivities
within a factor of two times that of bulk tungsten were produced with a two-step process
utilizing plasma and conventional chemical vapor deposition.
Tungsten is one of the refractory metals being consid
ered as a repiacement for aluminum in integrated circuits. It
has a higher melting point than aluminum and is more resis
tant to electromigration, hillock formation, and spiking.
While it has been possible to selectively grow tungsten on
silicon by ehemicalvapor deposition, 1-3 it has been difficult
to obtain high quality tungsten films that adhere well to sili
con dioxide, a necessity for broad-area metallization. Here
we describe the plasma deposition of tungsten films that ad
here wen to silicon dioxide, aluminum, silicon, and galIium
arsenide. The films were deposited at temperatures below
70°C (purely a plasma deposition process) using a de abnor
mal-glow discharge4 through a mixture ofWFIi, H2, and Ar,
Although the 2s-depositcd film resistivities typically have
been greater than 30 pH em (the deposition process has yet
to be optimized), we have found that low resistivity materia]
( < 10 pO. em) that adheres well to silicon dioxide can be
produced by plasma depositing 30-100 A of tungsten and
growing a subsequent layer by conventional chemical vapor
deposition (CVD).
Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of the experimental ap
paratus. The cathode, a stainless-steel plate, was separated
from a stainless-steel cross (1.375 in. Ld.) by an insulating
ring. The cathode was driven negative while the remainder
of the system was maintained at ground potential, A turbo
molecular pump evacuated the cell to a base pressure of
5X 107 Torr before WF" (Spectra Gas 99.88% purity),
H2, and argon were introduced into the system through mass
flow controllers. The total gas pressure was typically 100-
300 mTorr with the individual flow rates being less than or
equal to 10 seem. While tungsten was deposited on all of the
materials listed above, the remainder of this paper will per
tain to oxidized silicon substrates (8000 <h.. of thermal oxide
on top of silicon) unless noted otherwise,
A number of workers have reported that the adhesion of
thin metal films can be greatly improved by high-energy
eiectron, photon, or ion hombardment.'-7 Similarly, when
the substrates were placed directly on the cathode of our
abnormal-glow discharge in order to receive ion bombard
ment during film growth, it was possi.ble to obtain tungsten
films that adhered weH to the underlying materiaL The ener
gi.es of the ions impinging on the substrates in our experi
ments were much lower than those used previousIy7 since the maximum energy an ion eouid attain in our configura
tion was 2000 eV, corresponding to the 2 kV discharge vol
tage. In addition, the majority of the ions reaching the cath
ode probably had energies less than 1 keY due to charge
exchange collisions in the cathode fall region.8 Although the
energies were much lower than those in the previous studies,
the ion bombardment significantly increased the adhesion of
the deposited films. Furthermore, the substrates had to be
placed on the cathode for the films to adhere.
The cathode was not heated externally and, for all ofthe
discharge conditions reported here, the highest temperature
measured for the cathode was 70 DC, immediately after a 30-
min deposition, Since thermal tungsten CVD does not occur
at 70 ·C, aU of the deposition could be attributed to plasma
processes. This was also confirmed by the fact that the depo
sition rate was independent of the deposition time (see be
low). Any thermal contribution to the deposition process
would have been reflected by a nonlinear deposition rate
with respect to time due to the high thermal capacity and
long thermal equilibration time constant of the cathode. (It
could be possible, of course, that the substrate surface was at
a higher temperature than the cathode. However, simple cal
culations based on thermal conductivity indicate that the
temperature of the substrate surface should not have been
significantly elevated such that thermal CVD would occur.)
The adhesion of the deposited films was determined us
ing the adhesive tape test. As an added test, a section of the
FIG 0 I. Schematic diagram of the experimental apparatus,
1050 App!. Physo Lett 50 (; 6), 20 April 1987 0003-695 i /87/161050-03$01000 @ 1987 American Institute of Physics 1050
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:16:28film was ablated using a Kr F laser (248 urn) and the remain
der was tested again with tape. For films that adhered well,
low KrF laser ftuences on the order of 300 mJ/cm2 would
cleanly ablate the tungsten from the oxide without damaging
the underlying layer. In aU cases, the part of the deposited
film which was not irradiated by the laser still adhered well.
In addition, post heating at 500°C in vacuum did not signifi
cantly alter the adhesion.
Figure 2 shows the thickness and resistivity of the de
posi.ted film as a function of deposition time for a discharge
voltage of2000 V, a current of5.0 rnA, and WF6, H2, and Ar
partial pressures of 10, 150, and 100 mTorr, respectively.
The resistivity was determined using a four-point probe and
the film thickness was obtained by ablating part of the depos
ited film with the KrF laser and measuring the resultant step
height with a stylus profiIometer. Chemical etching of the
films confirmed that the laser cleanly removed the tungsten
without affecting the underlying oxide. As shown, deposi
tion began immediately (zero induction time) at a rate on
the order of 150 A/min, Unlike the resistivity of cOllvention
al CYD tungsten, which may decrease with increasing film
thickness due to an increase of the grain size, ') the resistivity
of the plasma-deposited fUm was independent of the film
thickness. In addition, for these discharge conditions, the
resistivity was on the order of70 pU em which is significant
ly greater than the bulk resistivity of tungsten, approximate
ly S.5pn em,
The properties of these films were investigated using a
number of surface analysis techniques in order to explain the
high. film resistivities. X-ray diffraction patterns were ob
tained for a number of 70 ,til em films with thicknesses
between 700 and 1300 A. In all cases, the diffraction peaks
corresponded to a-tungsten and no trace of the h.igher resis
tivity, metastable p phase oftungsten was detected, This is in
sharp contrast to the results obtained by Tang and Hess for
the plasma-enhanced CVD of tungsten. 10 In the plasma· en
hanced CVD studies, an rf discharge was used and sapphire
substrates were placed on a temperature-controlled elec
trode. For electrode temperatures less than 250°C, Tang and
Hess detected only p-tungsten and their films had resistivi
ties about 120 pO em. Since the phase of the deposited film
can be greatly influenced by ion bombardment, we believe
30CO
G3 :<500
III
III 2000 W
:Ii: :.; l)
:i: 11;00
!-V~2()(laV.1 ·S.O rnA
./' I
CJ __ Ij
0 _~-'['-~ _~ """'":r-........ _. 175!
o
10 .:;.
>-
-5<) ~
1=
III
00
p(WF5) ~ iC mT~" 25 ~ l '"
p{Ha} =~50 mTorr
peAx) ~ 1'00 m70rr
I '0
15 20 25
T!ME (millutee)
FIG. 2. Film thickness and resistivity as a function of deposition time.
1051 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 50, No, 16,20 April 1987 that a-tungsten films were obtained wi.th the abnormal-glow
discharge due to the fluxes and energies of the ions imping
ing on the substrates. The cleanliness of our vacuum system
may have also contributed to the production of a-tungsten as
the presence of oxygen or other impurities enhances the for
mation of the beta phase, II
Auger analyses of the plasma-deposited films show the
material to be relatively free from impurities. Films deposit
ed on SiOz and GaAs substrates were analyzed and, in both
cases, the Auger spectra indicated that less than 1 at. % of
carbon was incorporated in the tungsten. In addition, no
oxygen or fluorine was detected.
A comparison was made between plasma-deposited
tungsten and conventional CVD tungsten using scanning
and transmission electron microscopies. The conventional
CVD film was produced by depositing 100 A of tungsten
using the plasma and then doing a conventional CVD
growth (no plasma) at 400 "c. The resistivity of the 4S00-A..
thick conventional CYD film was about 14 pH em while that
of the 3000-A-thick plasma-deposited film was 70 pn em.
Figure 3 shows a scanning electron micrograph of the con
ventional CVD film and Fig. 4 shows a transmission electron
micrograph and diffraction pattern for the plasma-deposited
film. The grain size of the conventional film was approxi
mately 3000 A, more than an order of magnitude larger than
2000 A grain size of the plasma-deposited film, Consequent
ly, it appears that electron scattering at the grain boundaries
has limited the conductivity of the plasma-deposited films.
This inference is consistent with the fact that the resistivities
of the plasma-deposited. films were independent of the mm
thickness since the grain size did not seem to increase signifi
cantly with thickness.
It was possible to obtain different resistivity films by
altering the various discharge parameters (partial gas pres-
FIG. 3. Scanning electron micrograph of conventional CVD tungsten
grown on top of plasma-deposited tungsten.
K. E. Greenberg 1051
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138.251.14.35 On: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 20:16:28FIG. 4. Transmission electron micrograph and diffraction pattern for a
plasma-deposited film.
sures, discharge current, etc.). Deposition rates as high as
200 A/min were achieved and films with resistivities as low
as 30 fl!l em were obtained. It is believed that by optimizing
the discharge deposition process it will be possible to pro
duce films with resistivities much closer to that of bulk tung
sten. Even if it is not possible to obtain device quality materi
al purely by plasma processing, this could stiH be a viable
technique for broad-area metallization since we were able to
produce a lOflD em tungsten film that adhered to the under
lying oxide by plasma depositing 100 A of tungsten and then
growing an additional 5000 A by conventional CVD. A typi-
1052 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 50, No. 16,20 April: 987 cal metallization scheme might include a conventional sili
con selective tungsten deposition in the contact windows fol
lowed by the plasma deposition of a thin layer of tungsten
and the conventional CVD growth of an additional layer.
This scheme would produce low resistivity tungsten that ad
heres well to the oxide, ensure low contact resistance, and
cause minimal damage due to ion bombardment.
In summary, tungsten films that adhere well to silicon
dioxide were deposited using an abnormal-glow discharge.
The metal was deposited at low temperatures and prelimi
nary studies indicate that electron scattering at the grain
boundaries, rather than impurity incorporation or film mor
phology, was responsible for the higher than bulk resistivi
ties of the plasma-deposited films. Tungsten films having
resistivities within a factor of two times that of bulk tungsten
and that adhere well to silicon dioxide were produced by the
plasma deposition of a thin layer of tungsten foHowed by a
conventional CVD growth,
The author wishes to thank L. Maestas and M. Eatough
for the x-ray diffraction work, W. Wallace for the Auger
studies, R. Lujan for the scanning electron micrograph, and
C. Hills for the TEM studies. This work was performed at
Sandia National Laboratories and supported by the U.S. De
partment of Energy under contract number DE-AC04-
76DPOO789 for the Office of Basic Energy Sciences.
.-
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K. E. Greenberg 1052
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1.37211.pdf | AIP Conference Proceedings 170, 498 (1988); https://doi.org/10.1063/1.37211 170, 498
© 1988 American Institute of Physics.Bolometers as high-resolution
gamma spectrometers
Cite as: AIP Conference Proceedings 170, 498 (1988); https://
doi.org/10.1063/1.37211
Published Online: 29 May 2008
George Simpson
498
BOLOMETERS AS HIGH-RESOLUTION GAMMA SPECTROMETERS
George Simpson
Space Science Center, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824
ABSTRACT
A significant advance in nuclear gamma-ray spectroscopy could be made if
detectors capable of measuring Doppler shifts at MeV energies were available. With this
goal in mind, we have investigated the prospects for constructing gamma-ray
bolometers. We discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this approach, drawing on
recent progress in their application to X-ray astronomy and neutrino detection.
INTRODUCTION
Bolometers, which measure radiant energy by converting photons into heat, are
interesting to study because they raise the possibility of achieving very high resolution.
This has been demonstrated at X-ray energies by the GSFC group who, using a silicon
boule at 304 mK, have achieved a resolution of 17 eV at 6 keVl,2, 4. This is more than a
factor of 10 improvement over the best resolution previously achieved with solid state
detectors. Their detector is unsuitable for gamma-ray work, having an active volume of
only 2.5 x 10 -6 cm 3. Bias Cabrera 3 also took up the bolometer concept, proposing that
a neutrino detector be built using many 1 kg blocks of silicon at 1 inK. He suggested
that the required thermometry be performed using either superconducting thin films or
SQUIDs.
This paper discusses the potential of bolometers as spectrometers for gamma-
ray astronomy. The scope of the discussion is restricted to defining one feasible design
for a single bolometer unit, which corresponds to the individual detectors of
conventional gamma-ray spectrometers (eg: NaI or Ge crystals). A brief discussion of
the background conditions which will be encotmtered in orbit, and some possible
background suppression strategies are given. We are trying to answer the question: "Is
it possible, in principle, to use a bolometer to perform high-resolution astronomical
spectroscopy at gamma-ray energies?"
SCIENTIFIC PROMISE
Recent solid-state detector gamma-ray results have shown that the widths of the
galactic 5115,6,7 and 18098 keV lines are less than the resolution of these devices (N1
keV). It is reason,'tble therefore to expect that narrow widths will be a characteristic of
many other astrophysical lines, its yet undiscovered. Some of the questions which
could be addressed if a spectrometer with sufficient sensitivity and resoh, tion to
measure Doppler shifts at gamma-ray energies became available include the following:
SOLAR: Sites of nuclear activity on the stm: If the line-of-sight velocities of the
excited nuclei emitting gamma-rays could be determined, then by correlating the
velocities with those fotmd at other wavelengths, the interaction regions could be
uniquely identified. Different lines, such as those front positron annihihttion and
neutron capture, may well be produced at different places in the solar atmosphere.
Electron temperature at the annihilation site: If we could measure the width of the
/e) 1988 American Institute of Physics
499
positron annihilation line, we could determine the electron temperature, and thus open
the door to gamma-ray and radio correlation studies
BURSTS: Neutron star mass: It would be possible to make precise measurements
of gravitational red-shifts in gamma-ray burst spectra, if we had high enough
resolution. These data would pin down the ratio of object mass to emission radius.
Assuming that the emission comes from the surface, and assuming that we know the
density from the equation of state, we could then determine the radius of the star.
PULSARS: With a very high resolution spectrometer, we might find Doppler
shifts in pulsar emission which are a function of the phase. This would give a very
strong clue as to the emission geometry.
PHYSICAL PRINCIPLES
In this section, we discuss the physical principles which govern bolometry at
MeV energies. One of the key property of bolometers which makes them attractive for
gamma-ray astronomy is the fact that they use the bulk properties of matter, rather than
surface effects. This is important because the photon cannot be confined to a small
volume, A second property is the very low specific heat which some substances show
near OK.
1. Specific Heats: The Debye-Somerfeld Equation shows that the specific heat of the
lattice approaches zero as the third power of the temperature, while that due to electrons
is linear in the temperature, For very pure Germanium and Silicon, the electronic
specific heat is negligible. At .0001K (0.1 mK), the specific heats of these elements
actually fall as low as 1 electron volt per degree kelvin per gram. The figure below
shows the thermal capacity as a function of temperature in this range, for the
Germanium detector described below.
electron-
volts/mK
10000 Thermal Capacity of Germanium Gamma-Ray
Bolometer Detecting Element
1000
100
10 Germanium, 55 gms
I I
2.41 cm height x 2.32 cm diam
=> 1 radiation length x 20-1 MeV electron ranges
2 4 6
mK
2. Gamma-RCw Absorption: We require that gamma-rays of the energies of interest
have a probabi-lity (>0.5) of being totally absorbed in the detector. To achieve this, we
500
need a thickness of at least one interaction length, and we also need the linear
dimensions to be large compared to the range of recoil electrons. A cylindrical element
of Germanium, 2.3 cm in diameter and 2.4 cm in height, while only one interaction
length long, meets these requirements.
,~, Recovery: Because the thermal resistance from an object to a Helium bath is a very
strong function of surface quality, one usually provides thermal links between the
element and the cooling surface. This strategy not only promotes a uniform response
over the volume of the bolometer element, but also allows the recovery rate to be
controlled. The parameters of the thermal link must be chosen to provide heat flow
adequate for the bolometer element to recover quickly. They should have the highest
possible thermal conductivity, combined with the lowest possible specific heat. The
next figure shows a configuration which could be used in a gamma-ray telescope.
Evacuated
Refrigeration Cell,
also acts as
Faraday cage and
magnetic shield coolant flows
over surface
Bolometer
Element:
3ermanium
Therr uor resistance
Link thermometry)
4. Thermometry: The thermometry requirements for this instrument pose a challenge.
We must measure the total heat flow of a pulse which lasts only microseconds. We will
assume, for the present discussion, that equipment is available which can measure the
temperature of the bolometer element with an accuracy of lmK across the range from 1
mK to 1K, within the instrument response time. One strategy to achieve this
requirement is to use noise thermometry to establish the absolute temperature baseline,
and resistance thermometry to follow the thermal pulse. Since it is common to use
doped Germanium as the resistor .element, the possibility exists to combine the resistor
with the bolometer itself. This would resolve the often troublesome issue of thermal
contact between the sample and the thermometer.
501
A PRELIMINARY DESIGN
The preliminary design given in this section shows that reasonable parameters can
be found allowing such a device to function as a gamma-ray spectrometer. The next
step, a detailed optimization making use of engineering data for existing devices, will
be published in a follow-on paper. The parameters of this design are as follows:
1. Material: Germanium is chosen, because of its low specific heat in the millikelvin
regime, and its high gamma-ray absorption coefficient. Silicon, for example, requires
more than 5 times as much mass as Germanium, to achieve the same stopping power
for gamma-rays.
2. Mass: 55 gms provides one radiation length.
3. Shape: A right cylinder, of diameter approximately equal to the height, is chosen for
this design exercise.
4. Operating Temperature: 1-5 mK
5. Link Properties: Pure copper links are chosen to give the highest possible thermal
conductivity combined with the lowest thermal capacity. These quantities are a function
of temperature, so the net instrument response will be non-linear.
DESIGN MODELS
1. Response model: The response model describes what happens to the detector when
it is hit by a gamma-ray or other particle. It models the transfer of energy from the
infalling photon into heat, and it predicts the response of the instrument as a function of
time after the pulse. We have used STELLA, an interactive graphical modelling tool,
for this purpose. The STELLA model of our system is shown below. Each of the
graphical elements contains a relation specifying its response to its inputs. The boxes
integrate the flows into and out of them, which are shown as outlined arrows with
valves. The circles contain relations governing the local properties, and the arrows
show the functional dependencies. For example, heat enters the bolometer element
(U_bolo_element) from gamma-ray energy deposits (power_input), and leaves it due to
cooling via the thermal links (cooling_power). The specific heats and conductivities of
the links and the bolometer elements are represented graphically. The most important of
the equations are shown below the figure. We used this simple model to predict the
response of our system to gamma-rays of given energies, adjusting parameters such as
link area and bolometer mass until we achieved acceptable perfomaance.
2. Gamma-Ray transport model: We have used a gamma-ray transport program to
determine the photofraction and distribution of energy deposits in our bolometer
element.
3. Res~l~l~i~n and Backgro~md Models: For purposes of the present discussion, we
assume that the achievable resolution limit is given by the value already achieved with
X-ray detectors. An investigation of the sources of the various background
contributions, and what can be done to suppress each of them, will be completed in the
near future.
502
Log Cp_bolo
T bolo
dT bolo Thermal_Capac
~._ Net_Cooling_Energy
Net_bolo power_t
" ~ U_bolo_element '~," "
Power_Input Cooling_ Link_Tem
Power
Gamma ~
Energy Gamma_ Gamma
Pulser Interval
Link
Conductance
Key Model Equations
Net Cooling_Energy -- NcLCooling_Energy + dt * ( Cooling_Power )
INIT(Net_Cooling_Energy) = 0
T_bolo = T_bolo + dt * ( dT_bolo )
INIT(T_bolo) = 25 { inK}
U_bolo_elcment = U_bolo element + dt * ( -Cooling_Power + Power_Input )
INIT(U_bolo_element) = 0 {eV: arbitrary reference level}
Cooling_Power = IF(Link_Temp_Diff>0) THEN
Link_Temp_Diff*Link_Conductance ELSE 0 {eV per microsecond}
dT_bolo -- Net bolo power flow,q'hcrmal_Capac {mK}
Gamma_Pulser = PULSE(1,3,Gamma_Intcrval)
Link_Temp_Di ff = T_bolo-Tsink {inK }
Nct_bolo_power_flow = Powcr_Input-Cooling_Powcr (ev/microsecond}
MODEL PREDICTIONS T_bolo
Link
Area Log_T_bolo
Length
1. Response model: The themaal pulse time constants, as a function of time, were
optimized by adjusting the properties of the themlal link in the model. Pulse profiles
such as that seen below were typical. The important point is that reasonably fast pulses
can be achieved, with the conductivities and specific heats which exist at these
temperatures.
503
mK
1000, ,0eL
,0I Bolometer Response to
511 keV Energy Deposit
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
microseconds
2. Gamma-Ray Transport Model: The figure below shows the efficiencies for the
various interaction types, as a function of photon energy, for a single bolometer
element. It is clear from the figure that we would like to have a thicker detector, or a
material with a higher photopeak efficiency.
efficiency 60%
50% \
40%,
30% <
20%
10%•
0%13
200 PROCESS EFFICIENCIES for
GAMMA-RAY BOLOMETER
DETECTING ELEMENT.
(Preliminary Design)
•--
, [] , , [] j ~rh
400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000
Photon Energy, keV O. photoelectric
O. single Compton
• . multiple Compton
[]. pair production
3. Background: The small bolometer element size defends it against excessive dead-
time due to charged particle events. Our detector has a geometrical factor of ~82 cm -2
sr. The expected rate of charged particle events through the element is therefore
-10/second. Recovery times faster than 1 millisecond are required, to avoid having
gamma-ray events ride on the tail of charged particle events. Activation background is
the most serious problem for this system; our models do not yet address this issue.
504
4. Resolution Model: The resolution model is not yet complete. But considering that
with higher temperatures, McCammon et al. achieved 17 eV at 6 keV, it should be
possible to achieve similar values in the gamma ray regime.
SUMMARY
The advantages of the bolometer for gamma-ray spectroscopy are its very high
ultimate resolution and its simplicity of concept. Some disadvantages are the relatively
modest sensitivity which each individual element may have (too avoid pileup due to
charged particle events), the necessity of cooling to millikelvin temperatures, and the
need for extremely good electrical, acoustical, and magnetic isolation, to achieve the
ultimate resolution.
REFERENCES
1. S.H. Moseley, J.C. McCammon, and D. McCammon, J.Appl.Phys. 56(5),1257
(1984)
2. D. McCammon, S.H. Moseley, J.C. Mather, and R.F. Mushotzky, J.Appl.Phys.
56(5), 1263 (1984)
3. B. Cabrera, L.M. Krauss, and F. Wilczek, Phys. Rev. Letters, 55 (1), 25 (1985)
4. S.H. Moseley, R.L. Kelley, R.J. Schoelkopf, A.E. Szymkowiak, D. McCammon,
and J. Zhang (in press)
5. M. Leventhal, C.J. MacCallum, and P.D. Stang, Ap.J. 225, L11 (1978)
6. M. Leventhal, C.J. MacCallum, A.F. Huters, and P.D. Stang, Ap.J. 240, 338
(1980)
7. G.R. Riegler, J.C. Ling, W.A. Mahoney, W.A. Wheaton, J.B. Willett,
A.S. Jacobson, and T.A. Prince, Ap.J. 248, L13 (1981)
8. W.A. Mahoney, J.C. Ling, W.A. Wheaton, and A.S. Jacobson, Ap.J. 286, 578
(1984)
|
1.343156.pdf | Photoluminescence of CuAl x Ga1−x Se2 crystals grown by chemical vapor transport
Koichi Sugiyama, Satoshi Iwasaki, Tamio Endo, and Hideto Miyake
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 65, 5212 (1989); doi: 10.1063/1.343156
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.343156
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/65/12?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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142.157.129.8 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 22:20:311ITO
10-11 '--_.L..-_..L..-_-'-_-'-_~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
APPLIED VOLTAGE[V) FIG. 6. J-V characteristics
of Mo!Zr02(30.5 nrn)!
Si02!p-Si( 100) diodes for
various oxidation times.
where E is the electric field in the Si02 films. A Fowler
Nordheim tunneling theory leads to the equation
Ee = 4(2m*) 1/2tp3/Z13fxq, (2)
where m* is the effective mass of holes at the Si surface, <I> is
the barrier height, and q is the electric charge. From the
observed value of Ee (1.18 X 108 V Icrn) and the average ef
fective mass m* = O.28m (when m is the free-electron
mass), the value ofct> is estimated to be 3.44 eV. The photoe
mission measurement for Si into Si028 shows that the barrier
height for holes is about 3.6 eV which is nearly equal to the
above-mentioned value of <P. This shows that the current
transport mechanism through the Mo/ZrOzlSi02/Si diode for a 600-min oxidation is predominantly detennined by the
tunneling current through the Si02 film at higher electric
fields (IV I> 8.5 V). The Frenkel-Poole plot of the I-V char
acteristics at higher electric fields gives an abnormal dielec
tric constant of 19.2 Eo for Si02 films, which invalidates the
Frenkel-Poole emission process.9
In conclusion, thin zrOz films vacuum-deposited on
Si( 100) were oxidized in dry oxygen at 800"C. This results
in the growth of a thin SiOz layer at the Zr02/Si interface.
From the C-V characteristics of Mo/Zr02(30.S
nm)/Si02Ip-Si( 1(0) diodes, it was found that the static di
electric constant of the zr02 film decreases from 21.2 eo to
15.5 Eo due to the crystallization of the amorphous ZrOz film
during the oxidation. The leakage current of this diode was
lowered by the formation of the Si02 layer at the Zr02/Si
interface.
'M. Koyanagi, Y. Sasaki, M. Ishihara, M. Tazunoki, and N. Hashimoto,
IEEE Trans. Electron Devices ED-27, 1596 (1980).
2K. Ohta, K. Yamada, K. Shimizu, and Y. Tarui, IEEE Trans. Electron
Devices ED·29, 368 (1982).
3M. Morita, H. Fukumoto, T. {mura, Y. Osaka, and M. Ichihara, 1. Appl.
Phys. 58, 2407 (1985).
4y' Osaka, Y. Nishibayashi, and T. Jmura, J. App!. Phys. 63, 581 (1988).
~Y. Nishibayashi, T. Imura, Y. Osaka, and F. Nishiyama, Proceedings of the
12th International Symposium at llosei University, edited by T. Sebe, and
Y. Yamamoto (Hosei University Press, Japan, 1988), p. 493.
oR. E. Pawel, J. Elcctrochem. Soc. 126, 1111 (1979).
7B. E. Deal and A. S. Grove, J. Appl. Phys. 36, 3770 (1965).
"R. Williams, Phys. Rev. A 59,140 (1965).
"J. Frenkel, Phys. Rev. 54, 647 (l938).
Photoluminescence of CuAlx Ga1_XSea crystals grown
by chemical vapor transport
Koichi Sugiyama, Satoshi Iwasaki, Tamio Endo, and Hideto Miyake
Department 0/ Electrical Engineering, Mie University, Kamihama·cho, Tsu-shi, Mie 514, Japan
(Received 14 December 1988; accepted for publication 10 February 1989)
The photoluminescence (PL) characteristics have been studied for the CuAlx Gal _ x Se2
chalcopyrite quaternary crystals grown by an iodine transport technique. The PL
measurements at 17 K reveal the existence of three types of emission bands, which are
attributed to transitions involving localized states: shallow acceptors, deep donors, and deep
acceptors, respectively. The origin of the shallow acceptors is tentatively assigned to Se
interstitials and that of the deep donors to iodine impurities. All the measured crystals are p
type and the hole mobility at room temperature decreases with x ( S 0.3).
Recently there has been considerable interest in I-III
VI2 chalcopyrite semiconductor alloys for potential techno
logical applications. CuAlxGa1_ xScz quaternary alloys
have band gaps of 1.7-2.7 eV and are fairly well lattice
matched to ZnSe, and hence high-quality heterostructures are expected to be fabricated from these materials for opto
electronic devices. The preparation of the alloys by an iodine
chemical vapor transport technique and their optical ab
sorption characteristics have been reported by Bodnar and
co-workers, 1.2 but more detailed information concerning the
5212 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (12}, 15 June 1989 0021-8979/89/125212-04$02.40 © i 989 American Institute of Physics 5212
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142.157.129.8 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 22:20:31optical and electrical properties of the alloys is required for
the applications. In this communication we describe the lu
minescent and electrical properties of the CuAlx Gal _ xSe2
alloys with various compositions x.
The CuAlxGa1_xSe2 quaternary crystals were grown
by the chemical vapor transport method using iodine as a
transport agent. As source materials for the growth, we used
CuAlSez and CuGaSez ternary compounds, which were pre
pared by direct chemical reaction of stoichiometric mixtures
of the constituent elements. The purities of Cu, AI, and Ga
were 6N grade and those of Se and I were 5N grade. For
preparation of the quaternary crystals, a mixture of pre
scribed amounts of powdered CuAISe2 and CuGaSe2 was
charged with iodine (lOmg/cm3) in a partially carbon-coat
ed quartz ampoule 10 mm Ld. and 120 mm long. The am
poulewas sealed after evacuation to a pressure of about 10--6
Torr, and then inserted in a two-zone furnace. The crystal
growth was carried out for 10 days by keeping the source and
growth portions of the ampoule at 830 and 700 ·C, respec
tively. The source material was placed in the carbon-coated
portion of the ampOUle.
The grown crystals were platelets 5 X 5 mm2 wide and 1
mm thick or needles 5 mm long and 1-2 mm wide for x -0,
but the needlelike crystals were dominant for x> 0.6. The
crystals were ascertained to have a chalcopyrite structure by
x-ray ditrraction method. The alloy composition x was mea
sured with energy-dispersive x-ray microanalysis (EDX)
and the conventional atomic number, absorption, and flu
orescence (ZAF) corrections were performed for the data.
The photoluminescence (PL) measurements of the
grown crystals were performed at 77 K using a setup com-
Photon energy (eV)
2,0 1.5 1.2
600 17K
x=0.53
)(=0.43.-/ ~
x=U33./ ~
:A;=O.2.1~ "
)(=0.11
~.:.:-l(=-=-O _--_
sao
Wavelength (nm) 1000
FIG, 1. PL spectra at 77 K for CuAI,Ga, _ xSe2 crystals.
5213 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. 12, 15 June 1989 c (}
'0 2.5
f.. 1.5
1.
T o 17K
/ ,/ ,,-/' ..-;" " " , ,.
" " ,. /
/'
" " ", ",
",
/'
FIG. 2. Peak energies of ernission bands in the PL at 77 K vs composition x.
The band-gap energies obtained from absorption oflight for E Ii C polariza
tion by Bodnar and co-workers (sec Ref. 2) are plotted as a dashed line.
Filled circles represent the band-gap energies for CuGaSe2 and CuA!Se1,
estimated from the exciton absorption and emission data in Refs. 3-6,
posed ofaXe lamp, combinations of appropriate optical
filters, a grating monochromator, and a photomultiplier.
The PL spectra to be presented were not corrected for the
wavelength-dependent response of the measuring system.
Typical examples ofthe PL spectra are shown in Fig. 1. The
spectra generally consist of one or two emission bands. The
peak energies of the emission bands observed in this experi
ment are plotted as functions of the composition x in Fig. 2.
Bodnar, Gil, and Lukomskii have derived the band-gap en
ergies of the aHoys at 77 K from measurements of the funda
mental absorption edge for E lie (the optic axis) polariza
tion, corresponding to upper-valence-band to conduct
ion-band transition.2 These data are exhibited as a dashed
curve in the figure. The band-gap energies of CuGaSe2 and
CuAISez at 77 K have been estimated to be 1.73 and 2.73 eV,
respectively, from free-exciton absorption and emission
data,3-6 and are also plotted for comparison. The values are
50-110 me V larger than those of Bodnar and co-workers
because the absorption edges obtained by the latter research
ers are presumably shifted to lower energies due to the impu
rity-to-band transition effect.
The PL emission bands in CuAlx Gal _ x Sez alloys can
be classified into three types, and are labeled PI' P2. and P3•
Band PI with the highest peak energy was observed for
x < 0.6, and the peak energy for CuGaSez is about 1.68 eVo
The band is considered to be the same as those reported in
Refs. 3 and 4, and is attributable to the transition between
conduction band to a shallow acceptor, whose origin may be
Sugiyama et al. 5213
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142.157.129.8 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 22:20:31300 K
120
0 15
1/1 :> -N
E u
10 10~
....... ;;>.
M
~
I 'E :a u
~ co 0
1? ::i
~
5~ ;;>. ~
15 ....
III
~ C.
(\,I
"0 J QJ
10 -0 J:
0 0.1 0.2 0.3
)( in CuAlx Ga.I-xSez
FIG. 3. Hole concentration and mobility at room temperature in the as-
grown CuAlxGa, .xSe2 crystals vs composition x (:S0.3).
assigned to a Se interstitia1.4 The ionization energy of the
acceptor is about 50 meV for CuGaSe" and those for
CuAix Gal .. x Se2 alloys can be estimated fr~m the difference
between band gap and Pj emission-peak energies, when the
curve of the band gap used by Bodnar and co-workers is
shifted upwards such that the value for CuGaSe" becomes
1.73 eV. The ionization energy increases with comPosition x
and becomes 190 meV for x = 0.5. The increase is consid
ered to be mainly due to the change in hole effective mass
with x.
Band Pz was observed for the samples with x> 0.6 and
was dominant for x > 0.8. The band with a peak at L 76 e V
observed in CuAlSe2 seems to have the same origin as that
for the emission at 1.8 eV reported by Yamamoto.? Susaki et
al. observed a band peak at 1.33 eV for CuGaSe2, and from
the result of annealing experiments they concluded that the
band is associated with an impurity incorporated on a Se site;
thus they suggested that the 1.8-eV emission in CuAISe2 is
also attributable to the same mechanism. H They considered
that the iodine becomes a deep donor and that the emission
band of 1.33 eV in CuGaSe2 is due to the transition between
the donor and the valence band. In order to identify the
origin of band P2' we performed annealing experiments in
sealed quartz ampoules for crystals with x = 0.63 in vacuum
and then in an iodine atmosphere. After annealing in vacu
um at 600°C for iO h, band Pz disappeared but the spectrum
shape for band P3 was nearly unaltered. Band P2 reappeared
after the subsequent annealing in the iodine atmosphere at
600°C for 7 h using 5 mg/cm3 iodine in the ampoule, The
results indicate that band P2 is associated with iodine impur
ities and has the same nature as the band at 1.33 eV in
5214 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 65, No. i2. 15 June 1989 CuGaSe2' If the emission mechanism is due to the donor-io
valence-band transition, the donor ionization energy in
creases from 0.38 to 0.97 eV for x = 0 to 1. The experimental
result that bands PI and P2 are dominant for x<O.6 and
x> 0.6, respectively, will be explained in terms of the foHow
ing model. As-grown CuAl" Ga1_ x Se2 crystals with small x
contain excess Se atoms entering into interstitial sites. They
form acceptors and contribute to PI emission. The concen
tration of the excess Se decreases with increasing Al compo
sition x, and Se sites of the chalcopyrite lattice will have a
tendency to become vacant and to be occupied by iodine
atoms for larger x, which results in the formation of the deep
donors involved in the emission of band Pl'
Band P3 was observed for crystals with x < O. 8; the peak
energy is 1.23 eV for CuGaSe2 and gradually increases with
composition x. For CuGaSe2 single crystals, an acceptor lev
el with 0.55 eV has been obtained from the temperature de
pendence of the electrical properties,9.10 and for flash-evapo
rated CuGaSe2 films a PL band peaking at L 16 eV has been
observed at 80 K by Schumann et at. 1l and has been inter
preted as the emission associated with the deep acceptor lev
el (at 0.55 eV). Band p} observed in our study might be
attributable to the same mechanism, and might be related to
the deep acceptor level with an ionization energy of 0.5 eV in
CuGaSe~.
The electrical properties of the as-grown crystals were
examined by using the van der Pauw method at room tem
perature after formation of ohmic contacts by evaporation of
Au. The Hall measurements could not be achieved for sam
ples with x > 0.3 because of the very high contact resistance.
AU the measured samples are p type and the hole concentra
tions are of the order of wig cm-3 and decrease markedly
with x as shown in Fig. 3. Since the p-type conduction has
been related to the shallow acceptors, which are responsible
for P1 emission band,4 the change in hole concentration with
x can be explained as in the case of bands Pj and P2 on the
basis of the change in concentration of the excess Se. The
hole mobility decreases from 18 to 6 cm2jV s with increasing
x from 0 to 0.3. This remarkable decrease in hole mobility
with x might be due to either increase in hole effective mass
or increase in the concentration of scattering centers. The
centers might be related to Si impurities introduced from the
CuAlSe2 source material, which was contaminated with Si
as a result of the reaction of Al with quartz ampoules during
i.ts preparation.
In conclusion, the CuAt Gal . x Sez alloys grown by the
iodine transport technique are shown to have three emission
bands in the PL spectra. The three bands are considered to be
related with shallow acceptors, deep donors, and deep accep
tors, respectively. The as-grown alloy crystals have hole con
centrations of the order of 1018 cm--3 for xSO.3, and the
mobility decreases markedly with x.
The authors wish to thank S. Ogawa for technical assis
tance in the EDX work.
II. V. Bodnar, A. A. Vaipoiin, and L. S. Unyarkha, bv. Akad. Nauk SSSR,
Neorgan. Mater. 21, 1656 ( 1985).
2r. V. Bodnar, N. L. Gil, and A. 1. Lukornskii, SOy, Phys. Semicond. 17, 333
(1983).
Sugiyama et at. 5214
[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
142.157.129.8 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 22:20:313M. P. Vecchi, J. Ramos, and W. Giriat, Solid-State Electron. 21, 1609
(1978).
• J. Stankiewicz, W. Giriat, J. Ramos, and M. P. Vecchi, Sol. Energy Mater.
1,369 (1979).
'8. Tell and P. M. Bridenbaugh, Phys. Rev. B 12, 3330 ( 1975).
"M. Bettini, Solid State Commun. 13, 599 (1973).
7N. Yamamoto, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 15, 1909 (1974). KM. Susaki, T. Miyauchi, H. Horinaka, and N. Yamamoto, Jpn. J. Appl.
Phys. 17, 1555 (1978).
9L. S. Lerner, J. Phys. Chern. Solids 27, I (1966) .
IOL. Mandel, R. D. Tomlinson, M. J. Hampshire, and H. Neumann, Solid
State Commun. 32, 201 (1979).
"B. Schumann, A. Tempel, G. Kiihn, H. Neumann, N. V. Nam. and T.
Hansel, Kristall. Tech. 13, 1285 (1978).
Creation of TICaBaCuO fine features by a wet process
I. Shih and C. X. Qiu
Electrical Engineering Department, McGill University, 3480 University St.. Montreal. P. Q.
H3A 2A 7. Canada
(Received 15 November 1988; accepted for publication 14 February 1989)
During the study of the formation of TlBaCaCuO from rf-sputtered Ba-Ca-Cu-O films
(Ba:Ca-Cu = 2:2:3 in target) it was found that the rf-sputtered materials were relatively
unstable in water, in photoresist developer, and even in room atmosphere. To overcome the
severe undercutting effect during the chemical etching process resulting from the instability, a
Cu protective layer with a thickness of 100-150 A. was adopted for the fine-line patterning.
Using a positive photoresist technique, 3-,um lines have been successfully produced. Lines with
a width of 150 pm also have been produced on Zr02 substrates and superconductivity was
observed after a heat treatment in an environment containing O2 and Tl gas.
After the discovery of the new high Tc superconductor
system TlBaCaCuO, I many experiments have been reported
on the preparation of thin films of this materiaI2-s. Recently,
it has been shown that high Tc films of Tl-Ba-Ca-Cu-O can
be formed by diffusing Tl into rf-sputtered Ba-Ca-Cu-O
films.6 Although the formation of the pure high Tc phase is
complex, further development to process the sputtered films
has been made in our laboratory. For electronic applica
tions, it is required first to produce fine features of the high
Tc films. In our previous experiments using a wet chemical
method, we have successfully patterned YBaCuO thin films
into fine lines.7 In the present work, experiments have been
made to establish a procedure for the patterning of rf-sput
tered Ba-Ca-Cu-O films. After the patterning, the lines were
treated in an environment containing both Oz and TI. The
treated lines were tested for superconductivity and the re
sults are reported in this paper.
Films of Ba-Ca-Cu-O with a thickness from 1 to 5 ,um
were deposited from a single presintered Ba-Ca-Cu-O target
(Ba:Ca:Cu = 2:2:3) using an rfmagnetron method.6 Glass
slides, zrOz, and Si were used as substrates which were
mounted on a water-cooled Al substrate holder. The compo
sition of the as-sputtered films was determined by electron
probe microanalyzer and the results showed that these films
are Ca deficient (Ca/Ba = 0.76).
Results of etching of the rf-sputtered Ba-Ca-Cu-O films
at 25°C are shown in Table I. Here, we can see that the rate is
relatively high for all acids with A/Hz 0 = 1/40
(A = HN03, HCI, or H3 P04). The rate decreases as the
ratio is decreased and values of about 1 ,um/min is achieved for a ratio of 1/160. The solution with the above ratio will be
used in fine-line etching experiments to be described below.
By treating the films at a temperature above 750°C in O2 for
a few minutes, the etching rates were also found to reduce.
The variation of morphology of the as-deposited Ba-Ca
Cu-O films was also examined and it was found that these
were relatively unstable even under normal laboratory envi
ronment as com pared to the YBaCuO material. Figure 1 (a)
shows the top view of a film taken about 1 week after the
deposition. Roughly circular areas (red color seen by eyes)
are visible due possibly to the interaction with moisture or
due to the slow crystallization process or both. In addition to
the slow morphology variation in the air, it was found that
the as-deposited films are very sensitive to water and the
photoresist developer. "Etch pits" with irregular shape were
found in Ba-Ca-Cu-O films after being immersed in deion
ized H20 at 25°C for 1 min [see Fig. 1 (b)]. More severe
T ABLE I. Etch rate (in jim/min) of BaCaCuO films in HCl, HNO,. and
H,PO. solutions at 25 'C
HCl HNO, H,PO.
Ca:Ba:Cu 2:3:4 2:2:3 2:3:4 2:3:3 2:2:3
1/40 24 15 14 12 4.4
1/60 14 7.3 8.2 6.9 2.2
1/80 10 3.1 5.6 2.3 1.7
1/100 5.6 2.4 4.2 1.3 1.3
1/160 2.7 \.3 2.5 1.0 0.9
5215 J. Appl. Phys. 65 (12),15 June 1989 0021-8979/89/125215-03$02.40 © 1989 American Institute of Physics 5215
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142.157.129.8 On: Sat, 13 Dec 2014 22:20:31 |
1.98280.pdf | Effects of passivating ionic films on the photoluminescence properties of GaAs
B. J. Skromme, C. J. Sandroff, E. Yablonovitch, and T. Gmitter
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 51, 2022 (1987); doi: 10.1063/1.98280
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.98280
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/51/24?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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129.24.51.181 On: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 01:56:05Effects of passivating ionic films on the photoluminescence properties
of GaAs
B. J. Skromme, C. J. Sandroff, E. Yablonovitch, and T. Gmitter
Bell Communications Research, 331 Newman Springs Road, Red lJank, New Jersey 07701
(Received 27 August 1987; accepted for publication 15 October 1987)
The passivating effects of spin-coated films of Na2S' 9H20 on GaAs surfaces have been studied
using room-temperature photoluminescence (PL) and low-temperature PL spectroscopy.
After passivation, the 300 K PL efficiency is increased on both n-and p-type material;
improvements of up to 2800 X are observed. The surface field and surface recombination
related notch features in the free and bound exciton emission spectra at low temperature are
eliminated, implying that the residual band bending under illumination is less than 0, 15 V.
Oxygen-exposed GaAs surfaces possess a large density
of extrinsic states near the middle of the forbidden energy
gap, which effectively pin the surface Fermi level at that
positioIl,l,2 These pinning states have hindered the develop
ment of a successful GaAs metal-insulator-semiconductor
technology.3 Moreover, the midgap pinning of the Fermi
level greatly increases the nonradiative recombination rate
at surface recombination centers.4 The latter effect is re
sponsible for the "2kT" currentS which limits the perfor
mance of minority-carrier devices such as light-emitting di
odes, lasers, solar cells, and bipolar transistors.
Chemica!O or photochemicaf treatments to passivate
GaAs surfaces are consequently of great interest. Recently, a
novel technique involving spin-coated films of wide band
gap inorganic sulfides was reported. 8,'1 These mms produced
60-fold improvements in the gain of heterojunction bipolar
transistors at low current levels,8 and reduced surface re
combination velocities to values as low as 500 em/s.9 In this
letter, we use photoluminescence (PL), one of the most sen
sitive and widely employed methods of characterizing non
radiative surface recombination, 5-7,10 to study these sur
faces.l!
The samples consist of various (100) oriented struc
tures (described below in detail) grown by molecular beam
epitaxy (MBE), organometallic chemical vapor deposition
(OMCVD), and vapor phase epitaxy (VPE). Details of the
passivation procedure are described elsewhere.8 Briefly, the
sample is first lightly etched in a (1:8:500) solution of
(H2S04:H202:HzO) to obtain a hydrophilic surface, then
rinsed and spun dry. A few drops of -1.0 M aqueous solu
tion of Na2S . 9H20 are applied to the surface and the sample
is spun in air at about 5000 rpm until dry. Room-tempera
ture PL measurements are performed with the sample in a
sealed, He-fined chamber. Low-temperature measurements
are performed with the sample freely suspended in a super
fluid He bath at 1.8 K. The excitation is provided by an Ar+
ion laser operating at 5145 A. A fixed excitation level of ~ 10
W / cmz is employed at 300 K, while the 1.8 K spectra shown
here were recorded at ~700 mW/cm2• A l.O-m double
spectrometer, a GaAs photomultiplier tube, and a photon
counting detection system are used. The data have been cor
rected when necessary for the spectral response of the sys
tem. Intensity measurements are generally reproducible to
within ± 30% or better.
The strength of the room-temperature PL signal is shown in the upper two curves in Fig. 1 for two n-type GaAs
samples as a function of surface treatment. As the spectral
shape of the luminescence is typical of band-to-band transi
tions and does not change, we indicate only relative intensi
ties. Application of Na2S'9H20 yields improvements of up
to 2800 X in the PL intensity with respect to that of a freshly
etched surface for the low-doped sample, restoring to within
15% the intensity obtained with the original AIGaAs clad-
IOU ---------------------l
SURFACE TREATMENT I
I I
I
I
FIG. 1. Relative PL intensities at 300 K for four GaAs samples as a function
of surface treatment. (Open circles) OMCVD GaAs layer, 7.0 jim thick,
f! = oX 10" cm-3, sandwiched between two O.l-p.m-thick A1osGIlosAs
layers; the top AIGaAs layer is removed in the first etching step. (Open
triangles) OMCVD GaAs layer, 0.31 p.m thick, n O~ 9X 10'6 cm-3, grown
on a O.55-p.m-thick A1o,GIlo7As buffer layer. (Closed circles) a 9.1-p.m
thick !ayer,p = 4X 1015 em""', grown Oil a semi-insulating (SI) GaAs sub
strate. Initial "etched" state corresponds to Na2S rinsed off (no chemical
etch). (Closed triangles) a 3.2-,um-thick layer, p = 1 X 10'" em -:" grown
ou a S1 substrate. Initial "etched" state actually air exposed. Intensities are
normalized to the etched condition for each sample; lower two curves are
displaced down one decade for clarity.
2022 Appl. Phys. Lett. 51 (24), i 4 December 1987 0003-6951/87/502022-03$01.00 © 1987 American Jnstitute of Physics 2022
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129.24.51.181 On: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 01:56:05ding layer. Improvements for the more heavily doped sam
ple are smaller, primarily because this layer is thinner, which
results in larger residual surface recombination after treat
ment (The quantum efficiencies of the two samples are
about the same before treatment.) Variations between
successive NazS'9H20 applications are believed to result
from changes in the wetting properties of the surface and
resultant film quality.
Residual improvements in PL efficiency are observed
even after thoroughly rinsing off the bulk of the film in de
ionized water, presumably due to the presence of a passivat
ing sub monolayer surface phase.8,9 The data indicate a deg
radation in the properties of the hygroscopic Nu2S'9HzO
films when exposed ovemight to humid air; under drier con
ditions we found essential!y no change on this time scale.
Similar, though less pronounced improvements are ob
served on p-type samples of low and high doping levels, as
shown in the lower two curves in Fig.!. The maximum im
provement obtainable in these samples is smaner, due in
large part to the absence of underlying AIGaAs buffer layers
and the consequent diffusion of carriers into the highly non
radiative substrates.
The improvements we observed after N a2S' 9H20 passi
vation in the PL efficiency of both heavily doped p-and n
type material in the low injection regime are consistent with
a reduction in surface recombination center density and/or
unpinning of the surface Fermi level by the treatment How
ever, these observations alone do not rule out the alternative
explanation that we have merely repinned the Fermi level
closer to one of the band edges. Assuming low level injection
and quasi-equilibrium between the surface and the electri
cally neutral bulk, the surface recombination velocity S re
sulting from recombination through a given trap is given by4
Here, S[IJ and SnlJ are proportional to the concentration and
capture cross sections of the trap, no and Po are the equilibri
um bulk electron and hole densities, lls and p, are the elec
tron and hole densities at the surface under illumination, and
n* and p* are the densities which would be present if the
Fenni level were coincident with the trap level. Bare GaAs
surfaces exhibit large values of S primarily because the Fer
mi level is pinned near midgap, so that fls + p, is minimized
(note that n,p, is constant).4 If a given surface treatment
pins the Fermi level near one ofthe band edges, then either ns
or Ps will be large, regardless of the bulk doping, and Swill be
reduced on both n-and p-type material. An additional mea
surement, such as the capacitance-voltage data presented by
Off.sey et al., 7 is necessary to eliminate this possibility. In the
following, we demonstrate that the low-temperature PL
spectra provide the needed evidence.
A low-temperature excitonic luminescence spectrum
from a VPE GaAs sample is shown in Fig. 2 beth before and
after passivation by Na2S·9H20. The spectrum of the un
treated sample is typical of high-purity GaAs.12 In particu
lar, notch or dip features are observed at the locations ex
pected for both ground-state neutral donor-bound exciton
CD o,X')and longitudinal free-exciton (FE) luminescence.
The notch in the (D o,X) peak is usually observed in n-type
2023 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 51, No. 24. 14 December 1987 8170 ENEIlGY (e\l)
1.5'i50 ~ .5125 1.5100
8180 {DO, Xl 'I
(0'. Xl!
(!P. h)
I
8190 VPE GaAs
T =1.8K
PL ". 700 mW/cm2
Aexc=5145A
8200 8210 8220
INAVELENGTH (A)
FIG. 2. Normalized eltcitonic luminescence spectra (intensity in arbitrary
units) of !In n-type VPE GaAs layer (n = 4>< 10'4 em 3, 77 K mobil
ity = 92 000 em2/V s) before and after NazS'9H20 surface passivation.
The position of the ground state (D oX) peak is indicated by the tic mark at
81 8i A. Two excited states are also marked at shorter wavelengths. Incident
laser intensity (Pl. ) and wavelength CAe,c) are indicated.
material at a sufficiently high excitation intensity, and is as
cribed to self-absorption in a region near the surface where
the density of the (D 0 X) complexes is reduced by surface
recombination. 12,13
The notch i.n the free exciton/polariton peak has been
ascribed both to enhanced trapping of polaritons near the
surfacel4-16 (i.e., nonradiative surface recombination) and
to self-absorption in a portion of the space-charge layer at
the surface where the polaritonic resonance is modified by
the electric field.17 Irrespective of the chosen model, the
presence of surface charge and/or surface recombination
centers is known to be essential in producing the notch, since
surfaces cleaved in vacuum do not display the notch until
they are exposed to oxygen 18 and samples clad with an
AIGaAs cap layer do not display the notch until the cap
layer is removed. 17
After the NazS'9HzO coating is applied, both netches
are eliminated. A smaH amount of inhomogeneous strain,
resulting from. differential thermal contraction of the GaAs
and the Na2S film, is believed to be responsible for the slight
broadening of the (A 0,x) doublet and the (D o,X) excited
states; the latter peaks are no longer resolved. The absolute
PL intensity is reduced by a factor of about 3.5, which we
tentatively attribute to scattering by the polycrystalline sur
face film. The absence of improvements in the PL efficiency
suggests that rec.ombination associated with the bare surface
does not limit the lifetime at low temperature as it does at
300K.
Similar data are presented in Fig. 3 for a p-type MBE
sample. The spectrum of the sample before passivation is
dominated by (A 0,x) and "defect" acceptor-bound exciton
(d,x) features; a strong notch is present in the center of the
Skromme et al. 2023
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129.24.51.181 On: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 01:56:051 5150
MBE GaAs
T ~ 1.81< ENERGY (eV)
1.5125
PL RI 700 mWlcm2
>-"xc = 5145;'
8170 No,S APPLIED
I
8180 8190 CIA', X) ,.,....
8200
WAVELENGTH (A) 1.5100
(d. X)
8210 8220
FIG. 3. As Fig. 2, but for ap-typeMBE GaAs sample (p = 4x 1015 cm-3),
before and after Na2S'9HzO surface passivation.
FE peak. After application of aN a2S' 9HzO film, the (A () ,x)
and (d,x) peaks are broadened by the strain effect men
tioned above. More important, the FE line shape no longer
displays any notch.
The presence of the FE notch in the PL spectrum of this
untreated p-type sample has some interesting implications
for the mechanism by which such notches are produced. In
particular, Lee et al. and Steiner et ai. have argued that neu
tral donor concentration is an important factor in producing
the notch.15,16 The proposed mechanism involves elastic
scattering of the polariton modes in the vicinity of the longi
tudinal exciton energy by neutral donors, which in conjunc
tion with the small group velocity of these modes slows the
diffusive transport ofpolaritons from the bulk to the surface
and thereby enhances the effects of inelastic scattering and
surface trapping.
In the p-type sample of Fig. 3, the neutral donor concen
tration is essentially negligible, since the (D o,X) peak is vir
tually absent. Therefore, the notch in the FE peak in this
sample cannot be attributed to the effects of polariton scat
tering by neutral donors. Elastic scattering of polaritons by
neutral acceptors might be considered in this case, but the
calculations of Lee et 01. 15 conclude that acceptor scattering
is much less effective than donor scattering, and will produce
only an asymmetric single peak rather than a notched "dou
ble" peak.
The presence of notches in our moderately doped n-and
p-type material and their absence in some high-resistivity p
type samples studied by Lee et al.15 is consistent with the
2024 Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 51, No, 24, 14 December 1987 role of residual surface fields on the spectral transmissivity
ofthe surface for polaritons, as emphasized in the theory of
Schultheis and Tu. 17 Surface fields are expected for moder
ate illumination if the equilibrium bulk Fermi level is close to
either band edge (since the surface Fermi level is pinned
midgapl ), but not in high-resistivity samples where the bulk
Fermi level is near midgap. Direct measurements of the sur
face field under illumination would be highly desirable to
test this model.
The elimination of the surface-related notches in the
spectra of both n-and p-type material rules out the possibil
ity that the surface treatment has repinned the Fermi level
near one of the band edges. In that case, a large electric field
would exist at the surface under moderate illumination on
either the n-or the p-type material, which is known to pro
duce a notch in the FE peak. 17 An upper limit on the residual
band bending in the illuminated n-type sample at low tem
perature is estimated to be aboutO.15 V, based on a compari
son with the data of Ref. 17. We therefore conclude that the
Na2S' 9H20 treatment substantially reduces the density of
pinning and/or recombination centers on oxygen-exposed
GaAs surfaces.
We would like to thank R. Bhat, H. M. Cox, J. Harbi
son, and M. C. Tamargo for supplying the samples used in
this study. We would also like to acknowledge helpful dis
cussions with R. N. Nottenburg and a critical reading of the
manuscript by D. E. Aspnes.
'w. E. Spicer, P. W. Chye, P. R Skeath, C. Y. Su, and I. Lindau, J. Vac. Sci.
Techno!. 16,1422 (1979).
2T. E. Kazior, J. Lagowski, and H. C. Gatos, J. App\. Phys. 54, 2533
(1983),
3L. G. Meiners. 1. Vac. Sci. Techno!. 15, 1402 (1978).
4D. E. Aspnes, Surf. Sci. 132, 406 (1983).
'C. H. Henry, R. A. Logan, and F. R. Merritt, J. Appl. Phys. 49, 3530
(1978).
6R. J. Nelson, J. S. Williams, H. J. Leamy, B. Miller, H. C. Casey, Jr., B. A.
Parkinson, and A. Heller, App!. Phys. Lett. 36, 76 (1980).
7S. D. Offsey, J. M. Woodall, A. C. Warren, P. D. Kirchner, T. I. Chappell,
and G. D. Pettit, Appl. Phys. Lett. 48, 475 (1986).
"c. J. Sandrofl', R. N. Nottenburg, J. C. Bischoff, and R Bhat, AppL Phys.
Lett. 51, 33 (1987).
9E. Yablonovitch, C. J. Sandrafl', R. Rhat, and T. Gmitter, App!. Phys.
Lett. 51, 439 (1987).
IOH. C. Casey, Jr. and E. Buehler, App!. Phys. Lett. 30,247 (1977).
liB, J. Skromme, C. J. Sandroif, E. Yablonovitch, T. Gmitter, L. A. Far
row, and R. N. N ottenburg, presented at the Electronic Materials Confer
ence, Santa Barbara, June 24-26, 1987.
12H. Venghaus, J. Lumin. 16, 331 (1978).
"D. C. Reynolds, D. W. Langer, C. W. Litton, G. L. McCoy, and K. K.
Bajaj, Solid State Commun. 46, 473 (\983).
14C. Weisbuch and R. G. Ulbrich, 1. Lurnin. 18/19, 27 (1979).
15Johnson Lee, Emil S. Koteles, M. 0. Vassel[, and I. P. Salerno, J, Lumin.
34, 63 (1985), and references therein.
[('T. Steiner, M. L. W. Thewalt, E. S. Koteles, and J. P. Salerno, Phys. Rev.
B 34, 1006 (1986).
17L. Schultheis and C. W. Tu, Phys. Rev. B 32, 6978 (1985).
IRB. Fischer and H. J. Stolz, Appl. Phys. Lett. 40, 56 (1982).
Skromme et al. 2024
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1.2811402.pdf | Walter H. Brattain
John Bardeen
Citation: 41, (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.2811402
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2811402
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/41/4
Published by the American Institute of Physics
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a long illness. He spent the bulk of
his career at Bell Telephone Labora-
tories, returning to teach at his alma
mater, Whitman College, in his retire-
ment years.
A descendent of a pioneer Western
family, Brattain spent his childhood
on a homestead cattle ranch in Tonas-
ket, Washington, and was always
proud of his Western heritage. He
graduated from nearby Whitman Col-
lege in 1924, one of a famous class of
four students of Benjam in H. Brown,
an exceptional teacher of physics.
The other three also went on to
distinguished careers: Walker Bleak-
ney at Princeton, Vladimir Rojanski
at Union College and at Harvey Mudd
College, and E. John Workman as
president of the New Mexico Institute
of Mining and Technology. Brattain's
parents had also attended Whitman
and taken courses under Brown.
After graduating in 1926 with an
MS from the University of Oregon ,
Brattain took a sheep train east to
attend the University of Minnesota.
He was a research student of John T.
Tate, doing his PhD thesis on "Effi-
ciency of Excitation by Electron Im-pact and Anomalous Scattering in
Mercury Vapor." While at Minneso-
ta, he took one of the first courses in
quantum theory given in the United
States, under John H. Van Vleck, and
he never lost interest in the subject.
Brattain received his PhD in 1929.
Before joining Bell Laboratories that
year, he spent eight months with the
radio divisio n of the National Bureau
of Standards.
Prior to World War II, Brattain
worked at Bell Labs with Joseph A.
Becker on thermionic emission and
on semiconductor rectifiers. After
the war he was selected to be an
initial member of the newly formed
solid-state division, founded to exploit
the understanding of solids at the
microscopic level made possible by
quantum mechanics. His main inter-
ests both before and after the war
were on problems of surface physics.
I first met Brattain in the early
1930s, when I was a graduate student
at Princeton and he was working at
Bell's West Street laboratories.
When I joined Bell Labs in the fall of
1945, because of wartime crowding, I
shared an office with him and with
Gerald L. Pearson (who survivied
Brattain by less than two weeks).
Through them I became interested in
semiconductors, and I worked closely
with both of them during my six years
at Bell.
Brattain's first work with Becker
Circle number 62 on Reader Service Card
116 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1988William Shockley, Walter H. Drottain and John Dardeen
in 1948, shortly after the invention of the transistor.
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(212)661-9404was on effects of adsorbed layers on
emission from tungsten cathodes.
Later he did experiments to try to
understand the physics of copper-
oxide rectifiers. One of his last pro-
jects before the war was a study of the
oxidation of copper using a radioac-
tive copper tracer. As the war was
coming on, interest shifted to silicon
cat's whisker detectors for radar. He
was involved with some of the early
work; in particular he noted a large
photoeffect on the contact potential of
a silicon surface. During the war
Brattain worke d on the design of
airborne magnetometers for subma-
rine detection under the National
Defense Research Committee at Co-
lumbia University.
The Bell solid-state division was
formed in late 1945 as staff members
returned from various wartime activi-
ties. The semiconductor group, of
which Brattain and Pearson were
members, was one of several in a
broad program of solid-state research.
William Shockley was cohead of the
division and head of the group. Other
members in the initial semiconductor
group were Robert B. Gibney, a phys-
ical chemist, and Hilbert R. Moore, an
electrical engineer.
In the summer of 1945 Shockle y
had suggested making a solid-state
amplifier by exploiting the field-effect
principle—namely by altering the
conductance of a thin semiconducting
film via application of a transverse
field. In a simple form, the film is one
plate of a parallel-plate condenser.
Shockley's calculation indicated that
if the induced charge in the film came
from mobile carriers (conduction elec-
trons or holes) the effect should be
large enough to give amplification.
When attempts to observe the effect
failed, I suggested that the reason
might be that the induced charge was
in the form of electrons in states at
the surface that shielded the interior
of the film from the transverse field.
This hypothesis of surface states led
to several predictions that could be
tested experimentally. In accordance
with his background, Brattain decid-
ed to concentrate on surface prob-
lems, while Pearson studied bulk
phenomena. Brattain's experiments
helped to verify the existence of the
surface states.
In experiments done with Gibney,
Brattain found that one could bypass
the surface states if one applied the
field through an electrolyte adjacent
to the surface. He and I showed that
the current to a cat's whisker point
contact on a silicon surface biased in
the reverse (high resistance) direction
could be controlled by a voltage ap-
plied through an electrolyte insulatedfrom, but surrounding, the cat's
whisker. Later experiments showed
even larger effects when silicon was
replaced with germanium.
To avoid the slow response time of
the electrolyte, we tried to apply the
field across a thin oxide layer on
germanium. We found that the oxide,
if present, was not insulating, but
that there was a small effect on the
reverse current in a direction opposite
to what one expected from the field
effect. We had discovered a new way
to control the current flowing across a
rectifying contact: the bipolar princi-
ple, which involves flow of both types
of carrier—conduction electrons and
holes.
It did not take long to create an
amplifier that used the new principle.
The point-contact transistor was dem-
onstrated on 23 December 1947. A
month later Shockley conceived of the
superior junction transistor geome-
try, in which all of the action takes
place with the bulk of a semiconduc-
tor rather than at metal-semiconduc-
tor contacts. For these discoveries
Brattain shared the 1956 Nobel Prize
in Physics with Shockle y and me.
Unfortunately Brattain did not live to
see the 40th anniversary of his inven-
tion.
Through his remaining years at
Bell, Brattain continued to work on
surface problems. He devised meth-
ods for measuring the energy distribu-
tions of surface states and the cross
sections for trapping of electrons and
holes. His work was on "real" sur-
faces—ones on which there is the
usual thin oxide layer—rather than
the "clean" surfaces that are of cur-
rent interest. I collaborated with him
for some time after I went to Illinois
in 1951 , and he later worked with
Charles G. B. Garrett and with Phillip
J. Boddy.
In the early 1960s, Brattain re-
turned to Whitman College on a part-
time basis, and he joined the faculty
there after his retirement from Bell
in 1967. One of his favorite courses to
teach was one taught earlier by Ben-
jamin Brown: "Understanding
Science for Non-Science Majors." At
Whitman, Brattain became interest-
ed in problems of biophysics. He
collaborated with scientists at Bat-
telle Pacific Northwest Laboratories
in Richland, Washington, on studies
of ion flow through lipid bilayers.
Very receptive to new ideas, Brat-
tain was always ready to cooperate on
suggestions for experiments on pro-
posed new devices even when he had
reservations about the outcome. He
was one of the first experimenters
with a good understanding of the
Mott-Schottky theories of contact
118 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1988
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PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1988119
Not by Design
The Origin of
the Universe
Victor J. Stenger
A strong, confident case supporting the
hypothesis that the universe originated
because of a series of spontaneous, random
events, devoid of plan or design. Using the
laws of physics, Stenger shows that order
can and does happen every day—by chance.
Victor J. Stenger is professor of physics at
the University of Hawaii. He has been a
visiting professor at Oxford University,
Heidelberg University, and the National
Insitute for Nuclear Physics in Italy.
200 pages (Illustrated)
ISBN 0-87975-451-6
Cloth $22.95
A Physicist's
Guide to
Skepticism
Milton A. Rothman
The laws of physics provide clear-cut
principles defining what is possible—and
not possible—in the physical world.
Rothman examines many widely held
pseudoscientifi c beliefs in light of these laws.
Milton A. Rothman is a former professor
of physics at Trenton State College and a
former research physicist at the Franklin
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250 pages
ISBN 0-87975-440-0
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Prometheus Books
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Circle number 69 on Reader Service Card
120 PHYSICS TODAY APRIL 1988rectification developed just prior to
World War II. One has the feeling
that if he had not engaged in the
particular series of experiments that
led to the transistor, he would have
been involved in another series that
would have been successful not much
later.
Brattain often expressed the view
that the transistor radio might help
bring the peoples of the world closer
together: "All people can listen to
what they wish independent of what
dictatorial leaders might want them
to hear and I feel that this will
eventually benefit society."
Brattain was a member of the
Commission on Semiconductors of the
International Union of Pure and Ap-
plied Physics, and he served as its
chairman in 1966. He was also a
member of the Defense Science Board
and of various advisory committees.
While history will remember Wal-
ter Brattain for his achievements, I
will remember him as a close personal
friend, golf and bridge partner, and
colleague.
JOHN BARDEEN
University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign
Urbana, Illinois
Arthur H. Cooke
Arthur Hafford Cooke, born 13 De-
cember 1912, died in Oxford, England,
on 30 July 1987. He had recently
retired as warden of New College,
Oxford, a position he had held since
1976. Prior to this, he had been
associated with the Clarendon Labo-
ratory, Oxford, for more than 40 years
as an undergraduate, graduate stu-
dent, university demonstrator and
lecturer, and finally as a reader in
physics.
His early work before World War II,
under Frederick A. Lindemann (later
Lord Cherwell ) and Francis Simon ,
was concerned with the production of
low temperatures, and he helped to
establish Oxford as one of the early
centers of cryogenic research. Most of
his later work was also devoted to low-
temperature physics and, in particu-
lar, to the magnetic and thermal
properties of rare earth and transi-
tion metal salts. His work on para-
magnetic relaxation and hyperfine
effects led in 1953 to the discovery of
cerium magnesium nitrate, which
soon became the accepted standard
for the production and measurement
of temperatures in the millikelvin
range. His insight also led to the
discovery of the first Ising-like mate-
rial, cerium ethyl sulfate, in 1951 , and
in 1959 to the recognition of the firstdipolar ferromagnet, dysprosium
ethyl sulfate. In 1970, Cooke and his
associates found another prototypical
material, dysprosium vanadate—the
first example of a crystal with a
magnetically controllable Jahn-Tell-
er distortion.
All of these studies stemmed from
the same common thread: a detailed
understanding of the macroscopic
properties in terms of microscopic
interactions as revealed by micro -
wave paramagnetic experiments then
being developed in the Clarendon
Laboratory. Cooke's contact with
microwaves started during the Sec-
ond World War, when he worked on
radar for the Admiralty team at
Oxford. He designed the "transmit-
receive" cell, which played an impor-
tant part in the battle against U-
boats. For his wartime services, he
received a royal award: He was made
a Member of the Order of the British
Empire.
Cooke was an inspiring teacher.
His enthusiasm for physics was infec-
tious and he was unusually effective
in persuading the student to think for
himself, constantly checking the rea-
sonableness of each idea. Cooke had a
clear and intuitive feel for physics
that never led him astray. Where
others became bogged down in formal-
ism he proceeded by common sense.
He used the backs of many envelopes
to explain observed effects.
This same common sense also made
him an outstanding administrator.
He served from 1969 to 1983 as a
member of the Hebdomadal Council
of Oxford University and for ten years
on the General Board of Faculties,
including a period as de facto chair-
man. His thoughtful and fair ap-
proach to all matters and his tactful
and witty manner earned the respect
of all who knew him.
Cooke was by nature a shy man, but
he had many friends. Everyone
around him appreciated his engaging
sense of humor and his even tempera-
ment. There must be some with
whom he battled, but they would be
hard to find. He cared for people and
they cared for him. His terminal
illness was diagnosed three months
before the end, and during this time a
constant stream of friends and col-
leagues came to see him, some travel-
ing from far away. His unfailing
courtesy and his personal interest in
each visitor continued up to the end,
and his ex-students, now well on in
their own professional lives, found
they could still learn from this witty,
wise and gentle man.
WERNER P. WOLF
Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut U
|
1.341693.pdf | Some properties of bulk YBaCuO compounds containing SiO2
C. X. Qiu and I. Shih
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 64, 2234 (1988); doi: 10.1063/1.341693
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.341693
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/64/4?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
136.165.238.131 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 19:26:49Some properties of bulk y .. Sa .. Cu-O compounds containing 8102
C. X. Qiu and I. Shih
Electrical Engineering Department, McGill University. 3480 University Street, Montreal,
Quebec H3A 2A 7, Canada
(Received 4 January 1988; accepted for publication 10 May 1988)
Bulk Y-Ba-Cu-O samples containing Si with nominal compositions ofY:Ba:Cu:Si = 1:2:3:x
(x = 0.2, 0.4, and 0.6) have been prepared by adding SiOz to the source materials. After a
relatively short heat treatment, the resistance transition characteristics of the samples were
found to improve as the SiOz content was increased. Results from ac susceptibility
measurements also showed improved values as the Si02 content was increased. However, as
the solid-state reaction was carried out at a lower temperature but for a longer time, the sample
resistance increased and the superconductivity was found to degrade.
Several recent attempts have been made to deposit thin
films of the high Tc superconducting compound
YBa2 Cu, 07 on Si or Si02/Si substrates. 1,2 These attempts
were made in order to develop this material for future high
speed electronic device and circuit application. In such film
deposition experiments, a heat treatment at an elevated tem
perature in oxygen was generally required. The heat treat
ment, whieh was required to form the superconducting
films, resulted in diffusion of Y, Ba, andlor Cu into Si or
Si02 .2 For this structure, it was also a general belief that, in
addition to the in-diffusion mentioned above which de
stroyed the stoichiometry, the out-diffusion ofSi atoms from
the substrates into the films also will result in nonsupercon
ducting materials. Although the actual mechanisms were
not known, all of the reported attempts on film deposition
involving Si or SiOz were not successful. Recently, Y-Ba
Cu-O films with a thickness of about 30 p,m have been pre
pared in our laboratory using a paint-on method.3 A resis
tance transition onset temperature of 103 K has been
observed on a treated sample deposited on a Si substrate.
However, the zero-resistance state was not reached even at
77 K. In order to develop a procedure for the thin-film depo
sition on these substrates, it is necessary to know the effect of
Si atoms on the superconducting properties of the Y -Ea-Cu° compound. In the present work, we have prepared Y -Ba
Cu-O bulk samples containing SiOz and the results obtained
are reported in this communication.
Samples used in the study were prepared by three differ
ent procedures. Procedure (A): Weighted amounts of
Y203, BaCO}, and CuO (nominal purity 99.9%) were
thoroughly mixed and then pressed to form disks with a di
ameter of 2.1 cm and a thickness of about 0.4 cm. The disks
were sintered at 900 °C in air in a horizontal furnace for a
period of 5 h. Following this, the sintered materials were
powdered again. Powder ofSi02 (99.9% purity) was then
added to the sintered Y -Ba-Cu-O materials to a composition
ofY:Ba:Cu:Si = 1:2:3:x (x = 0.2,0.4, and 0.6). Disks were
prepared and heated at 1000 °C in air for a period of 8 h.
After this heating, oxygen was allowed to flow through the
furnace tube and the temperature was decreased to 600 °C
(maximum cooling rate about 10°C/min) and maintained
at this value for a period of 12 h. The temperature was finally
reduced to room value over a period of 3 h. Procedure (B):
Weighted amounts of Y20" BaCO, , CuO, and Si02 (x = 0.2,0.4, and 0.6) were mixed and pressed into disks.
The disks were first treated in air at 600°C for about 1 h.
After this short treatment, the furnace temperature was in
creased to 1000 "C and maintained at this level for a period of
5 h. The temperature was then reduced to 600 °C and the
low-temperature treatment was allowed for a period of 12 h.
The treatment using the procedure (B) was carried out in
air. Procedure (C): Weighted amounts of Y203, BaC03,
CuO, and Si02 (x = 0, 0.2, 0.4, and 0.6) were mixed,
pressed and heated at 900 °C for 2 h in air. The materials
were reground and pressed again to form disks. The disks
were then treated at 950°C for 12 h in air. After this, oxygen
was introduced and the samples were treated for a period on
hat 700°C.
After the complete treatment using procedure CA) de
scribed above, samples with x = 0 and 0.6 were found to be
similar to conventional sintered Y-Ba-Cu-O samples with
some voids, especially in the region near the bottom surface.
However, the samples with x = 0.2 and 0.4 adhered tightly
to the alumina plate with a deformed globular appearance, a
sign ofme1ting during the sintering at l000"C. For the sam
ples prepared using procedures (B) and (C), no special ex
ternal features were observed. However, for x = 0.4 and 0.6
dark gray samples were resulted.
X-ray diffraction was made on samples prepared using
procedure (B) and the results obtained showed characteris
tic peaks which were consistent with those obtained for the
orthorhombic Y-Ba-Cu-O compounds. Several weak peaks
for other phases were also observed, suggesting the possible
formation of these phases or an incomplete reaction of the
source materials. For the samples prepared using procedure
(C), x-ray results were also obtained and are shown in Fig.
1. All of the major peaks for these samples can be identified
to belong to the orthorhombic YBa2 Cu, 07 _ d' For the sam
ple without Si02, there are several weak peaks resulting
from Y203, Y2CU20S' or other unidentified phases.4 The
Y 203 peak decreases as the Sial content increases. The
magnititude of the two peaks due to Y 2 Cu} Os and the un
identified peaks increase as the Si02 content is increased.
Furthermore, a weak Si02 peak appears with the addition of
Si02 and the magnitude increases as the Si02 content in
creases.
Samples with a typical thickness of 0.2 em and a length
of about 2.0 cm were cut for temperature-dependent electri-
2234 J. Appl. Phys. 64 (4). 15 August 1988 0021-8979/88/162234-03$02.40 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 2234
[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
136.165.238.131 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 19:26:49(Q20.006) (005) (103.110) -(003)
x::O
50 40 30 20
28 (d egrees)
FIG. 1. X-ray diffraction results for the YBa2Cu,07 with different Si02
contents. Peaks marked with # are for the Y2CU20, phase and those
marked with * are due to unidentified phases.
cal measurements. Results obtained for four samples pre
pared using procedures (A) and (B) were compared and it
was found that the room-temperature resistivity decreased
as the Si content was increased. Furthermore, the transition
temperature also increased with the Si content. This Si-con
tent effect on bulk samples was not expected from the pre
viously reported thin-film results on Si substrates. H In or
der to confirm this effect, ac susceptibility measurements
were carried out at 77 K. The measurements were made at 1
and 100 kHz using an HP model 4274A multifrequency
LCR meter. During the measurements, the sample (typical
weight 0.6 g) selected was located inside an induction coil
with a room-temperature low-frequency inductance of 220
T ABLE I. ac susceptibility results of the YBa2 Cll, Si, 0, samples prepared
using YEa2 Cu, 07 _ y/SiO, sources.
/j,Ln/L,u" b
Sample" Si02 at I kHz
No. content, x (%)
35-1 0 --1.64
35-2 0 -1.92
32-1 0.2 -0.92
32-2 0.2 ·--0.62
33-1 0.4 -7.00
33-2 0.4 -7.11
34-1 0.6 -9.62
34-2 0.6 -9.07
"All samples prepared in the same experimental run.
b L300 is the inductance of the empty coil at 300 K.
2235 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 64, No.4, 15 August 1988 /j,L77/L;()o
at 100 kHz
(%)
-1.89
--1.90
-0.94
----0.48
-6.95
-··6.97
-9.60
-9.07 ,uH (inner diameter about 0.5 cm and the effective length
about 2.0 cm). The sample temperature was then reduced by
immersing it slowly in liquid nitrogen. The ac susceptibility
was obtained by taking -!1Ln 1 L300• Here ilL77 is the dif
ference of inductance values taken at 77 K with and without
the Y-Ba-Cu-Si-O sample. Several samples were also
checked using an independent HP model 4192A LF Imped
ance Analyzer, yielding results within 2% of those obtained
with the LCR meter. The results obtained for eight samples
prepared using procedure (A) are shown in Table 1. It was
found that the I1L77 1 L300 first decreased and then increased
as the Si02 content x was increased to 0.6. For the samples
prepared using procedure (B) described above, the Si02
content effect was clearly observed. The room-temperature
resistance was found to decrease and the onset temperature
increased from 81 to 93 K with the addition ofSi02. ac sus
ceptibility measurements were also carried out and the re
sults are given in Table n. In Table II, it is seen that the
inductance difference increases as the x value is increased.
The values for the samples with x = 0.6 are about 10 times of
that for the two samples without Si02• The susceptibility
results are thus qualitatively consistent with the onset tem
peratures. The low onset temperature of about 80 K for the
sample without SiOz was due to an incomplete reaction of
the materials [by procedure (B) ]. In order to obtain further
information, electrical measurements were carried out for
the samples prepared using procedure (C). The results have
shown onset temperature values from 93 to 95 K for all of the
samples, which seem not to be affected by the presence of
Si02• However, the room-temperature resistivity was found
to increase as the SiOz content was increased. In Fig. 2, the
resistivity of two samples (x = 0, and 0.6) are plotted versus
temperature. It can be seen that the onset temperature of the
two samples was about 94 K. For the sample without Si02,
zero resistivity occurs at about 86 K. A more sharp transi
tion was found for the sample with x = 0.6. However, a very
small resistivity remained even at 78 K. This residual resis
tivity was not found for samples with x = 0.2 and 0.40 ac
susceptibility measurements were also carried out for sam
ples prepared by procedure (C). Results showed an average
-ilL77 1L300 value of about 6.13% at 1 kHz and about
6.38% at 100 kHz for all samples.
TABLE II. ac susceptibility results of the YBa2 Cu, Six Oy samples prepared
using Y203/BaCO,/CuO/SiO o sources.
!J.Ln/L"X) !J.L77/L"Hl
Sample" Sial at I kHz at 100 kHz
No. content, x (%) (%)
36-2 0 --0.47 -0.42
36-3 0 -0.45 -0.52
37-2 0.2 -1.16 -1.16
37-3 0.2 .--1.S1 -1.49
38-2 0.4 -4.36 -4.30
38-3 0.4 --4.37 -4.30
39-2 0.6 -4060 ---4.30
39-3 0.6 0004.76 -4.46
a All samples prepared in one experimental run.
"Measured during the heating cycle.
C. X. Qiu and I. Shih Tn
onset"
(K)
81
85
87
93
2235
[This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to ] IP:
136.165.238.131 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 19:26:49e u
E
.J::::
'" .!!
,... .... ......
". .... ....
IJ") .,-,
'" w a: 30
20
10
0
50 iOO 150
Temperature (K) 200 250
FIG. 2. Temperature-dependent resistivity characteristics for a sample
without SiO, and a sample with Si02 (x = 0.6) prepared using proce
dure (C).
The present results on bulk Y-Ba-Cu-O samples have
demonstrated that the presence oflarge quantities ofSi02 in
this compound material did not result in apparent detrimen
tal effects on the superconducting properties when the sam
ples were treated for a relatively short period of time [proce
dures (A) and (B)]. In fact, the resistance transition and the ac susceptibility measurements at 77 K both showed an
improvement in the material quality. The critical current
density of the samples was also found to increase by about 3-
4 orders of magnitude as the Si content increased from 0 to
0.6. However, under near optimum treatment conditions
with a long period of time, quality of the samples did not
show any further improvement with the addition of Si02 ,
even though the resistance transition temperatures were
similar. After prolonged heat treatment, the sample with
high Si02 content (x = 0.6) did not reach zero resistance
state even at 77 K. For the samples with Si02• preliminary
experiments have been made by immersing them in boiling
deionized water for 10 min. The results showed that these
samples were more resistant to water at the elevated tem
perature than the samples without Si02• Further experi
ments are being made and the results will be reported.
'T. Aida, T. Fukazawa, K. Takagi. and K. Miyauchi. Jpn. J. App!. Phys. 26,
Ll489 (1987).
2M. Gurvitch and A. T. Fiory, AppL Phys. Lett. 51, 1027 (1987).
'r. Shih and C. X. Qiu, App!. Phys. Lett. 52, 748 (1988).
'J. M. Tarascon, L. H. Greene, W. R. McKinnon, and G. Hull, Phys. Rev. B
35,7175 (1987).
Entropy optimization in quantitative texture analysis
H. Schaeben
Department afGeology, University of Bonn, Nussallee 8, 5300 Bonn 1. West Germany
(Received 5 February 1988; accepted for publication 12 April 1988)
The mathematical model of entropy optimization is introduced into texture goniometry to
provide a solution of the problem of quantitative texture analysis, i.e., of reproducing an
orientation distribution function from its corresponding experimental pole distribution
function data.
Let (Zp)p= 1 •...• P be a partlt10n of the unit sphere
S3 = {rER3111rll = 1}, i.e., S3 = UZp, Zp nZq = if; if p=j:.q,
and set for each rES 3
A P
Pit (r) = 2:>p][z/r)/s(Zp),
p= 1 (l)
with
Yp = { P" (r)ds(r»O, p = 1, ... ,P, Jzp
where s(Zp) denotes the two-dimensional area of Zp, and
ds( r) denotes an infinitesimal areal element of S 3 containing
r, and with
{I ifrEZp, Iz (r) =
.p 0 otherwise.
Then Ph (r) is a Zp patchwise constant approximate of the mathematical pole distribution function (pdf) Ph (r) with
respect to the reflection of the crystal form {h}, where {Ii}
denotes the set of symmetrically equivalent crystal direc
tions of direction 11., liES 3.
Analogously, let (Gn) n = t •...• N be a partition of the
three-dimensional space G of orientations g, i.e., G = UG n'
Gn nGm = if; if n=j:.m, and set for each gEG,
A N
f(g) = L x"lIGn (g)/v(G n),
n~l
with
XII = r f(g)dv(g) >0, n = Ip .. N, Jan (2)
where v ( G n) denotes the three-dimensional volume of G n ,
and dv (g) denotes an infinitesimal volume element of G con-
2236 J. App!. Phys. 64 (4). 15 August 1988 0021-8979/88/162236-02$02.40 @ 1988 American Institute of Physics 2236
............................................. -..... : ..... : ...•.....•.........•...•... ( •.............. ····································'·l·'·'·····
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136.165.238.131 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 19:26:49 |
1.4873751.pdf | Determination of adhesion between thermoplastic and liquid silicone rubbers in hard-
soft-combinations via mechanical peeling test
C. Kühr , A. Spörrer , and V. Altstädt
Citation: AIP Conference Proceedings 1593 , 142 (2014);
View online: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4873751
View Table of Contents: http://aip.scitation.org/toc/apc/1593/1
Published by the American Institute of Physics
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AIP Conference Proceedings 1713 , 040003 (2016); 10.1063/1.4942268 Determination of Adhesion between Thermoplastic and
Liquid Silicone Rubbers in Hard-Soft-Combinations via
Mechanical Peeling Test
C.Kühr1*, A.Spörrer1 and V.Altstädt2
1Neue Materialien Bayr euth GmbH, Germany – Christin.Kuehr@nmbgmbh.de; Andreas.Spoerrer@nmbgmbh.de
2 Polymer Engineering, Unive rsität Bayreuth, Germany – Volker.Altstaedt@uni-bayreuth.de
Abstract
The production of hard -soft- combinations via multi injection molding gained more and more importance in the last years. This
is attributed to different factors. One principle reason is that the use of two -component injection molding technique has many
advantages such as cancelling subsequent and complex steps and shortening the process chain. Furthermore this technique
allows the combination of the properties of the single components like the high stiffness of the hard component and the elastic
properties of the soft component. Because of the incompatibility of some polymers the adhesion on th e interface has to be
determined. Thereby adhesion is not only influenced by the applied polymers, but also by the injection molding parameters and
the characteristics of the mold. Besides already known combinati ons of thermoplastics with thermoplastic elastomers (TPE),
there consists the possibility to apply liquid silicone rubber (LSR) as soft component. A thermoplastic/LSR combination gains
in importance due to the specific advantages of LSR to TPE. The faintly adhesion between LSR and thermoplastics is currently one of the key challenges when dealing with those combinations. So it is coercively necessary to improve adhesion between the
two components by adding an adhesion promoter. To determine the promoters influence, it is necessary to develop a suitable testing method to investigate e.g. the peel resistance. The curre nt German standard “VDI Richtlinie 2019”, which is actually
only employed for thermoplastic/TPE combinations, can serve as a model to determine the adhesion of thermoplastic/LSR
combinations.
Keywords : Liquid Silicone Rubber (LSR), hard-soft-combination, VDI Richtline 2019, peel test
INTRODUCTION
Since the development of liquid silicone rubber
(LSR) in the 1970 [1], this material showed an extreme
rapid increase. In 2010 LSR received 11 % in the world market of silicone elastomers [2]. This trend is
remarkable due to the distinguished thermic and
mechanical properties, like fast curing, excellent
temperature stability or good resilience. Therefore
liquid silicone rubber can be used in many applications
such as soothers, baking molds or seals in automotive
area.
Liquid silicone rubber belongs to the high
temperature curing silicones and consists of a
component A, which contains a platinum catalyst, and
a component B with a cross-linking agent. After
mixing the components in a 1:1 ratio, the composition
can be cured at high temperatures and in a few minutes
via hydrosilylation. The main trial for LSR processing
is the liquid injection molding (LIM). In this
connection the LSR components A and B are mixed via a static mixer at 20 °C and then the mixture is
injected in a hot mold (140 – 200 °C).
Besides the manufacturing of LSR products via one-
component injection molding, the combination
between thermoplastics and LSR gains more and more
important, e.g. rain sensors in automobile industry. The
interconnection of thermoplastic and LSR is assembled
by two-component injection molding. However for the
production of this combination it is coercively
necessary to consider the faintly adhesion between LSR and thermoplastic. To improve the adhesion
between LSR and thermoplast ic it is possible to add an
adhesion promoter. In order to determine the adhesion
quality and of course the influence of the adhesion
promoter, it is required to use a suitable testing
method. But at the moment no standardized technique
exists, so the achieved results can’t be compared. The
current German standard “VDI Richtlinie 2019”, which is actually only employed for thermoplastic/TPE
combinations, can serve as a model to determine the
adhesion of thermoplastic/LSR compounds. This test
method offers the potential to determine the adhesion quality and the fracture surface, but also a calculation
of the peel resistance.
The aim of the presented paper is the evaluation of
the mechanical bonding strength of selected
thermoplastic/LSR combinations (e.g. PBT or PA)
characterized on an adapted peel test device, which is
abutted to the “VDI Richtlinie 2019”.
EXPERIMENTAL
Material
The cross-linked LSRs (in the following labeled as
LSR 1 and LSR 2) used in this study are two-
component commercial grade rubbers produced by
Wacker-Chemie GmbH in Germany. The two
components A and B were mixed in a 1:1 ratio.
As carrier material a polybutylene terephthalate
(PBT) by Ticona was disposed.
Proceedings of PPS-29
AIP Conf. Proc. 1593, 142-145 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4873751
2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1227-9/$30.00
142 Two-component injection molding
The test specimen in Fig. 1 was produced via two-
component injection molding at a Krauss Maffei
Multinject CXV 65-180/55. The screw of the vertical injection unit (thermoplastic) had a diameter of 20 mm and the horizontal unit (LSR) 25 mm. The thickness of the thermoplastic was 2 mm and the LSR had a thickness of 2 mm, too.
Figure 1 – Test specimen produced via two-component
injection molding. The yellow plate depicts the hard
thermoplastic carrier material and the white dog bone represents the soft LSR.
In Tab. 1 and Tab. 2 the recommended (material
sheets from material supplier) and the adjusted
parameter values are shown.
Table 1 – Recommended parameter values from the material
sheets of the material suppliers.
PBT LSR 1 LSR 2
Melting
[°C] 230 – 250 - -
Mold [°C] 65 – 93 165
(in a press) 165
(in a press)
Heating time [s] - 300
(in a press) 300
(in a press)
Table 2 – Adjusted parameter values, which were used at the
test specimen production.
PBT LSR 1 LSR 2
Melting
[°C] 230 – 250 - -
Mold [°C] 80 200 160
Heating
time [s] - 140 170
The production of a thermoplastic/LSR-combination
is more difficult than the multi-injection molding of a
thermoplastic/TPE-combination, because the hot
thermoplastic melt is injected in a cold mold (60 –
80 °C) and in contrast to this, the cold liquid silicone rubber in a hot mold, as already mentioned. The
process started with filling the first mold cavity vertical with hot thermoplastic. After a short cooling of the first carrier plate, the mold is opened and rotated by 180°.
Then the mold is closed again, the liquid silicone
rubber is injected onto the carrier plate. After a
sufficient cross-linking time, the test specimen is
demolded.
Peel-Test
The peel-test was performed on an universal testing
machine Zwick Z2.5 to determine the peel resistance,
the adhesion quality and the fracture patter. For that purpose the test specimen was clamped in a test slide, which was fixed via a tension rod. Then the soft component (LSR) was pulled off at a 90° angle (Fig. 2). The haul-off speed was 100 mm/min [3].
Figure 2 – Experimental setup of the peeling test.
Fig. 3 shows a typical slope of a peel-test. The
outcome of the peel-test is the averaged force F. Once
the average force F has been determined, the peel
resistance Ws can be obtained [2],
ܹ௦ൌி
(Eq. 1)
where b is the width of the soft component (LSR).
0 20 40 60 80 100 1200810121416force [N]
traverse path [mm]F
Figure 3 – Typical curve of a peel-test.
143 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Peel resistance of PBT with LSR 1
After the injection molding of the test specimen the
interface of PBT/LSR 1 was analyzed by SEM. As
shown in Fig. 4 the contact surface was firmly bonded
between the two materials. No entrapped air or defects were visible in the interface. So it was possible to
determine the produced test specimen by the peeling test according to “VDI Richtlinie 2019”.
Figure 4 – SEM image of interface PBT with LSR 1.
Subsequent to the peeling tests the fracture surface
was examined by SEM, too. As seen in Fig. 5 and 6
some residues of LSR 1 remained on the carrier
material. Thereby it was obvious in Fig. 6a to attribute
the LSR residues to the injection point of LSR onto the
thermoplastic. The silicone was radially spread in fluid
line of the liquid silicone rubber. Like in Fig. 5 depicted, the silicone residues appeared not only at the
injection point of the LSR, but also on some other
positions of the thermoplastic. So it could be assumed
that there existed a good adhesion at selected points of
the carrier material.
Figure 5 – SEM pictures of LSR 1 residues on PBT after a
peeling test.
Figure 6 – SEM pictures of LSR 1 residues at the LSR
injection point of LSR.
Besides the estimation of the fracture surface it was
also possible to calculate the peeling resistance of the
produced combination. The peel resistance was 1.32 ± 0.06 N/mm. This value indicated that an adhesion between the thermoplastic as carrier material and the LSR 1 as soft component already exists.
However it is still nece ssary to elevate the peel
resistance of this material combination.
Comparison of the peel resistance of PBT with LSR 1 and LSR 2
As shown in Tab. 3 the peel resistance for the two
liquid silicone rubber types was diverse. The
PBT/LSR1 combination achieved a higher peel
resistance than the test specimen of PBT/LSR 2. This
result was attributed to different additives in the LSR
types.
Table 3 – Peel resistance of the thermoplastic/LSR-
combinations.
peel resistance [N/mm]
PBT/LSR 1 1.32 ± 0.06
PBT/LSR 2 1.05 ± 0.05
But, as already mentioned above, it is required to
examine the adhesion between the material combinations even more closely to increase the
adhesion forces. One possible approach is the addition
of additives, which are able to raise the peel resistance.
a
b PBT
LSR 1
144Quality assessment of the test method
At last the used test method was assessed. Therefore
this mechanical examination method had to achieve
different points of criticism:
1.Is it possible to peel the soft component?
2.Is it feasible to examine the fracture surface,
the adhesion quality and to calculate the peel
resistance?
3.Does the test setup show some influence onto
the peeling?
4.Is the used geometry of the test specimen
practical?
As the represented results indicated the soft
component could be peeled off without any
complications. Thus the peel force could be observed
via the used test method. Above the averaged peel
force it was possible to calculate the peel resistance
and evaluate at the same time the adhesion quality. In
addition the fracture surface was simultaneously
assessed.
In the conducted tests no visible influence of the experimental set-up was evident. Furthermore the
selected geometry of the test specimen seemed useful.
CONCLUSION
In this study two hard/soft-combinations were
determined by a mechanical test method. A
polybutylene terephthalate was used as hard
component and two liquid silicone rubbers were
applied as soft component.
Besides the examination of the adhesion quality and fracture surface, the peeling resistance was calculated. Thereby it was noticed that the two different liquid silicone rubbers showed an adhesion on the carrier
material (PBT). Furthermore LSR 1 showed a higher peeling resistance than LSR 2 and so this LSR type had
a better adhesion to the hard component. Moreover
some silicone residues, which were examined via
SEM, remained on the carrier material. At last the used testing method was assessed. The mechanical test technique was abutted to the German standard “VDI Richtlinie 2019”, which is currently
applied for thermoplastic/TPE-combinations. It could
be shown that this method is absolutely suitable to
determine the adhesion of a thermoplastic/LSR-
combination.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge STMWIVT (Programm Neue Werkstoffe in Bayern, NW-1204-0003 Cluster
Neue Werkstoffe) and the support of our project
partner for providing the material.
REFERENCES
1. J. LeFan; M. Eng Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics
2011, 1.
2. U. Wachtler in Fachtagung Silikonelastomere,
Würzburg, 2013, CD.
3. Verein Deutscher Ingenieure, VDI Richtlinie 2019,2011.
4. M. Bräuer; B. Hupfer; J. Nagel; U. Reuter Kautsch.
Gummi Kunstst. 2006, ??, 115.
5. E. Delebcq; F. Ganachaud Appl. Mater. and Interfaces
2012, 4, 3340.
6. E. Haberstroh; C. Lettowsky J. of Polym. Eng. 2004, 24,
203.
7. E. Haberstroh; C. Ronnewinkel J. of Polym. Eng. 2001,
21, 303.
145 |
1.4876767.pdf |
Deformation Sensor Based on Polymer-Supported
Discontinuous Graphene Multi-Layer Coatings
G. Carotenuto, L. Schiavo, V. Romeo, L. Nicolais
Institute for Composite and Biomedical Materials. National Research Council.
Piazzale E. Fermi, 1, 800 55 Portici (NA), Italy.
Abstract. Graphene can be conveniently used in the modification of polymer surfaces. Graphene macromolecules are perfectly
transparent to the visible light and elec trically conductive, consequently these tw o properties can be si multaneously provided to
polymeric substrates by surface coating with thin graphene layers. In addition, such coating process provides the substrates of : water-
repellence, higher surface hardness, low-friction, self-lubricatio n, gas-barrier properties, and many other functionalities. Po lyolefins
have a non-polar nature and therefore graphe ne strongly sticks on their surface. Nano-crystalline graphite can be used as graph ene
precursor in some chemical processes (e.g., graphite oxide sy nthesis by the Hummer method), in addition it can be directly appl ied to
the surface of a polyolefin substrate (e.g., polyethylene) to cove r it by a thin graphene multilayer. In particular, the nano-c rystalline
graphite perfectly exfoliate under the applic ation of a combination of shear and frict ion forces and the produced graphene sing le-
layers perfectly spread and adhere on the polyethylene substrate surface. Such polymeric materials can be used as ITO (indium-t in
oxide) substitute and in the fabrication of different electronic de vices. Here the fabrication of transparent resistive deforma tion
sensors based on low-density polyethylene film s coated by graphene multila yers is described. Such de vices are very sensible and
show a high reversible and reproducible behavior.
Keywords : graphene, sonsors, optically tr ansparent, electr ical conduction.
PACS: 72.80.Vp 07.07.Df 78.66.Qn 85.40.Hp.
1. INTRODUCTION
The use of graphene-on-polymer to fabricate transparent strain sensors and other stretchable resistive sensors has
been described in the literature [1-4]. The surface of non-polar subs trates can be modified by coating with graphene
macromolecules. Polymeric films like polye thylene are very adequate non-polar su bstrates for such graphene coating.
Depending on the amount of deposited graphene, both few-layers thick coatings and several-layers thick coatings can be
achieved. When the surface of the polymeric substrate has been uniformly coated by graphene, continuity is established
in the coating layer since electrons can move through the co ntacting graphene sheets. In particular, electron transport
between the contacting graphene sheets in the interconnect graphene network takes place because adjacent graphene -
orbitals overlap, extending the molecular wavefunctions to the full graphene coating layer [1]. For such a reason, in the
case of an iso-oriented multi-layer graphene coating, electr on transport is not possible between adjacent layers but only
inside the same layer. Consequently, a multi-layer graphene coating can be considered as a sort of multi-channel
electrical conductor, and it is equivalent to a combination of resistors in a parallel connection. The equivalent resistance
of equal parallel resistors is given by R=r/N where r is the layer resistance and N the total number of layers present in
the multilayer. Since the deformation of a graphene layer caus es an increase of the distance between each graphene unit,
thus interrupting some percolative paths, an increase of the multilayer resistance is observed for all types of film
deformation. In particular, the bending of the LDPE substrate causes a similar deformation of the discontinuous
graphene layers coating the substrate surface with a consequent reduction of the electrically conductive paths present in each planar layer of this coating. Actu ally the graphene layers placed above th e median plane get far away each other
and the graphene layers located below this plane get closer. However, electrical conduction re quires an alignment of the
planes which is obstructed in both cases. Such property can be used to fabricate deformation sensors based on polymer
supported graphene multi-layers. The sensibility of such conduc tive sensors is related to the number of graphene layers
contained in the coating ( R/R
01/N) and it decreases with increasing of the multi-layer thickness. Promptness of the
Times of Polymers (TOP) and Composites 2014
AIP Conf. Proc. 1599, 18-21 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876767
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1233-0/$30.00
18
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:37:25
graphene-based sensor is quite high since a variation in th e percolative path number takes place as it deviates from the
planar configuration. In particular, because of the low intens ity of the Van der Waals forces involved in the interaction
between adjacent graphene layers, this movement of the graphene sheets induced by the substrate deformation is
completely reversible and a recovery of the electrical properties can be achieved.
Owing to the scarce mechanical properties of the LDPE subs trate, the reversibility of the sensor must be ensured
by an external elastic polymeric packaging which has also the important function to prevent the graphene coating from
contamination that may falsify the deformation measurement. Because the electrical conductiv ity of the graphene layer
can be influenced by the absorption of non-polar organic molecule s (e.g., hydrocarbon compou nds) on its surface, the
graphene-LDPE system requires to be protected by encapsulation in an elastic polymeric layer. Such encapsulation can
be easily done by sealing the deforma tion sensor between two PET films (plastification pouches). Because PET is a
quite elastic polymeric material, such encapsulation has also the effect to provide the device of adequate flexural
elasticity which is strictly required to achieve a convenient reversibility in the sensor answer. A thermally sealed PET
packaging may represent a convenient choice for the LDPE-graphene device. The sensor measurements should be quite
reproducible and free from hysteresis problems for little deform ation of the device and the thermal sealing also helps to
increase reproducibility of the sensor behavior. Little deforma tions should not change irreversibly the distribution of
graphene sheets present on the LDPE surface, consequently this type of device does not show hysteresis phenomena at
least under moderate deformations.
2. EXPERIMENTAL
LDPE films were uniformly coated by a thin layer of graphene simply by gently rubbing an alcoholic suspension of
nano-crystalline graphite (few-layer graphene, FLG) on its surface by using a piece of LDPE. The FLG alcoholic
suspension was produced according to a literature process [5]. The resulting graphene-based coating layer had a very
uniform thickness that could be varied from a few layers to several by changing the conc entration of the alcoholic
suspension. Because the graphene unities are optically tr ansparent (the opacity of a singl e graphene layer is 2.3% [6])
the coating layer resulted transparent, and transparency was depending on the number of graphene coating layers. In
particular, an evaluation of the film thickness was possible based on the opacity value of the single graphene sheet
(2.3%). The full layer opacity is given by 0.023N where N is the layer number, however this value can be measured (it corresponds to 1-T, where T is the film transmittance) and therefore N=(1-T)/0. 023. In order to prevent contamination
and obtain an elastic system, the obtained graphene/LDPE films were sealed between two PET films (plastification
pouches) together with the device electrodes (two aluminum strips) (see Figure 1).
FIGURE 1. Deformation sensor based on graphene-coa ted LDPE films encapsulated into PET.
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The special surface morphology which resulted when the surface of a LDPE film has been rubbed out with a
FLG suspension in order to generate a uniform graphene coating layer has been accurately imaged by Scanning
19
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:37:25
Electron Microscopy “SEM-FEG Jeol JS M-7001F”. As shown in Figure 1, th e substrate surface results completely
covered by the graphene layers which form planar percolative paths. The FLG nanocrystals are not completely
exfoliated and some crystals adhering to the LDPE substrate are still present.
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 6502000040000Intensity
2 (deg) gct = 16.7 nm
gct = 14,5 nm
gct = 16,0 nm
Pure substrate (LDPE)
(002)(004)B
FIGURE 2. SEM micrograph of the graphene-based layer coating the LDPE surface (A) and XRD with indication of graphene
coating thickness (gct) measured by the Scherrer equation (B).
20
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The structure of the very thin gr aphene-based layer coating the surface of the LDPE substrate has been
investigated by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD). Diffuse halo and peaks at 21.4°, 23.69°, and 36.16° belong to the
LDPE substrate. The graphene coating layer has a crystallin e nature and its diffraction pattern results locate at a 2
value lightly different from that of the FLG precursor. In fact , the (002) peaks is located in the diffractogram at 26.45°,
while the starting FLG sample has this signal at 26.51° (the same signal is located at 26.6° for hexagonal graphite).
Therefore, the interspacing in the graphene coating is higher, probably because of a higher concentration of defects. The
layer thickness has been evaluated by applying the Scherrer formula to the (002) peak and it resulted of 16.7 1nm
(corresponding to 50 5 crystalline planes).
The mechanisms involved in the electrical conduction of graphene-based coatings are depending on the applied
voltage. At low voltages (e.g., 10V) only an ohmic conductivity is involved. In this case the film resistivity is not
depending on the voltage, and only the planar percolative paths contained in the multilayer coating contribute to
electron transport. Electrons move th rough the graphene-to-graphene contact s present in each layer because of a
wavefunction extension trough the contacting graphene unities. However, at higher electrical potential values (e.g.,
100V) also hopping and tunneling conduction mechanisms can be involved in the electrical conductivity of the modified surface. In this case, the electrons move from neig hbor planes in the graphene-based coating layer. Thus, the
resistivity value results strictly depending on the applied voltage. However, because electronic devices are usually
working at low voltages, only the ohmic regime is important for a deformation sensor from a practical point of view.
The electrical conductivity of the coating layer was measured by a resis tivity meter (Monroe Electronics, Model 272,
configured for measurements of surf ace resistivity) and it was strictly depending on the coating thickness and
significantly decreased with thickness decreasing to a few nanometers. An exponential behavior described the
dependence of the surface resistance on th ickness for these systems (the best da ta fitting was achieved by the following
equation: R=R
0·exp(-N/a)+b; where R 0=(6.1±1.7)·109, a=1.12±0.02, and b=115±20).
4. CONCLUSION
Optically transparent resistive deformation sensors can be based on graphene-coated LDPE films conveniently
protected by encapsulation in PET. Owing to the percolative structure of the graphene coating layer, deformation may
cause a variation in the conductive path number, and conseq uently in the surface coating resistance. The discontinuous
nature of the coating layer is essential for the working of such a kind of device. The electrically conductive and
optically transparent graphene/polyethylene films were si mply fabricated by rubbing alcoholic suspensions of
nanocrystalline graphite on the LDPE surface.
5. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Authors knowledge Nicola Bazzanella, labo ratory technician at Dept. of Phys ics, University of Trento for the
microscopical analysis of the samples. We are gratef ul to the Research Project “ENAM - PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL-
BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT” for financial supporting of this work.
REFERENCES
1. Z. Jing, Z. Guang-Yu, S. Dong-Xia, Chin. Phys. B 22, 057701 (2013).
2. J. Wang, Y. Geng, Q. Zheng, J.-K. Kim, Carbon 48 1815-1823 (2010).
3.X. Li, R. Zhang, W. Yu, K. Wang, J. Wei, D. Wu, A. Cao, Z. Li, Y. Cheng, R.S. Ruoff, H. Zhu, Sci. Rep. 2, 870 (2012).
4. S.-H. Bae, Y. Lee, B.K. Sharma, H.-J. Lee, J.-H. Kim, J.-H. Ahn, Carbon 51 236-242 (2013).
5. G.Carotenuto, V.Romeo, S.DeNicola, L.Nicolais, Nano Res Lett 8 (94), 1-6 (2013).
6. R.R. Nair, P. Blake, A. N. Grigorenko, K.S. Novoselov, T.J. Booth, T. Stauber, Science 320, 1308 (2008).
21
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1.4876781.pdf |
Structural FEM analysis of the strut-to-fuselage joint of a two-seat
composite aircraft
Erik Vargas-Rojas*, Diego Camarena-A rellano, Hilario Hernández-Moreno
IPN, ESIME Ticomán; Av. Ticomán 600; Col. San José Ticomán; México, 07340
*Contact author: erikvargasrojas@hotmail.com; T. (+33)787085133
Key Words : aircraft structure analysis, composite materials, FEM, geometrical modeling
Abstract. An analysis of a strut-to-fuselage joint is realized in order to evaluate the zones with a high probability of failure by means
of a safety factor. The whole section is analyzed using the Fini te Element Method (FEM) so as to estimate static resistance beh avior,
therefore it is necessary a numerical mock-up of the section, the mechanical properties of the Carbon-Epoxy (C-Ep) material, an d to
evaluate the applied loads. Results of the analysis show that the zones with higher probability of failure are found around the wing
strut and the fuselage joint, with a safety factor lower than ex pected in comparison with the average safety factor used on air crafts built
mostly with metals.
INTRODUCTION
The approach for the development of aircraft structures usi ng composite materials is similar to a testing pyramid, i.e,
mechanical properties of constituent materials require an extensive tests campaign, conforming the base of the pyramid; later on, a less broad series of mechanical tests of standa rdized coupons that consider the constituent materials
mechanical properties and the stacking sequence follow. Next , simple structural elements require even fewer but more
specialized experimentation, so do complete structures [1]. However, the evaluation of a structure following this
approach becomes a complex and expensive task [2,3], spec ially for small aircrafts manufacturers for which several full
scale test may be cost prohibited when taking into ac count a low unit production rate. Additionally, the complete
structural integrity analysis should consider other tests su ch as static resistance, environmental effects, fatigue and
damage tolerance [1]. For this study, the static resistance analysis requires to measure the material mechanical properties
of the C-Ep composite material, and to compare them against the stresses produced by flight loads.
Other approaches exist for the analysis of aerospace stru ctures, such as the development of technological evaluators
proposed by Grunevald and Collombet [4], who consider the tes ting of representative specimens as an alternative, or a
complementary method to the testing pyramid, so costs can be reduced by considering focused analysis of critical zones
of a structure, thus developing representative specimens an d extensively using numerical simulations with FEM software.
In previous works, structural critical zone s have been already identified for the Stela-M1 aircraft, as part of a joint
collaborative effort between Mexican aircraft manufacturer, Aeromarmi; and Instituto Politécnico Nacional of Mexico
(IPN) [5-7]. This research has for objective to present the ev aluation of the static strength of the joint of the fuselage with
the main landing gear and with the supporting strut of the wing , as depicted in Fig 1. In or der to achieve this goal, the
physical and mechanical characterization process of the comp osite material are presented, as well as the digitalization
process of the geometry under study, so a Product Life Manage ment (PLM) and a FEM software can be used robustly in
order to identify the most stressed zones under the actual st ress state [8] produced by the most critical flight load case
according to normalized design criteria for this kind of aircraft [9].
FIGURE 1 . (a) Strut-to-fuselage, and landing-gear-to-fusela ge joint (circled). (b) Single representative part.
Times of Polymers (TOP) and Composites 2014
AIP Conf. Proc. 1599, 74-77 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876781
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1233-0/$30.00
74
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MATERIAL CHARACTERIZATION
Physical characterization deals with the estimation of density measurements; matrix, reinforcement, and void volume
fractions; stacking sequence (number and fiber orientation) and thickness. Volume fractions are obtained with the matrix
acid digestion method, following the procedure A as presented in ASTM D 3171 [10]. Void content V p is obtained using
the test method ASTM D 2734 [11]. Density measurement is achi eved by using the hydrostatic principle according to the
test method described in ASTM D 792 [12]. According to [ 13], results of the physical char acterization considering 5 test
coupons cut with the water jet process show that the average fiber volume fraction V f reaches 43.4%, matrix volume
fraction V m a slightly higher value of 47.4%, and a porosity volume fraction V p equal to 9.2%. Respective standard
deviation s is 6.2, 6.3, and 0.7%; so coefficient of variat ion CV is 14.22, 13.26, and 7.08%, respectively.
An analysis using a metallurgical microscope allows to meas ure the thickness and to visualize the stacking sequence
of the composite material which consists of nine bidirection al layers, each one with two main directions: 0° and 90°.
Outermost layers 1 and 9 are made with glass fiber and epoxy resin and serve as protection and as a sacrifice material if
sanding is needed to remove paint and for a smoother finish , whereas layers 2 through 8 are fabricated with thicker
carbon fiber fabrics (0.578 mm per layer).
Test methods for tensile and shear properties using tension specimen are described by ASTM standards D 3039 [14],
and D 3518 [15]. Values obtained are intended to be used in FEM modeling as input data aiming robustness in results.
Specimen dimensions for tensile and shear test fulfill minimu ms specified in standards because it was not possible to
obtain the preferred dimensions (25 u 250 mm) due to limited material availab ility. Both kinds of coupons were
instrumented with strain gages oriented in the transverse dire ction with respect to the load axis; axial strain measurement
was accomplished with a standard extensometer. Stress-strain pl ots obtained with tensile tests allow to determine a chord
elastic modulus, as well as the axial tensile strength; the axial Poisson ratio is obtained from the transverse-axial strain
plot. With respect to shear properties, the coupons are oriented during cutting proc ess so as to have a ±45° fiber pattern
with respect to the axial axis of the spec imen; in this case, a stress-strain tran sformation is needed so the shear elastic
modulus and shear maximum stress can be calculated with a sh ear stress-angular strain. Acco rding to [8], results show
for tensile test averages values of 308.3 MPa for tensile strength, 29880.52 MPa for elastic modulus, and 0.06 for Poisson ratio; respective s is 74.10 MPa, 6500 MPa, and 0.05; and CV is 25.96%, 19.96%, and 83.06%, respectively. With
respect to shear tests using tensile test coupon, the averag e shear strength is 59.52 MPa, and the shear modulus has a
value of 6592.07 MPa; respective s is 0.7, MPa and 463 MPa; and CV is 1.18%, and 7.02, respectively.
NUMERICAL MODELING
Loads applied onto the structure are du e to aerodynamical forces, inertial forc es, and reactions during landing and
taxing. For this study, the most critical condition on flight mane uvering is used for the FEM an alysis; this extreme case is
identified using the so called maneuver diagram , which is the plot of the load factor as a function of speed [16,17],
obtained from a previous resear ch [11] based on the official calculus memento of the Stela-M1 [18], and on the
requirements specified in FAR Part 23 [9]. It is worth to remark that for this airplane the gust diagram is comprised
within the maneuver diagram [16]. The most critical cases are present at load factors of +4.4 and 2.2, so for the analysis
it is chosen the case of the +4.4 load factor (at maximum dive speed). Additionally, it is pertinent to emphasize the
extreme rare condition that this value could be reached along the lifetime of the airplane.
The lift distribution over the midspan of the wing is calcu lated by Morales in [19]. Once the total half-wing lift of
2002.46 N is obtained, the load on the wing strut is calculated reaching a numerical value of 4879.15 N. Considering that
the biggest in-flight load factor is 4.4, the calcu lated wing strut load reaches a value of 21469.87 N.
The strut-to-fuselage joint is a geometrically complex part; so in order to digitize the actual geometry, two methods
are used: in the first one standard metrol ogy instruments are used an d several geometrical simpli fications are considered,
but results are not sufficiently accurate for the FEM anal ysis, so it was decided to employ a geometrical image
correlation technique by photogrametry using the 3D Rhinoceros software. According to the software documents [20],
the maximal deviation of this method is about 0.02 mm for a 10.2 Megapixel camera, as used for this study. To obtain the
spatial location of the surface points, a cali bration procedure is needed to register the specific targets, which are then
pasted on the surface of the part as it is shown on Fig. 2a; then, several pictures of the part are taken from different
angles. After processing, the digitized surface, presented on Figure 2b, is ready for FEM analysis. The digitized geometry
75
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was exported to CATIA and then again to ANSYS so it could be meshed as presented on Fig. 2c. A shell element with 8
nodes, able to simulate layered compos ites was chosen (SHELL 99), [21].
FIGURE 2 . Digitizing technique. (a) Geometry with targets. (b) Digitized part on CAE software. (c) Digitized part on FEM software.
FEM method for structural analysis requires several material properties. In this case, in-plane strength in tension
corresponds to mean experimental values; the tensile strength considered along the stacking direction is the value solely
of the resin, as obtained from literature for an epoxy resin [22]. In a similar way, the in-plane shear strength is the mean experimental value. The compressive strength values are es timated considering the same tensile/compressive strength
ratio reported in literature [23] for a car bon reinforced composite, i.e., if the experimental tensile strength is 308 MPa, the
estimated compressive value lays around 246 MPa (1.25 ratio). Boundary conditions are estab lished trying to simulate as
best possible the real conditions of the real structure, thus all degrees of freedom (DOF) are restrained along the borders,
excepting the corner radius which is free of constraints beca use it is part of the door peri meter. The load imposed by the
strut, as previously calculated, is distributed uniformly over the surface of the bo lted metallic plate attached to the
fuselage. The rotational DOF of this surface were constraine d so as to simulate the presence of the metallic fitting
between the strut and the fuselage.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
According to FEM results, normal stress and shear stress fields , it can be corroborated that the most stressed zones are
located in the lower border where the metallic fitting is in contact with the composite shell. On future studies these zones must be subjected to careful examinations because they are the most likely to present damages, if ever appear. In Table 1,
the maximum and minimum values of the stress are presented.
TABLE 1 . Maximum and minimum stress values on nodes.
Stress Maximum (MPa) Minimum (MPa) Stress Maximum (MPa) Minimum (MPa)
Normal in x (Vl) 375.88 – 269.67 Shear in xy 027.16 – 031.93
Normal in y 082.73 – 075.62 Shear in yz 112.73 – 145.53
Normal in z (Vl) 355.81 – 267.65 Shear in xz (Wlt) 044.04 – 034.05
Once the stress fields are obtained, the Tsai-Wu strength cr iterion is used according to the equation 2, in order to
calculate the strength factor R, which is analogue to the static safety factor for metals. In equation 2 the coefficients Fij
are the elements of the Tsai-Wu tensor which can be calculated using the expressions for a, b, and c, that depend on the
material strength properties. For the set of equations, V stand for normal stresses, W for shear stresses, l for longitudinal
(along the fiber direction), t for transverse, T for tension, and C for compression. The minimum strength factor calculated
has a value of 1.343, which means that the analyzed structural component may not present structural failure even for the worst flight scenario according to the maneuver diagram.
a ac b b R 2/42r (1)
tl lt t l F F F Fa VVWVV122
662
222
11 2 , t lF Fb VV2 1 , 1 c ( 2 )
C
lT
l Fmax max 1 /1 /1 VV , C
tT
t Fmax max 2 /1 /1 VV , C
lT
l Fmax max 11 /1VV , C
tT
t Fmax max 22 /1VV , 2
max 66 /1lt FW (3)
76
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CONCLUSIONS
x The geometrical modeling of a complex geometrical shape, constituted by the strut-to-fuselage joint is achieved by
photogrametry using the 3D Rhinoceros software, and properly treated so as to use it for FEM with ANSYS.
x Physical and mechanical characterization is necessary so the material properties allow to work with a FEM model
as accurate and robust as pos sible. However, certain values are used as published in respective literature.
x After exploiting the FEM model, the most stressed areas are identified and the respective numerical values allow to
establish an approximate strength factor for the worst in-f light load case. For such a case, this value which means
that the analyzed structural component may not present structural failure even for the worst flight scenario
according to the maneuver diagram, which is an extrem e improbable case not expected during normal operation.
x This study is the first step of a process which aims to design a representative specimen that permits the detailed
analysis of the evolution of the stress and material conditions during the lifespan of the structure, known as health
monitoring, which can be impact the manufacture proc ess, inspection procedures, and maintenance practices.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Authors gratefully acknowledge the logistical support of Architect Nestor Romero-P., Head Director of Romfer
Industries; of Engs. Gerardo Cortés-M. and Carlos Martínez-G. from Aeromarmi; of Dr. Jorge-Luis González-V., Head Director of GAID Research Group for his scientific advice; as well as the former directives of ESIME Ticomán, in
particular to Director Eng. Miguel Álvarez-M., and Academical Sub-Director Eng. Porfirio Sarmiento-M.
REFERENCES
[1.] US Department of Defense. Handbook Polymer Matrix Composites Vol. 1, Guide lines for characterization of structural materials .
MIL-HDBK-17-1E. DOD. 1997. p. 6 –1 through 6 –11.
[2.] Karen E. et al. A history of full-scale aircraft and rotorcraft crash testing and simulation at NASA Langely Research Center , 15th-18th
November 2004; 4th International Aircraft and Cabin Safety Research Conference. Lisbon, Portugal.
[3.] Tomblin, J., Seneviratne, W., F AA Research on large-scale test substantiation, damage tolerance and maintenance workshop .
Rosemont, Chicago, IL, July 19th-21st, 2006.
[4.] M. Mulle, F. Collombet, B. Trarieux, J.-N. Périé and Y.-H. Grunevald. Démonstrateur technologique multi-instrumenté (réseaux de
Bragg et mesure de champs). Revue des Composites et Matériaux Avancés. 15(1)33-51. 2005
[5.] Vargas-R., E. Project Aeromarmi –ESIME Ticomán: development of an utility aircraft fabricated with composite materials . In Spanish.
Internal document. 2009. p6.
[6.] Hernández, H. Proposal for the study of the structural integrity of the Stela-M1 aircraft . In Spanish. 2009. p10.
[7.] Bello-Olvera, O. E. Conceptual design approach of a six-seat aircraft using composite materials . BSc thesis, ESIME-Ticomán, IPN. In
Spanish. México. 2010.
[8.] Camarena-Arellano D., FEM analysis of the strut-to-fuselage, and landing-gear-to fuselage joint of a composite, low-weight, two-seat,
and single-engine aircraft . BSc thesis, ESIME-Ticomán, IPN. In Spanish. México. 2009.
[9.] FAA. FAR Part 23. Airworthiness standards: Normal, utility, acrobatic, and commuter category airplanes .
[10.] ASTM Standard D 3171-76. Method for fiber content of resin-matrix composites by matrix digestion .
[11.] ASTM Standard D 2734 – 91; Method for void content of reinforced plastics .
[12.] ASTM Standard D 792 – 91; Method for density and specific gravity (relative density) of plastics by displacement .
[13.] Arellano, D., Vargas, E., Hernández, H. Medición de fracciones volumétricas en materiales compuestos C-Ep y G-Ep por digestión y
calcinación de resina . 5º CIIES. México. 10-14 Noviembre 2008.
[14.] ASTM D 3039M – 00. Method for Tensile properties of polymer matrix composite materials .
[15.] ASTM D 3518M – 94. Method for in-plane shear response of polymer matrix composite materials by tensile test.
[16.] Niu, M. Airframe structural design . Hong Kong, Conm ilit Press LTD. 1999. p.612.
[17.] Bruhn, E. Analysis and design of aircraft structures . Cincinnati: Tri-State Offset Co., 1958.
[18.] Stela-M1, Calculus Memento . In Spanish. Aeromarmi SA de CV. España, 2005.
[19.] Morales-Hernández, A. Analysis of stresses in order to design an inspection access panel under the wing of the Stela-M1 aircraft . BSc
thesis, ESIME-Ticomán, IPN. In Spanish. México. 2008.
[20.] Rhinoceros 4.0 User’s guide .
[21.] Release ANSYS 10.0 Documentation.
[22.] Miravete A., Larrodé E., Castejón L., Materiales Compuestos Tomo I. Editorial Reverté, España, 2000.
[23.] Gay, D., Matériaux composites . Édition Hermes – Lavoiser, France 2005.
77
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1.4876779.pdf | Thermoplastic matrix composites for aeronautical applications – The
amorphous/semi-crystalline blends option
Michele Iannone, Floriana Esposito, and Aniello Cammarano
Citation: AIP Conference Proceedings 1599, 66 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876779
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4876779
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/proceeding/aipcp/1599?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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131.247.112.3 On: Thu, 13 Aug 2015 18:35:43Thermoplastic Matrix Composites for Aeronautical
Applications – The Amorphous/Semi-Crystalline Blends
Option
Michele Iannonea , Floriana Espositoa and Aniello Cammaranob
aAlenia Aermacchi, Viale dell’Aeronautica snc, 80038 Pomigliano D’Arco (Naples) Italy
bIMAST SCaRL, Piazza Bovio 22, 80133 Napl es, Italy
Abstract. Blends obtained by mixing high temperature applications thermoplastics have been investigated. Namely the
blends considered in this work are made by semi -crystalline thermoplastics PEEK with amorphous PEI. The final goal is
to analyse the mechanic al, chemical -physical and environmental resistance characteristics of these blends to evaluate
their suitability as matrices of carbon reinforced composites for aeronautical structural applications . The first collected
results are very promising.
Keywords: Composites, Aeronautical Structures, Thermoplastic, PEEK, PEI, Blends.
PACS: 81
INTRODUCTION
Composites for structural aeronautical applications are generally based on carbon fiber reinforcement and
Polymeric Thermo setting Matrix, mainly epoxy. Several research and development activity has been performed to
evaluate the possibility to utilize thermoplastic based matrices. In fact thermoplastics appear very promising, due the
high toughness, the potential re -processability, weldability and the easier recycling. Furthermore thermoplastics
don’t require refrigerated storage and transport, which is required for the thermosetting which have also a limited
storage and handling time. One of the reasons for limited thermoplastic applications for aeronautics are the severe
requirements in terms of maximu m service temperature and environmental resistance. For the structures generally a
Tg wet not lower than 110 °C is required; that means that some thermoplastic resin with satisfactory structural
properties (e.g. Polycarbonate) cannot be considered due to relaxation phenomena [1 -4] correlated to a Tg too much
closer to the maximum wet working temperature . As a consequence, the use of thermoplastics for aeronautical
structural applications has been considered only when very high Tg amorphous thermoplastics (PEI, PES) and high Tf semi -crystalline thermoplastics (PPS, PEEK, PEKK) have been available. The evaluation of such materials
allowed to realize that PEEK and PEKK are always suitable for structural applications, PPS is preferred for interior
applications, PEI and PES give some concerns about resistance to environmental humidity and solvents. The usage
of PEEK and PEKK based composites, which show very good mechanical properties, is limited by cost
considerations. In fact the raw material cost of the resin is high. Also the prepreg fabrication process is expensive,
due to the high melting temperature (above 350 °C) and the high viscosity of the melt PEEK, making very difficult
the fiber impregnation. Part fabrication is also difficult, and the advantages of working with a material already
polymerized (the long curing cycles needed for epoxy are not required for thermoplastics) are balanced by the
disadvantages due by the need to work at high temperature and to control the cooling rate to obtain the correct
crystallinity level in the performed items.
TABLE 1. Some Thermoplastic Resins suitable for aeronautical stru c tural applications .
Resin Molecular Structure Tg Tf
PEI Amorphous 200 --
PEEK Semi -Crystalline 140-145 334-343
PPS Semi -Crystalline 85-90 275-290
Times of Polymers (TOP) and Composites 2014
AIP Conf. Proc. 1599, 66-69 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876779
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1233-0/$30.00
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Cost reduction can be pursued through the utilization of fabrication techniques peculiar of ther moplastics, like
thermoforming. This technique is suitable for parts not too large, and cannot be used for large structures (e -g- wings
and fuselages); for these latter automated lay -up and automated fiber placement, requiring an appropriate heating
facility to melt the material, could allow an interesting cost reduction, because don’t require cu ring in autoclave, but
they still need some improvements.
An idea that could help, mainly the assembly process, is the amorphous bonding. It is based on the addi tion of a
layer of amorphous material as external ply during the fabrication of a semi -crystalline matrix composite part. An
example is the fabrication of parts made of PEEK -carbon composite with the addition of external PEI layers. Two
parts made in this way can be joined at a temperature above the PEI Tg and below the PEEK Tf. If needed a PEI
film can be put between the two parts during joining. The same concept can be used to simplify other process techniques.
This approach, that in the following w ill be called “ amorphous bonding”, was already mechan ically tested with
good results [5 ] , but needs some additional checks to be utilized in a reliable way. In fact, it must be demonstrated
that blending doesn’t decrease the properties of the blend comp onents. The physical and mechanical properties of
the blends must be evaluated, including also a check of the after blending properties of the amorphous component.
In fact the structural suitability of the amorphous bonding requires that both materials are melt together; melting of
the only amorphous gives a very poor bonding with the semi - crystalline part in the “solid” state. A point to be
verified is the soundness of the amorphous resin molecular structure when processed at a temperature much above
Tg. Also the crystallization behavior of the semi -crystalline resin in the blends must be compared with the one of the
resin alone.
BLEND CHARACTERIZATION
PEEK -PEI blends have been performed through a high temperature mixing process utilizing an industr ial
extruder.
Tests have been performed on neat PEEK and PEI and on the following PEEK -PEI blends (percent by weight):
90-10; 80- 20; 70- 30; 50- 50; 30- 70; 20- 80; 10- 90.
DSC tests performed on blends with different compositions show that the transiti on temperatures of the single
components aren’t modified in a relevant way in the blend. The PEEK crystallization is affected by the cooling rate
[6] but a constant level of crystallinity (about 30%) is obtained when cooling rate ranges between 10 and 30 0°C/min.
For cooling faster than 300 °C/min th e crystals (generally aggregated in a spherulitic geometry) cannot form
adequately, and for very high cooling rate an amorphous material is obtained. This is an unstable status, and when the quenched material is heated above Tg a crystallization occurs, producing crystals not arrange d in a spherulitic
geometry (cold crystallization). For very slow cooling (e.g. 1°C/min) crystallinity higher than 30% is obtained.
In fig. 1 the DSC scanning (repeated for two s amples) is shown for a quenched PEEK. In a first run a
crystallization above Tg is observed; the formed crystals melt above Tf. After cooling at a speed in the window from
10°C/min , a correct crystallization occurs. In the following scanning no cold crysta llization is observed, and Tg and
the melting heath of the crystalline phase can be measured. It can be also observed that the melting curve observed
in the first scan, related to the melting of the cold crystallization phase , shows a shallow which gives a shape
different from the one observed in the second curve (spherulites melting). Is also interesting to note that for all the
PEEK/PEI blend s only a single Tg is observed with a value intermediate between the PEEK and the PEI Tg , and the
Tg of the sin gle components aren’t observed, indicating a good level of blending .
67
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131.247.112.3 On: Thu, 13 Aug 2015 18:35:43
Temperature, °C
FIGURE 1. DSC scanning of a 50/50 PEEK/PEI blends
.
TABLE 2. DSC experimental results of PEEK/PEI
blends with different composi tions .
PEEK/PEI
blend composition Tg PEI,°C Tg PEEK, °C Tf PEEK, °C Fusion Heat
!H, J/g
0/100, first run 214.94
0/100, second run
100/0, first run
100/0, second run
214.87
146.53
151.83
343.58
342.08
44.99
49.19
PEEK/PEI
blend composition Tg blend, °C Tf blend, °C Fusion Heat
! H, J/g
10/90, first run
10/90, second run 207.50
206.88 334.83
334.84 0.35
0.14
20/80, first run 198.81 334.80 6.63
20/80, second run
30/70, first run
30/70, second run 199.47
192.83
199.77 334.31
332.10
331.61 5.44
13.87
14.03
50/50, first run 177.03 339.21 24.04
50/50, second run
70/30, first run
70/30, second run
80/20, first run
80/20, second run 207.15
161.29
167.79
156.45
/ 335.54
341.28
338.75
341.06
340.04 24.18
33.12
32.40
38.29
35.62
90/10, first run
90/10, second run 148.17
157.72 342.26
340.71 43.64
44.82
68
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131.247.112.3 On: Thu, 13 Aug 2015 18:35:43The values indicate that no specific negative effect is induced on thermal properties by blending, including the
high temperature dwell (10 minutes at 380°C)
Further investigation is in progress on mechanical, D ynamical -mechanical and environmental properties.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The reported activity has been performed in the research project TECOP, supported by MIUR (Italian Ministery
of Research and University), leaded by IMAST (District for Polimeric and Composite Materials and Structures). of
which Alenia Aermacchi is Member.
REFERENCES
[1] L. Grassia, A. D’Amore, Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics 74, art. no. 021504 (2006)
[2] L. Grassia, S. L. Simon, Polymer 53, 3 613-3620 (2012)
[3] L. Grassia, M. G. Pastore Carbone , A. D’Amore, Journal of Applied Polymer Science 122, 3752- 3757 (2011)
[4] J. Guo, L. Grassia, S. L. Simon, Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics 50, 1233 -1244 (2012)
[5] C.Voto and M.Iannone , “ Environmental Resistance of Amorphous Bonded Thermoplastic Joints ” AGARD Report 785, 1991
[6] J. Kenny, A. D’Amore, L. Nicolais, M. Iannone and B. Scatteia, “Processing of Amorphous PEEK and Amorphous PEEK
Based Composites” SAMPE Journal Vol.25, N°4, July/August 1989 .
69
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131.247.112.3 On: Thu, 13 Aug 2015 18:35:43 |
1.4876788.pdf | Immobilization of natural anti-oxidants on carbon
nanotubes and aging behavior of ultra-high molecular
weight polyethylene-based nanocomposites
Nadka Tzankova Dintchevaa, Rossella Arrigoa, Cristian Gambarottib, Monica
Guenzib, Sabrina Carroccioc, Francesca Cicognad, Giovanni Filipponee
aDipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Ambi entale, Aerospaziale, dei Materiali,
Università di Palermo, 90128 Palermo, IT
bDipartimento di Chimica, Materiali ed Ingegneria Chimica "G. Natta",
Politecnico di Milano, Piazza L. da Vinci 32, 20133 Milano, IT
cConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche - ICTP UOS Catania,
Via P. Gaifami 18, 95126 Catania, IT
dConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche CNR - ICCOM UOS Pisa, Area della Ricerca,
Via G. Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, IT
eDipartimento di Ingegneria Chimica, dei Materiali e della Produzione Industriale,
Università di Napoli Federico II, Piazzale V. Tecchio 80, 80125 Napoli, IT
Abstract. The use of natural antioxidants is an attractive way to formulate nanocomposites with extended durability and
with potential applications in bio-medical field. In this work, Vitamin E (VE) in the form of α-tocopherol and Quercetin
(Q) are physically immobilized on the outer surface of mu lti-walled carbon nanotubes (CNT s). Afterward, the CNTs-VE
and CNTs-Q are used to formulate thermally stable ultra high molecular weight polyethy lene based nanocomposites. The
obtained results in the study of the thermo-oxidation behavior suggest a beneficial effect of the natural anti-oxidant
carbon nanotubes systems. The unexpected excellent thermo -resistance of the nanocomposite s seems to be due to a
synergistic effect of the natural anti-oxidant and carbon na notubes, i.e. strong interaction between CNT surface and anti-
oxidant molecules. Particularly, these interactions cause the formation of structural defects onto outer CNT surfaces,
which, in turn, increase the CNT radical scavenging activity.
Keywords: Natural antioxidants, Carbon nanotubes, α-Tocopherol, Quercetin, UHMWPE, Stabilization.
PACS: 82.35.Lr; 61.82.Pv; 87.85.Jf
INTRODUCTION
Thermal- and photo-oxidative degradation of polymers and polymer-based nanocomposites is a key issue for
these class of materials. By adding suitable stabilizing systems, such as anti-oxidants, light stabilizers, thermal
stabilizers, and fire retardants, the prot ection against thermal- and photo-oxidativ e degradation is usually realized [1-
3]. However, the use of low molecular weight stabilizing sy stems is restricted because of their physical loss, i.e.
volatilization, migration, and water extraction. One of the possible approaches in order to solve these matters is
promoting an increase of the molecular weight of the anti- oxidant systems, for example through the introduction of
long alkyl chains, which is the common i ndustrial practice. On the other hand, if the molecular weight is too high, a
poor molecular distribution in the polymer matrix can occur. The appropriate alkyl chain length is strictly dependent
on the kind and intrinsic molecular weight of polymeri c matrix and so the formulation of universal stabilizing
systems is not easy. Another possibility is grafting of the stabilizing molecules onto the polymeric macromolecules
[4]. Such an approach is a multi-st ep chemical modification way, hard to control. An innovative method to
immobilize low molecular weight chemicals is their physi cal entrapment. This approach allows to preserve the
active functionalities in the structure of the molecules, th at could be damaged through covalent linkage. Moreover,
in recent years, several studies are fo cused on the use of stabilizing systems coming from natural sources because of
Times of Polymers (TOP) and Composites 2014
AIP Conf. Proc. 1599, 102-105 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876788
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1233-0/$30.00
102
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:44:42their presumed safety and bio-compatibility. In particular, natural vitamins and flavonoids, easy available in nature,
are widely studied and considered for seve ral environmental applications.
α-Tocopherol molecule (a com ponent of vitamin E) is a hindered phenol an ti-oxidant, able to react with the free
radicals in the cell membranes and to protect polyunsaturated fatty acids against oxidative degradation. This natural
molecule has been used as antioxidant and stabilizer fo r polymeric matrices such as polyolefins [5] and bio-
polyesters [6]. In recent years, the α-tocopherol was successfully used as anti- oxidant in ultra high molecular weight
polyethylene (UHMWPE) for the formulation of orthopedic components [7]. Quercetin is a flavonoid with numerous
biological activities and used as a potent antioxidant, able to stabilize polyolefins, such as polypropylene, both against thermo-oxidation and action of UV radiation [8]. The quercetin anti-oxidant activity is related to its ability to
scavenge free radicals and to reduce free radical formation. Therefore, the im mobilization of natural anti-oxidants,
such as vitamin E and quercetin, can be considered as a promising way to overcome drawbacks arising from their
easy volatilization at high temperatures during melt proce ssing of polymer matrices, as wellas migration issues
during the manufacture life-time. In pa rticular, the physical imm obilization onto the outer surface of nanoparticles,
such as nanosilica, carbon nanotubes, etc. allows to formulate multi-functional nanoparticles having in-build
reinforcement and stabilizing actions.
In this study the attention is focused on the formul ation and use of carbon nanotubes based multi-functional
nanoparticles because of CNTs versatility and unique properties. An innovativ e approach in the immobilization of
vitamin E and quercetin onto CNT surface has been performed. Long alkyl chains have been covalently linked to
outer CNT surface; in a seco nd distinct step, the anti-oxidant molecu les have been entra pped between the long
chains, aiming at preserving the integrity of active functionality of the stabilizing molecules. The thermo-oxidation
behavior of the complex nanocomposite systems has been accurately investigated an d compared to the neat
UHMWPE matrix.
EXPERIMENTAL PART
The materials used in this work were:
- Ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) supplied by Sigma-Aldrich, having average molecular
weight 3÷6 MDa, softening point T=136°C (Vicat, ASTM D 1525B), melting point Tm=138°C (determinate by DSC) and density 0.94 g/mL at 25°C;
- Multi-walled CNTs,
bearing covalently linked -COOH groups, supplied Cheap Tubes, U.S.A. The main properties
are: outer diameter OD=150÷200 nm, inner diameter ID=10÷20 nm, length L=10÷20 μm, purity >95 wt.%, ash <1.5
wt.%, specific surface area SSA>60 m2/g an d electrical conductivity EC>10-2 S/cm.
- (±)-α-Tocopherol, a natural anti-oxidant vitamin E (VE) molecules coming from vegetable oil, supplied by Sigma-
Aldrich. It has molecular weight 430.71 g/mol.
- Quercetin hydrate, a natural flavonoid compound (Q), supplied by Sigma-Aldrich srl. Molecular weight: 302.24
g/mol; Formula: C 15H10O7 xH 2O; Purity: >= 95 %.
The CNTs-COOH have been subjected to chemical modifi cation to obtain CNTs functionalized with long chain
alkyl ester groups (alkyl- f-CNTs). In a second separate step, the VE or Q molecules have been
immobilized/adsorbed on the outer surface of the alkyl- f-CNTs.
The UHMWPE powder and 1 wt.% of CNTs were manually mixed at room temperature until a homogeneous black
powder was obtained. The blends were then hot compacted at 210°C for 5 min under a pressure of 1500 psi to get
thin films (thickness less than 100 μm) for the subsequent analyses. UHMWPE wa s subjected to the same procedure.
The investigations have been performed by:
- Spectroscopical characterization, pe rformed using a Spectrum One spectrometer by Perkin-Elmer. FT-IR spectra
were obtained through 16 scans with a 4 cm-1 resolution. The carbonyl index (C I) was calculated as the ratio
between the carbonyl absorption area (1850-1600 cm-1) and the area of a reference peak at about 1370 cm-1. The
hydroxyl index (HI) was calculated as the ratio between the hydroxyl absorption area (3570-3150 cm-1) and the area
of the same reference peak; - Thermo-Gravimetrical analysis (TGA),
carried out using an Exstar TG/DTA Seiko 7200 instrument with a heating
rate of 10°C/min from 30 to 750°C under nitrogen flow.
- Rheological tests, performed using a stress-controlled rheometer SR5 by Rheometrics Scientific in parallel plate geometry. The complex viscosity ( η*) was measured performing frequency sweep tests at T=210°C from 10
-1 to 102
rad/s considering a maximum strain of 2.0%.
The thermo-oxidation of the nanocomposites was performed at 120°C in air oven. The samples were then subjected
to FTIR analyses at different annealing times.
103
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:44:42RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The presence of the immobilized VE and Q molecules onto outer CNT surface has been assessed by infrared
spectroscopy and thermo-gravimetric analysis, although, obtai ned results suggest that, in this case, both techniques
are qualitative but not quantitative.
The rheology (see Figure 1) and morphology analysis (not reported for sake of conciseness) indicate a beneficial
effect of the presence of the natural anti-oxidant molecules. As known, the rheology analysis is particularly sensitive
to molecular architecture and it can be considered a valid technique to assess the occurrence of degradation
phenomena. The complex viscosity curves ( η*) for neat UHMWPE and UHMWPE/alkyl-f-CNT without and with
VE and Q molecules as a function of the frequency are shown in Figure 1. The viscosity values of the three alkyl-f-
CNTs filled nanocomposites are higher than the unfilled matrix. In particular, the VE- and Q-additivated samples
show even higher viscosity, suggesting a beneficial effect of both anti-oxidants against the thermo-oxidation
phenomena which may occur during processing.
FIGURE 1. Complex viscosity curves ( η*) for neat UHMWPE and all investigated complex nanocomposites systems as a
function of the frequency.
The thermo-oxidation behavior of the complex UHMWPE/alkyl-f-CNT/VE and UHMWPE/alkyl-f-CNT/Q
systems has been studied and compared to that for the neat matrix and UHMWPE/alkyl-f-CNT one. In Figure 2, the
trends of carbonyl and hydroxyl indices for all the investigated systems are reported as a function of the thermo-oxidation times.
(a) (b)
FIGURE 2. Carbonyl (a) and Hydroxyl (b) Indices for neat UH MWPE and complex nanocomposite s systems as a function of
the thermo-oxidation times.
The increases of the carbonyl and hydr oxyl species as a function of the aging times is related to the undergone
thermo-oxidation. It is evident that the degradation process is slower for the nanocomposites containing VE and Q
104
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:44:42molecules. VE and Q molecules are both known to be effec tive in the protection of the polymeric matrices against
thermo-oxidation, but the excellent stabilizing actions attained in our samples are definitely much higher than what commonly reported in literature [5, 8]. Such an unexpected finding could be explained considering some specific
interactions between the used natural anti-oxidants and the carbon atoms of the outer surface of the CNTs. Such
interactions could give rise to the formation, upon ther mal treatment, of several intermediate anti-oxidant radicals,
which induce the formation of CNT surface defects. In this way, some carbon at oms change their hybridization from
sp
2 to sp3, achieving radical scavenging properties. It is important to highlight that such kinds of interaction between
the radicals and carbon atoms ar e favored if the radicals are close to the CNT surface, which satisfy the assumptions
of the ab initio theoretical calculations based on the density functional theory [9]. Such a condition could be fulfilled
thanks to the long alkyl chains covalently linked to the CNTs, which eventually promote the trapping of the anti-
oxidant molecules in the close proximity of the CNT surface.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was financially supported by the Ministry of University and Research in Italy, FIRB2010 Futuro in
Ricerca (project title ‘‘GREENER—Tow ard Multifunctional, Efficient, Safe and Stable ‘Green’ Bio-Plastics
Based Nanocomposites of Technological Interest via the Immobilization of Functionalized Nanoparticles and
Stabilizing Molecules;’’ cod: RBFR10DCS7).
REFERENCES
1. N.Tz. Dintcheva, F.P. La Mantia, Polym. Degrad. Stab. 92, 630-634 (2007).
2. N.Tz. Dintcheva, F.P. La Mantia, V. Malatesta, Polym. Degrad. Stab. 94, 162-170 (2009).
3. N.Tz. Dintcheva, E. Morici , R. Arrigo, F.P. La Mantia, V. Malatesta, J.J. Schwab, Polym. Degrad. Stab. 97, 2313-2322 (2012).
4. S. Al-Malaika (Ed.), “Reactive Modifiers for Polymers”, Bl ackie, Academic and Professiona l, an imprint of Chapman and
Hall, London, ISBN 0-7514 0265 6 (1997).
5. Al-Malaika S, Goodwin C, Issenhuth S, Burdick D. The antioxidant role of α-tocopherol in polymers II. Melt stabilising effect
in polypropylene. Polym. Degrad. Stab., 64(1) , 145-146 (1999).
6. Gonçalves CMB, Tomé LC, Coutinho JAP, Marrucho IM. Addition of α-tocopherol on poly(lactic acid): Thermal, mechanical,
and sorption properties. J. Appl. Po lym. Sci., 119(4) , 2468–275 (2011).
7. Oral E, Muratoglu OK. Vitamin E diffuse d, highly crosslinked UHMWPE: a review. Int. Orthop., 35(2) , 215-223 (2011).
8. M. D. Samper, E. Fages, O. Fenollar, T. Boronat and R. Balart, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 129, 1707–1716 (2013).
9. De Menezes VM, Fagan SB, Za nella I, Mota R. Carbon nanotubes interacting with vitamins: First principles calculations.
Microelectr. J., 40, 877-879 (2009).
105
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1.4876770.pdf | Shear Creep Compliance of Polyoxymethylene Copolymers
with Different Molecular Weights
Joamin Gonzalez-Gutierreza, Zerihun Mellese Megena,
Bernd Steffen von Bernstorffb and Igor Emria
aCenter for Experimental Mechanics, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana,
Pot za Brdom 104, Ljubljana, Slovenia, SI-1125
bBASF AG,
G-CA/MT - J513, Ludwigshafen, Germany, D-67056
Abstract. Polyoxymethylene copolymer (POM) is considered a high performance engineering polymer with many
applications due to its good ch emical resistance and very good mechanical properties. It is k nown that mechanical
properties of polymers are greatly influenced by their average molecular weight ( Mw). This paper presents the shear creep
compliance of new POM copolymers with a broad range of average molecular weights (10240 to 204400 g/mol). Master
curves of creep compliance were constructed using the time-te mperature superposition principle. It was observed that at
short time ( t = 0.25 s), creep compliance is independent of Mw. As the time increases ( t = 3.16x108 s ~ 10 years) shear
compliance decreases as a power function of Mw, but only up to a critical Mw of a pproximately 92300 g/mol. After this
critical Mw creep compliance becomes again independent of Mw. These results in combination with finite element
analysis could be used for selecting a specific Mw according to suit the require ments of certain application.
Keywords: polyoxymethylene, shear creep compliance, time-tem perature superposition, model, molecular weight
PACS: 83.60.Bc, 83.80.Ab, 83.85.Ns, 83.85.Tz
INTRODUCTION
Polyoxymethylene (POM) is an engineering polymer of formaldehyde with hydroxyl ends stabilized by
esterification or etherification. It is sometimes also referred as polyacetal or less commonly as aldehyde resins [1].
POM is distinguished from other engin eer polymers by its crystallinity level th at can be between 60 to 90% [2, 3];
such high crystallinity induces very go od mechanical properties su ch as high modulus, stiffness, fatigue and creep
resistance [3, 4]. Other desirable technological properties of POM include dimensional stability, corrosion
resistance, superior tribological properties and capability of operating at temperatures in excess of 90 °C [5, 7]. All
of these properties combined with good moldability allow using POM as a structural material in many different
applications. In many occasions, POM is used as a substitute for metals or ny lons [7, 8]. In fact POM can compete
with nylons, which can show some serious deficiencies in dimensional stability in humid environments [9].
It is well known that many properties of polymeric systems in general are greatly influenced by their molecular
weight [10-12]. Of particular interest is shear creep comp liance, which may help in the selection of an appropriate
material for applications that require mechanical stability when constantly loaded. Thus, the aim of this paper is to investigate how creep compliance is affected by changi ng the average molecular we ight of POM copolymers.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
For this investigation eight POM copolymers with different average molecular weights ( Mw) were synthesized
by BASF (Ludwigshafen, Germany) following a r ecently patented methodology [13] and traditional
copolymerization methods for polyoxymethylene. Molecular weights were measured by the supplier using gel
permeation chromatography and they were 10240, 26600, 52750, 81100, 92360, 109000, 129300 and 204400 g/mol.
In order to perform creep compliance measurements on the selected POM copolymers, cylindrical specimens
with diameter D = 5.8 ± 0.1 mm and length l = 29.0 ± 2.0 mm were prepared by gravimetrical casting as described in
Times of Polymers (TOP) and Composites 2014
AIP Conf. Proc. 1599, 30-33 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876770
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1233-0/$30.00
30
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:39:04[14]. The casting temperature was set to 200 °C and the heater travelling speed was 1 mm/min. After casting,
specimens were cut to the required length and glued with acrylate-based glue (F524 black and activator B, Kemis plus d.o.o, Slovenia) to custom made metal holders for gripping the cylindrical specimen to the measuring device.
Shear creep compliance measurements were performed in a HAAKE MARS II controlled stress rheometer
fitted with solid clamps. Initial part of the creep measur ing procedure started with an annealing phase at high
temperature (120 °C for 2 h) to erase mechanical stress–strain history of th e material. Annealing was followed by
slow cooling to the first measuring temperature, -20 °C at a rate of 0.028 °C/min to minimize the effects of physical
aging. After cooling down, shear creep measurements were performed in segmental form at eight different
temperatures: -20, 0, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 °C. Each specimen was loaded in shear with a constant shear stress
(
) of 30000 Pa for 1000 s, once the desired temperature had stabilized for approximately 15 min. The level of
applied stress was previously determined to be within the linear viscoelastic region. The useful segment length was
set from 1 to 1000 s. Three repetitions were performed on different samples for each molecular weight under
consideration and their results at a given temperatur e were averaged. Finally, following the time-temperature
superposition principle, averaged segments were shifted alon g the time-scale in relation to the segments measured at
two nominal reference temperatures, Tref = 20 and 60 °C. Shifting was executed by using the closed-form shifting
procedure [15].
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
As previously described in the research methodology, creep measurements were performed at eight different
temperatures: -20, 0, 20, 40, 80, 100 and 120 °C. After the segments were collected they were shifted to two
different temperatures 20 and 60 °C to construct master cu rves. The master curves for all the POM copolymers at the
reference temperature of 20 °C can be se en in Fig. 1. Please notice that both ax es in Fig. 1 are in logarithmic scale.
By looking at Fig. 1, one can see that during the first four decades the change in creep compliance is negligible. Moreover, after a period of ten decades the increase in compliance is only two d ecades. Therefore, Fig. 1
demonstrates that even POM copolymers with low av erage molecular weight have good creep resistance.
FIGURE 1. Creep compliance master curves for POM copolymers with different Mw at Tref = 20 °C
In order to compare the effect of molecular weight on the creep comp liance of POM copolymers, isochronal
creep compliance curves at two reference times are shown in Fig. 2. Please notice that both axes in Fig. 2 are in
logarithmic scale. At shorter times ( t = 0.25 s) the creep compliance is independent of the molecular weight at both
selected reference temperatures. The hori zontal lines that run through the data points in Fig. 2 represent the average
value of the measured creep compliances at the selected time, such line fits very well the experimental data. 6.E-106.E-096.E-08
1.E-01 1.E+01 1.E+03 1.E+05 1.E+07 1.E+09 1.E+11Shear creep compliance [Pa-1]
Time [s]Mw = 10240 g/mol
Mw = 26600 g/mol
Mw = 43090 g/mol
Mw = 81100 g/mol
Mw = 92360 g/mol
Mw = 109000 g/mol
Mw = 129300 g/mol
Mw = 204400 g/molTref= 20 °C
= 30000 Pa
31
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:39:04However at longer times ( t = 3.16x108 s ~ 10 years), it was observed that the creep compliance decreases until a
molecular weight around 92300 g/mol, followed by a plateau until the maximum Mw investigated (Fig. 2) at both
selected reference temperatures. The experimental data has been fitted using a combination of power and linear
functions (i.e. constants) as shown in Table (1).
FIGURE 2. Change in creep compliance ( J) of POM copolymers with different aver age molecular weight at two reference
temperatures, Tref =20 °C and 60 °C and two reference times, t = 0.25 s and 3.16x108 s (10 years). Experimental data is fitted
according to equations shown in Table (1)
TABLE (1). Equations for shear creep compliance ( J) dependence on molecular weight ( Mw)
Time [s] Equation Tref [°C] Values R2
0.25 J = Constant
when 10240 g/mol Mw 204400 g/mol
20 J = 9.47 x10-10 Pa-1 1
60 J = 1.42 x10-9 Pa-1 1
3.16x108
(10 years) J = bMwc
when 10240 g/mol Mw 92360 g/mol
J = Constant
when 92360 g/mol < Mw 204400 g/mol
20 b = 2.90 x10-7
c = -0.408 0.932
J = 2.60 x10-9 Pa-1 1
60 b = 9.55 x10-6
c = -0.643 0.981
J = 6.33 x10-9 Pa-1 1
The decrease in creep compliance w ith increasing average molecular we ight has been reported for other
polymers such as polypropylene [16, 17], polyimides [ 18], poly(1,3-trimethylene car bonate) [19], fiber glass
reinforced polyester [20] and even for polyoxymethylene homo-, co- and terpolymers [21]. However, current results show that after a critical average molecular weight ( Mw = 92360 g/mol) creep comp liance at longer times ( t ~10
years) becomes independent of Mw, at least up to Mw = 204400 g/mol. Also at very short times ( t = 0.25 s), shear
creep compliance is independent of the average molecular weight (Fig. 2). Decrease in creep compliance could be
attributed to an increase in crystallinity [22] and increase of entanglements [23] as the molecular weight increases.
6E-106E-096E-08
10000 100000Shear creep compliance [Pa-1]
Average molecular weight, Mw [g/mol] J(10years,60°C)
J(10years,20°C)
J(0.25s,60°C)
J(0.25s,20°C)
FitJ(10years,60°C)
FitJ(0.25s,60°C)
FitJ(10years,20°C)
FitJ(0.25s,20°C)
32
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220.225.230.107 On: Fri, 16 May 2014 06:39:04CONCLUSIONS
POM is an important engineering poly mer with a great variety of applica tions. In this study the shear creep
compliance of POM copolymers with di fferent Mw was measured. It was fou nd that the shear creep compliance at
short times appears to be independent of Mw. At longer times, the shear creep compliance decreases with Mw
following a power law relationship with exponent values between -0.408 and -0.643, depending on the reference
temperature. There seems to be a critical Mw after which creep compliance b ecomes once again independent of Mw,
in this study it appears to be around 92300 g/mol. These resu lts in combination with finite element analysis could be
used for selecting a specific Mw according to suit the requirements of particular applications.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We will like to acknowledge the financial support of the Ad Futura Fund of the Republic of Slovenia ( Javni
sklad Republike Slovenije za razvoj kadrov in štipendije ), the Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS) and the Erasmus
Mundus Program; as well as, the support of the staff at BASF Ludwigshafen, Germany for the synthesis and
molecular weight characterization of POM copolymers.
REFERENCES
1. R. Zhao, International Nonwovens Journal 14, 20-24 (2005).
2. J. Masamoto, Prog. Polym. Sci. 18, 1-84 (1993).
3. M. Hasegawa, K. Yamamoto, T. Shiwaku and T. Hashimoto, Macromolecules 23, 2629-2636 (1990).
4. A. A. Edidin and S. M. Kurtz, J. Arthroplasty 15, 321-331 (2000).
5. D. Jauffres, O. Lame, G. Virg ier, F. Dore and C. Chervin, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 106, 488-497 (2007).
6. K. Al Jebawi, B. Sixou, R. Seguela and G. Vigier J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 106, 757-764 (2007).
7. C. Pistor and K. Friedrich, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 66, 1985-1996 (1998).
8. H. Benabdallah, Wear 254, 1238-1246 (2003).
9. T. Kongkhlang, K. Tashiro, M. Kotaki and S. Chirachanchai, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 130, 15460-15466 (2008).
10. X. Zhao, L. Ye and L. Hu, Polym. Adv. Technol. 19, 399-408 (2008).
11. S. Srivastava, S. Srivastava, S. Srivastava, S. J. La'Verne, I. Ali Khan, P. Ali and V. D. Gupta, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 122, 1376-
1381 (2011).
12. W. Dziadur, Mater. Charact. 46, 131-135 (2001).
13. L. Pottie, and B. S. von Bernstorff. U.S Patent No. 2013/0203958 A1 (8 August 2013).
14. G. B. Stringari, B. Zupan čič, G. Kubyshkina, B. S. von Bernstorff and I. Emri, Powder Technol. 208, 590-595 (2011).
15. M. Gergesova, B. Zupan čič, I. Saprunov and I. Emri, J. Rheol. 55, 1-16 (2011).
16. L. Xialolin, H. Yajiang and D. Cong, Polym. Eng. Sci. 49, 1376-1384 (2009).
17. D. Drosdov and J. D. Christiansen, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 88, 1438-1450 (2003).
18. L. M. Nicholson, K. S. Whitley and T. S. Gates, Int. J. Fatigue 24,185-195, 2002
19. A. P. Pego, D. W. Grijpma and J. Feijen, Polymer 44, 6495-6504 (2003).
20. A. Kouadri-Boudjelthia, A. Imad , A. Bouabdallah and M. Elmeguenni, Mater. Des. 30, 1569-1574 (2009).
21. Y. Tajima and T. Itoh, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 116, 3242-3248, 2010
22. H. Jin, J. Gonzalez-Guti errez, P. Oblak, B. Zupan čič, I. Emri. Polym. Degrad. Stabil . 97, 2262-2272 (2012).
23. C.A. Tweedie and K.J. Van Vliet. J. Mater. Res. 21, 1576-1589 (2006).
33
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1.4898148.pdf | Determination of constitutive parameters of homogeneous metamaterial slabs by a
novel calibration-independent method
U. C. Hasar, G. Buldu, M. Bute, J. J. Barroso, T. Karacali, and M. Ertugrul
Citation: AIP Advances 4, 107116 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4898148
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4898148
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/adva/4/10?ver=pdfcov
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Determination of constitutive parameters of homogeneous
metamaterial slabs by a novel calibration-independent
method
U. C. Hasar,1,2,aG. Buldu,1M. Bute,1J. J. Barroso,3T. Karacali,2,4
and M. Ertugrul2,4
1Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, University of Gaziantep,
Gaziantep 27310, Turkey
2Center for Research and Application of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering, Ataturk
University, Erzurum 25240, Turkey
3Associated Plasma Lab., National Inst. for Space Research 12227-010 São José dos Campos,
SP , Brazil
4Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Ataturk University, 25240, Erzurum,
Turkey
(Received 2 July 2014; accepted 28 September 2014; published online 10 October 2014)
A calibration-independent line-line method for broadband and simultaneous consti-
tutive parameters determination of homogeneous metamaterial (MM) slabs is pro-
posed. It is shown that the su fficient condition for parameters retrieval by the
proposed method is to measure uncalibrated (raw) complex scattering parameters
of measurement cells (di fferent air regions in free-space) which are completely and
partially loaded by the two identical metamaterial slabs. The stability of derived
equations for di fferent measurement uncertainty cases is analyzed. We have validated
the proposed method by using simulated scattering parameters of a MM slab with
split-ring-resonators and then by comparing the extracted electromagnetic param-
eters with those of a general method used in the literature in the cases with and
without a small o ffset in reference-plane positions (as well as other measurement
errors). From this comparison, we note that while the general method does not
eliminate those errors, the proposed method not only does not introduce the non-
physical anti-resonance behavior but also removes the measurement errors arising
from di fferent mechanisms such as inaccurate reference-plane positions and mis-
matched connections. C2014 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise
noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
[http: //dx.doi.org /10.1063 /1.4898148]
I. INTRODUCTION
Materials characterization is an important research field involving an analysis of electromag-
netic responses of various materials through the relative complex permittivity ( εr), the relative
complex permeability ( µr), and other related parameters (e.g., magneto-electric coupling and chiral
parameters). With the advent of artificial resonant-type structures (coined as metamaterials–MMs),
it becomes possible to devise an engineered material with some exotic electromagnetic properties
including negative refractive index ( n) so that otherwise unattainable applications such as perfect
lenses1and invisibility cloaks2come into real. The first fabricated MM was composed of periodic
arrangement of a metallic-dielectric cell with split-ring-resonators (SRRs) and a thin metal wires
on opposite faces of a dielectric substrate.3After this MM structure, various MM slabs have been
proposed for di fferent purposes, some of which are given.4–7
aElectronic mail: uchasar@gantep.edu.tr
2158-3226/2014/4(10)/107116/10 4, 107116-1 ©Author(s) 2014
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In artificially constructed MM structures, both the size of the composite particles and the
period of lattices are generally made larger than the wavelength at the particle resonance, and so a
homogenized description3applies thus allowing the description of the properties of MMs in terms
of bulk or macroscopic material parameters ( εrandµr). In the literature, very interesting tech-
niques have been proposed for retrieval of electrical properties of homogeneous MMs.3,8–20Many
of these methods require some sort of calibration (named as calibration-dependent techniques)
before accurate measurements are carried out.3,8–17However, calibration kits used for calibration
of measurements may produce inappropriate material characterization due to inaccurate scattering
(S-) parameter measurements arising from imperfect calibration kits. In recent studies, we have
applied calibration-independent techniques18–20for accurate electromagnetic characterization of
MMs. Nonetheless, these techniques are restricted to the measurement of either εrorµr.
It was shown that the complex propagation constant ( γ) (as well as all the properties of an
unknown transmission line and those of the junctions to the measurement lines) of a non-reflecting
line can be determined from uncalibrated (raw) S-parameter measurements by a line-line (LL)
method.21–24In this research paper, we propose a new calibration-independent method based on the
LL technique for constitutive parameter ( εrandµr) measurements of isotropic MM slabs.
II. THE METHOD
A. Background
Fig. 1 presents the measurement configurations of our method for retrieval of constitutive para-
meters of a homogeneous3MM slab with di fferent lengths, L1andL2. Here, the length of a MM
slab refers to the length of the substrate in the propagation direction (in our analysis, it is the x
direction as shown in Fig. 2(a)). More information about definition of the length of MM slabs can
be found in Section IV. S1andS2denote the two-port networks for the slab region with di fferent
lengths (shorter and longer ones) to be determined; and XandYdesignate two-port (error) networks
corresponding to transitions used for linking S1andS2to a vector network analyzer (VNA) or
a calibrated reference plane. In Fig. 1(a), the shorter slab with length L1is placed between two
horn antennas, while the longer slab with length L2is positioned between the same antennas in
Fig. 1(b). The final configuration, Fig. 1(c), illustrates the case when the shorter slab at arbitrary
distances L01andL02replaces the longer one. In each measurement configuration, it is assumed
that the regions where the slabs are positioned are at far field (zone) of the antennas (plane wave
assumption) and that XandYare asymmetrically spaced ( D1,D2) from each measurement cell.
The networks XandYinclude source and load match errors, errors due to mismatched connections,
transitions between connecting cables and horn antennas, contact structures, embedded devices,
etc. The methodology in calibration-independent techniques is to characterize S1and/orS2without
resorting to any knowledge of error networks XandY; that is, the e ffect of these networks has to be
removed from the whole system.
B. Propagation constant determination
For the analysis of cascaded networks, either of the two transfer matrix forms, namely,
ABCD25–27or wave cascading matrix (WCM)18–20,28–30can be employed. Because the WCM form
is more useful for treating two-port calibration problems than the ABCD form,28in this paper, we
will use the WCM form.
The basis for propagation constant determination in the LL technique (discussed in Section I)
relies upon using two identical unknown MM slabs with di fferent lengths Luwhere u=1 or 2
asymmetrically ( D1,D2) spaced from the antennas as schematized in Fig. 1(a) and Fig. 1(b).21–24
We use the matrices TX,TY,TL1andTL2for modeling, respectively, the transitions X,Y, and the
measurement cells including slabs with di fferent lengths. The WCM presentation of the whole sys-
tem in Figs. 1(a) and (b) for two measurement cells loaded with slabs can be expressed as18–20,28–30
Mu=TXTLuTY, (1)
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FIG. 1. Typical two-port measurement problem: unknown two-port network ( S1andS2) and two-port error networks, X
andY.
where
Mu=1
S(u)
21S(u)
12S(u)
21−S(u)
11S(u)
22S(u)
11
−S(u)
221, (2)
andS(u)
klparameters ( k,l=1,2) are the uncalibrated (raw) measured complex S-parameters. Using
Eq. (2), the theoretical WCM form for TLuin Eq. (1) can be expressed as18–20,29
TLu=1
(1−Γ2)TsuT2
su−Γ2Γ 1−T2
su
−Γ 1−T2
su1−Γ2T2
su, (3)
where
Γ=z−1
z+1,Tsu=e−γLu,z=z′+iz′′=
µr/εr,n=n′+in′′=√εrµr, (4)
γ=γ0n, γ 0=−i2π
λ0, ε r=ε′
r+iε′′
r, µ r=µ′
r+iµ′′
r. (5)
Here,γ,z, and nare, respectively, the propagation constant, normalized wave impedance, and
refractive index of the slab-filled cell, and γ0,µ0, and λ0correspond to the propagation constant,
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FIG. 2. (a) Configuration of the unit cell for the analyzed SRR MM slab (for better visualization, the substrate thickness
and the dimensions of the metallic inclusions are not drawn to the scale of the cubic cell) and (b) magnitudes of simulated
S-parameters of two MM slabs with L1=4.0 mm (periodic arrangement of unit cell in yandzdirections with periods
ay=4.0 mm and az=4.0 mm) and L2=8.0 mm (cascade connection in the propagation ( x) direction of two identical
MM slabs with length L1), corresponding to the configurations in Fig. 1(a) and 1(b), respectively.
permeability, and wavelength of free-space. In our mathematical analysis, exp (−iωt)time depen-
dence has been assumed in phasor (complex) domain.
The theoretical WCM form for TLugiven in Eq. (3) can be written in a di fferent form23as
TLu=TΓT0uT−1
Γ, (6)
where∗−1denotes the inverse of the matrix ‘ ∗’ and
TΓ=1Γ
Γ1,T0u=Tsu 0
0T−1
su. (7)
Using Eqs. (1), (6), and (7), we can write
M1M−1
2=(TXTΓ) T01T−1
02(TXTΓ)−1. (8)
It is obvious from Eq. (8) that M1M−1
2andT01T−1
02are similar matrices.18–20,29Using the fact
that similar matrices have the same trace (denoted by Trin the remainder of the manuscript), which
is the sum of diagonal elements in a square matrix, and hence both matrices have the same eigen-
values, from Eq. (8) we obtain22,23
λ(1,2)=Tr M1M−1
2∓
Tr M1M−1
22−4
2, (9)
where λ(1,2)=exp(∓γ∆L),∆L=L2−L1, and λrepresents either forward or backward traveling
waves inside the slab. Finally, the propagation constant will be
γ(1,2)=∓ln λ(1,2)
∆L. (10)
C. Constitutive parameters determination
The technique for determination of εrandµrof isotropic homogenized MM slabs by the pro-
posed method is based upon using raw S-parameters measured on a given cell completely filled with
a longer slab and then partially filled with a shorter slab as shown in Fig. 1(b) and Fig. 1(c).
The WCM form of the whole system for a measurement cell loaded by the shorter slab (Fig.
1(c)) can be written
M21=TXT1TL1T2TY, (11)
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where
Tu=αu 0
0 1/αu, α u=e−γ0L0u, (12)
andL01andL02are arbitrary lengths of air-filled sections inside the measurement cell in Fig. 1(c).
Then, using Eqs. (1) and (11), we obtain
M21M−1
2=TXT1TL1T2T−1
L2T−1
X. (13)
It is clear from Eq. (13) that Tr(M21M−1
2)=Tr(T1TL1T2T−1
L2).18–20,29Next, using Eqs. (3), (11),
and (12), we find an objective function
Fobj(Γ)=Λ1Γ4+Λ2Γ2+Λ3=0, (14)
where
Λ1=T2
s1
α1α2+α1α2T2
s2−Λ0,Λ0=Tr M21M−1
2Ts1Ts2, (15a)
Λ2=(1+T2
s1T2
s2)α2
1+α2
2−α2
1α2
2−1
α1α2
−(T2
s1+T2
s2)α2
1+α2
2
α1α2
+2Λ0, (15b)
Λ3=T2
s2
α1α2+α1α2T2
s1−Λ0. (15c)
It is obvious from Eq. (14) and (15) that Fobjis a function of only Γsince using Eqs. (9) and (4), Ts1
andTs2can readily be expressed as
Ts1= λ(1,2)L1/∆L,Ts2= λ(1,2)L2/∆L. (16)
As a result, using Tr(M1M−1
2)andTr(M21M−1
2)we can determine Γfrom Eq. (14). Because
there are two roots for Γin Eq. (14), the correct root can be chosen by imposing the constraint
|Γ|≤1 (orℜe{Zs}≥0) for passive samples and continuity of Γover frequency. Finally, the εrand
µrcan analytically be determined by using Eqs. (4), (5), (9), and (14) as
µr=γ
γ01+Γ
1−Γ
, ε r=1
µrγ
γ02
. (17)
III. ON ACCURACY AND STABILITY OF THE PROPOSED METHOD
In the derivation of the objective function in Eq. (14) it is tacitly assumed that α1,1 and
α2,1. It is instructive then to evaluate what happens when a) α1=α2=1 and b)α1=α2=α0
whereα0,1. We will also demonstrate how the correct root for λ(1,2)andγ(1,2)from Eqs. (9) and
(10) can be selected. Finally, we will investigate the stability of the derivations for γ(1,2)in Eq. (10)
andΓin Eq. (14) for di fferent values of S-parameters.
A. Analysis of special cases for α1andα2
We first consider the case when α1=α2=1, corresponding to the case in which the shorter
slab with length L1fills completely the measurement cell in Fig. 1(c). Although this case is already
taken into consideration in the determination of γin Subsection II B, it is important for two reasons:
1) it verifies the derivation of the objective function in Eq. (14), and 2) it underlines the basic idea
behind the constitutive parameters ( εrandµrsimultaneously) determination.
Substituting α1=α2=1 into Eqs. (14) and (15), we obtain with the assumption of Γ,∓1
Λ(1)
1=T2
s1+T2
s2−Λ0,Λ(1)
2=−2Λ(1)
1,Λ(1)
3=Λ(1)
1, (18a)
Tr(TL1T−1
L2)=Ts1
Ts2+Ts2
Ts1
, (18b)
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where Λ(1)
1,Λ(1)
2, and Λ(1)
3, respectively, correspond to the Λ1,Λ2, and Λ3values when α1=α2=1.
Here, it is clear that Eq. (18b) will reduce to Eq. (9), which accordingly verifies the derivation of
Fobj(Γ), and that this case does not give any information about the value of a physical Γ(|Γ|≤1).
We next consider the case when α1=α2=α0whereα0,1, corresponding to the case of the
shorter slab symmetrically positioned into the measurement cell (the same air regions between the
end surfaces of the shorter slab and the terminals of the cell) in Fig. 1(c). Reflecting the condition
α1=α2=α0whereα0,1 into Eqs. (15a)-(15c) we determine
Λ(2)
1=T2
s1
α2
0+α2
0T2
s2−Λ0, (19a)
Λ(2)
2=−1
α2
0 1−α2
02+T2
s1T2
s2 1+α4
0
+2Λ0, (19b)
Λ(2)
3=T2
s2
α2
0+α2
0T2
s1−Λ0. (19c)
where Λ(2)
1,Λ(2)
2, and Λ(2)
3, respectively, correspond to the Λ1,Λ2, and Λ3values when α1=α2=α0
whereα0,1.
Because using Eqs. (10) or (18b) we can determine at most either εrorµrvia the complex pro-
pagation constant γ, we also need to measure Γto extractεrandµrsimultaneously. It is apparent
from Eqs. (19a)-(19c) that Λ(2)
1,Λ(2)
2, and Λ(2)
3are all linearly independent from one another so that
their substitution into Eq. (14) will not allow the factoring out of the Γterm. Therefore, this case
gives some information about Γ. As a result, considering these two special cases, we conclude that
the su fficient condition for simultaneous εrandµrdetermination in LL methods is to measure
raw S-parameters of two measurement cells which are completely and partially (symmetrically or
asymmetrically) loaded by the two identical unknown slabs with di fferent lengths ( L1,L2).
B. Solving the ambiguity in the selection of the correct propagation constant
It is obvious from Eq. (9) that λ(1,2)represents both forward and backward traveling waves inside
the MM slab. In this circumstance, it is di fficult to discern which eigenvalue, λ1orλ2(in Green’s
function terminology), corresponds to forward or backward traveling waves at a given frequency. To
resolve this problem, a simple technique using the comparison of λ(1,2)at different frequencies was
introduced.23In applying this technique, for the first two lowest frequencies in the band, the positive
solution of Eq. (9) is arbitrarily retained and plotted in the complex plane. For each of next frequencies,
the two possible solutions in Eq. (9) are tested and only the one which ensures a monotonic variation
ofλ(1,2)in the complex plane is taken as the correct solution. This technique resembles to similar
ones in the literature3,8,31–34and is based on the principle of causality of physical (non-anticipative)
systems in which the system response is directly dependent upon past and present values of the input.
C. Stability analysis for the complex permittivity and permeability determination
Because the derivations for εrandµrdepend on M1M−1
2andM21M−1
2, we have to monitor the
effects of measurement uncertainties on εrandµrdetermination. Using Eq. (2), we can express
Tr(M1M−1
2)as
Tr(M1M−1
2)=S(1)
12S(1)
21+S(2)
12S(2)
21−S(1)
11
S(1)
22+S(2)
11
−S(2)
22
S(2)
11+S(1)
22
S(1)
21S(2)
12. (20)
When both S(u)
11andS(u)
22approach zero in Eq. (20), the value of Tr(M1M−1
2)will not go to zero
or infinity as in the case of broadband constitutive parameters determination by the methods3,8,10
(i.e., inadequacy of retrieval procedures35,36), and thus will be stable. In addition, it is well-known
that the phase uncertainty of measured reflection S-parameters ( S(u)
11andS(u)
22) increases significantly
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when S(u)
11andS(u)
22simultaneously or separately approach zero. This situation results in a large
ripple in the extracted εrandµr36(or anti-resonant behavior35) by most S-parameter techniques
in the literature since the phase uncertainty in S(u)
11and/orS(u)
22is multiplied by 1 /|S(u)
11|and/or
1/|S(u)
22|in the process of extracting εrandµr.3,8,10Here, the vertical bars on each side of a quantity
denote its magnitude. On the other hand, it is expected that the proposed method will extract more
smootherεrandµrover a broad band since the e ffect of phase uncertainty is already mitigated
by the amplitudes of reflection S-parameters in Eq. (20). Because the WCM and ABCD matrix
representations preclude both S(u)
21andS(u)
12from approaching zero, the derivations of εrandµrwill
be stable by the proposed method. However, when the amplitudes of S(u)
21and/orS(u)
12become less
than approximately -30 dB (depending on the accuracy of measuring instrument), the uncertainties
in amplitudes and phases of S(u)
21andS(u)
12will greatly increase, and this circumstance may adversely
affectεrandµrextraction. As a result, the derivations for εrandµrfrom Eqs. (10) and (14) are
generally e ffective and suitable for high-to-low-loss (but not very high-loss) MM slabs.
IV. RESULTS
For validation of the proposed method, in this section we consider a MM slab with SRRs in
rectangular or circular form. This MM slab structure is one of the mostly studied MM slabs in
the literature.3,4,8–10,17–20The cell of the analyzed slab, as shown in Fig. 2(a) – slightly di ffering
from that in,3,4is assumed to be in cubical form ( ay=az=L=4 mm) and has the following
features. The substrate onto which the metal strips of SRRs are placed has a complex permittivity
ofεs=4.4−i0.15, a thickness of t=0.25 mm, and an area of 4 ×4 mm2. Strips are assumed to
be copper [5 .8×107(S/m)] with a thickness of 17 µm. The outer ring length is l=2.2 mm and
both rings have a linewidth of w=0.2 mm. While the slit gap is g=0.22 mm for both rings, the
separation distance between inner and outer rings is s=0.15 mm. While the MM slab with length
L1=4.0 mm is obtained by periodic arrangement of the cell in Fig. 2(a) in the yandzdirections
with periods ay=4.0 mm and az=4.0 mm, the MM slab with length L2=8.0 mm is obtained by
the cascaded connection of two identical MM slabs with lengths L1=4.0 mm in the xdirection
(wave propagation direction).
S-parameters simulations are performed by a commercial 3-D full electromagnetic simulation
software (CST Microwave Studio C37). In the simulations, electric (magnetic) boundary conditions
for which tangential components of electric (magnetic) fields are zero are applied at xy(xz) planes.
To ensure periodicity of the unit cell (Fig. 2(a)) in the yzplane as well as a wave propagating in the
xdirection, waveguide ports are positioned over yzplanes. Fig. 2(b) demonstrates magnitudes of
the simulated S-parameters of the investigated SRR MM slabs with L1=4.0 mm and L2=8.0 mm
(simulated S-parameters for the configurations in Fig. 1(a) and 1(b), respectively). For simplicity,
phases of the these simulated S-parameters as well as S-parameters of the configuration in Fig. 1(c)
are not shown. It is seen from Fig. 2(b) that both of the investigated SRR MM slabs with lengths L1
andL2resonate around 11.0 GHz, at which fast variation of S-parameters is notable.
It is a well-known fact that for the analyzed wave incidence (wave propagation in xdirection
and electric field in zdirection), the cell in Fig. 2(b) behaves as an isotropic MM slab (no coupling
between electric and magnetic fields4,10), characterized by both εrandµror both zandn[Eqs. (4)
and (5)]. For validation of our method, we first substitute the simulated S-parameters, corresponding
to the configurations in Fig. 1(a)-1(c), into Eq. (2). Then, we calculate the matrix multiplications
M21M−1
2andM1M−1
2. Next, we find γfrom Eq. (10) and Γfrom Eq. (14). Using Eqs. (17) and
(4), we finally extract n,z,εr, andµrvalues, as shown in Figs. 3 and 4, of the analyzed MM
slab by applying the proposed method (PM). The same figures also illustrate the extracted n,z,εr,
andµrparameters of the MM slab with length L1=4.0 mm by the general method (GM) in.3,10,17
We have the following two important points drawn from the dependencies in Figs. 3 and 4. First,
each extracted electromagnetic parameter by the proposed method is in good harmony with that
by the general method. Second, while extracted ε′′
rby the general method is less than zero over
approximately 10.3-11.0 GHz (as seen from the inset in Fig. 4(a)), that by the proposed method is
greater than zero over the whole analyzed frequency band (5.0-15.0 GHz). It is a well-established
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FIG. 3. Real and imaginary parts of the retrieved (a) refractive index ( n) and (b) the normalized wave impedance ( z) by the
general method (GM) in Refs. 3, 10, and 17 and the proposed method (PM).
fact that for a passive medium such as that we consider in our paper in Fig. 2(a), ε′′
r(andµ′′
r) must
all be positive in the whole frequency range.3,8,10,16,17,35,38In a recent study,35it has also been shown
that non-physical anti-resonant behavior [a decay in the electromagnetic property with increasing
frequency (e.g., a negative slope of ε′
rbetween 10 .3-11.0 GHz in Fig. 4(a)) and an increase in
power gain around the resonance band (e.g., ε′′
r<0 between 10 .3-11.0 GHz in Fig. 4(a))] of ex-
tracted electromagnetic properties comes from not periodicity of MM slabs but from in-complete
adequacy of retrieval procedures. In addition, in another study38it has also been demonstrated that
this non-physical behavior of electromagnetic properties of MM slabs can be remedied by fitting
the simulated S-parameters to those obtained from the Lorentz /Drude e ffective medium models. As
a result, for the tested MM slab in Fig. 2(a) we note that our proposed method not only extracts
physically acceptable electromagnetic properties but also eliminates the need for the fitting process
for accurate electromagnetic properties.
In the calculation of the frequency-dependent parameters in Figs. 3 and 4 we assumed that
measurement error sources (incorrect reference-planes, source and load match errors, errors due to
mismatched connections, transitions between connecting cables and horn antennas, contact struc-
tures, embedded devices) have no e ffect on electromagnetic properties extracted by both methods.
Now, we consider the e ffect of a shift in positions of reference planes [planes or surfaces to which
the setup is assumed to be calibrated; e.g., to the left and right terminals of S1in Fig. 1(a)] on n,z,
εr, andµrparameters. For simplicity, it is assumed in this analysis that while there is no shift in the
reference-plane on the right surface of the MM slab, there is a −1 mm shift in the reference-plane
on the left surface of the MM slab. In the extraction of electromagnetic properties by the GM
method, the e ffect of a shift in the left reference-plane is reflected into the analysis by multiplying
the reflection and transmission S-parameters for the configuration in Fig. 1(a) with exp (+2γ0)and
exp(+γ0), respectively (please refer to Eqs. (11) and (12) for more details). Figs. 5 and 6 illustrate
the retrieved electromagnetic parameters of the analyzed SRR MM slab using the GM method (from
S-parameters of only the MM slab with length L1=4.0 mm) and the PM method.
FIG. 4. Real and imaginary parts of the retrieved (a) relative complex permittivity ( εr) and (b) relative complex permeability
(µr) by the general method (GM) in Refs. 3, 10, and 17 and the proposed method (PM).
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FIG. 5. Real and imaginary parts of the retrieved (a) refractive index ( n) and (b) the normalized wave impedance ( z) by
the general method (GM) in Refs. 3, 10, and 17 and the proposed method (PM) when there is an o ffset (-1 mm) in the
reference-plane position on left side of the MM slab.
By comparison with the dependencies in Figs. 3 and 4, it seen from the dependencies in Figs. 5
and 6 that an absolute shift of 1 mm (a generally acceptable level of measurement error at micro-
wave frequencies) drastically alters actual dependencies of electromagnetic parameters retrieved by
the general method.3,10,17This is because MM structures are resonating structures whose response
sharply changes around resonance frequency. The same amount of shift, nonetheless, does not a ffect
the same frequency-dependent parameters extracted by the proposed method. Furthermore, we note
that the o ffset in the left reference-plane position results in a non-physical ε′′
rextracted by the GM
method over a broader band (10.3-15.0 GHz) than that (10.3-11.0 GHz) when there is no o ffset.
As a result, the dependencies in Figs. 5 and 6 clearly indicate the importance of a retrieval method
resistant to undesired measurement errors arising from a shift in reference-plane positions.
To test the proposed method for other systematic measurement errors such as source and load
match errors, errors due to mismatched connections, and imperfection of the used calibration kit, we
have considered various TXandTYsquare matrices in Eqs. (1) and (11). We note from this analysis
that our proposed method is resistant and immune to those errors and retrieves accurate constitutive
parameters of the test MM slab because our proposed method eliminates the e ffect of unknown error
matrices TXandTYin Eqs. (11) and (13) from determination of electromagnetic parameters,25,28,29
as discussed in Subsection II C.
V. CONCLUSIONS
We have proposed a calibration-independent method for determination of complex permittivity
and complex permeability of isotropic homogeneous MM slabs. We think that such a method,
capable of extracting the constitutive parameters, has been proposed for the first time in the liter-
ature. Its advantage is that it removes or eliminates measurement errors of various origins arising
FIG. 6. Real and imaginary parts of the retrieved (a) relative complex permittivity ( εr) and (b) relative complex permeability
(µr) by the general method (GM) in Refs. 3, 10, and 17 and the proposed method (PM) when there is an o ffset (-1 mm) in
the reference-plane position on left side of the MM slab.
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from incorrect reference-planes, source and load match errors, errors due to mismatched connec-
tions, transitions between connecting cables and horn antennas, contact structures, embedded de-
vices. The idea behind how the constitutive parameters are retrieved is through some illustrative
cases. In addition, the accuracy of the proposed method is analyzed by letting the reflection
S-parameters approach zero. We have tested the proposed method by using simulated S-parameters
of a MM slab with SRRs and noted for the tested slab that while our proposed method removes
the so-called antiresonance problem as well as the problem of measurement errors, the method
widespreadly used in the literature has both of these problems in di fferent levels.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Authors, U. C. Hasar, G. Buldu, M. Bute, T. Karacali, and M. Ertugrul, would like to express
their thanks to the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) under the
project Grant Number 112R032 for supporting this study. U. C. Hasar also sends special thanks to
the Science Academy of Turkey (the Young Scientists Award in 2014) for supporting his studies.
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1.4820457.pdf | Low-temperature magnetic characterization of optimum and etch-damaged
in-plane magnetic tunnel junctions
Jimmy J. Kan, Kangho Lee, Matthias Gottwald, Seung H. Kang, and Eric E. Fullerton
Citation: J. Appl. Phys. 114, 114506 (2013); doi: 10.1063/1.4820457
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4820457
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Downloaded 23 Sep 2013 to 128.143.23.241. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsLow-temperature magnetic characterization of optimum and etch-damaged
in-plane magnetic tunnel junctions
Jimmy J. Kan,1Kangho Lee,2Matthias Gottwald,1Seung H. Kang,2and Eric E. Fullerton1
1Center for Magnetic Recording Research, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla,
California 92093, USA
2Advanced Technology, Qualcomm, Inc., San Diego, California 92121, USA
(Received 5 June 2013; accepted 20 August 2013; published online 19 September 2013)
We describe low-temperature characterization of magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) patterned by
reactive ion etching for spin-transfer-torque magnetic random access memory. Magnetotransport
measurements of typical MTJs show increasing tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) and larger
coercive fields as temperature is decreased down to 10 K. However, MTJs selected from the high-resistance population of an MTJ array exhibit stable intermediate magnetic states when measured
at low temperature and show TMR roll-off below 100 K. These non-ideal low-temperature
behaviors arise from edge damage during the etch process and can have negative impacts onthermal stability of the MTJs.
VC2013 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4820457 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
Magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) comprised of CoFeB/
MgO/CoFeB trilayers are the core components in today’s
Spin-Transfer Torque Magnetic Random Access Memory
(STT-MRAM) cells. For memory applications, many electri-cal and magnetic characteristics need to be optimized
simultaneously. For instance, establishing a high tunneling
magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio is important for securinglarge read speed/voltage margins while large magnetic
energy barrier (EB) is essential to guarantee data retention
and low bit error rates.
1All of these parameters are highly
sensitive and can be easily degraded during device etching
steps. In this paper, we describe the magnetotransport behav-
ior of STT-MRAM MTJs and report the emergence of inter-mediate states and TMR roll-off at low temperatures in
etching damaged MTJs and link these characteristics to
degraded device performance and thermal stability at roomtemperature.
II. EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
The in-plane MTJs investigated in this study are ellipti-
cal 40 nm /C2110 nm devices based on CoFeB free and refer-
ence layers and have been fully integrated into a 45-nm
CMOS logic platform.2(a),2(b)Transport properties of the
MTJs are measured by conventional two-probe techniques.Pulsed measurements of room temperature transport and
probabilistic switching were performed using a National
Instruments PXIe Pin Parametric Measurement Unit. Wehave studied an array of devices and characterized the distri-
butions of resistance, coercive field, and magnetoresistance.
The average room temperature, zero-field TMR, andresistance-area (RA) product measured from more than
30 MTJs are 132% and 10 Xlm
2, respectively. The TMR
values described in this paper are given by the parallel resist-ance (R
p) and antiparallel resistance (R ap) measured at zero
field (TMR ¼[Rap0-Rp0]/Rp0) instead of at full saturation
because the zero-field TMR value is more relevant for STT-MRAM devices. We further characterized selected devicesby variable-temperature magnetotransport measurements
performed in a helium cryostat (Quantum Design Physical
Property Measurement System with a temperature range of
2–400 K) using a custom designed insert probe to suppresselectro-static discharge events.
To study the room-temperature switching characteristics
and thermal stability we used time-dependent STT measure-ments. In the thermally activated spin-transfer torque switch-
ing regime, which is for an applied voltage V /C28V
c0(Vc0is
the intrinsic switching voltage), the probability of switchingbetween the R
pand R apstates can be modeled as
Psw¼1/C0exp/C0tp
s/C18/C19
;s¼s0expD1/C0V
Vc0/C18/C19/C20/C21
;(1)
where tpis the duration and amplitude of a voltage pulse, s0
is the thermal attempt time (approximately 10/C09s), and Dis
the energy barrier for reversal of the free layer.3Assuming
V/C28Vc0, this thermal activation model describes the small
voltage probability of switching, often referred to as theread-disturbance rate (RDR)
lnðP
swÞ¼lntp
s0/C18/C19
/C0D1/C0V
Vc0/C18/C19
: (2)
The EB values ( D¼KuV/k BT) are estimated by fitting the
slope of the logarithmic portion of RDR at 20-ns pulse
widths as shown in Fig. 1.4,5This method of extracting EB
has been shown to provide more accurate estimates of thestatic EB than the widely used method which expresses the
switching voltage (at P
sw¼1-e/C01) as a function of pulse
duration
Vc¼Vc01/C01
Dlntp
s0/C18/C19 /C20/C21
: (3)
The application of Eq. (3)generally underestimates the static
EB because V cis often beyond the assumed V /C28Vc0limit
for the thermal activation model. In addition the high biases
used can cause current induced heating and field-like torque
0021-8979/2013/114(11)/114506/4/$30.00 VC2013 AIP Publishing LLC 114, 114506-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 114, 114506 (2013)
Downloaded 23 Sep 2013 to 128.143.23.241. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionscontributions that reduce the measured EB.6In Fig. 1,w e
have fitted the RDR probability for a MTJ that represents theaverage electrical and magnetic characteristics of the pri-
mary population. For this cell with close to ideal electrical
characteristics, we extracted D
AP-P¼43.3 and DP-AP¼46.4
for antiparallel-to-parallel (AP-P) and parallel-to-antiparallel
(P-AP) switching, respectively.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The quasi-static magnetic properties of MTJs are char-
acterized by measuring the transport behavior of the device
during magnetic field sweeps. Temperature-dependentresults from the MTJ in the primary resistance population
are shown in Fig. 2. This MTJ has an average D¼44.8. The
magnetic field is swept at a rate of 10 Oe/s with a constant5-lA read current. R-H loops in Fig. 2(a) show decreasing
H
Cwith increasing temperature as thermal activation reduces
the coercive field. Fig. 2(b) shows that H cAP-P changes over
temperature much faster than H cP-AP . Combined with the
observed asymmetry in EB values, this suggests that two
different reversal mechanisms are responsible for AP-P andP-AP switching. If the P-AP reversal is through coherent
rotation while nucleation and propagation is responsible forAP-P switching, the slope of H
cAP-P vs. temperature is larger
due to the significance of thermal activation in the domain
wall depinning processes, and the EB is smaller as a result ofthe reduced effective volume.
7The origin of this asymmetri-
cal reversal behavior is not fully understood but is possibly
attributed to the stabilizing effect that the dipolar field emit-ted from the reference layer has on the AP state configura-
tion. This explanation is consistent with the observation that
the R-H loop offset field grows in the AP direction as tem-perature is decreased. This magnetostatic interaction may be
stabilizing the spins in the free layer during an attempted
AP-P switch, but conversely aiding in the P-AP directionreversal.
The introduction of thermally induced magnetic disorder
is responsible for the large drop in AP state resistance andzero-field TMR versus temperature as shown in Fig. 2(d).
Upon increasing the temperature from 10 K to 300 K,
the TMR decreases from 200% to 145%. This results inTMR(10 K)/TMR(RT) ¼1.4, comparable to ratios obtained
in other reports on CoFeB/MgO/CoFeB junctions.
8This
change in TMR is dominated by a steady increase in R apas
temperature is decreased (R apchanges 27% from 300 K to
10 K while R pchanges only by 3%). A compounding of two
effects is responsible for these changes. Due to asymmetry inwave functions for different spins across a single crystal
MgO barrier, the P state conductance is dominated by tun-
neling of majority spins while the AP state conductance isprimarily due to minority spin tunneling through interfacial
states, which is more active at higher thermal energies.
9
However, higher thermal energies will induce magnetic dis-
order that degrades the spin-polarization of the electrodes,
resulting in a decrease in R apand an increase in R p. For these
MTJs, a simple model combining elastic and inelastictunneling terms developed by Shang et al. can explain this
temperature dependence. The conductance in the P and AP
states can be expressed as
10
GPðTÞ¼GTð1þP1P2ÞþST4=3;
GAPðTÞ¼GTð1/C0P1P2ÞþST4=3;
TMRðTÞ¼DGðTÞ=GAPðTÞ;(4)
where G Tis a prefactor for direct elastic tunneling dependent
on the MgO barrier thickness and height, P 1and P 2are the
effective spin polarizations of the tunneling electrodes (in
FIG. 1. A fit of the logarithmic portion of the RDR measurement to a ther-
mal activation model gives the energy barrier of this MTJ to be 43.3 (AP-P
switching) and 46.4 (P-AP switching).
FIG. 2. (a) Resistance vs. field loops measured at various temperatures. The magnetic field is swept at a rate of 10 Oe/s with a constant 5- lA read current. (b) Coercive
fields for AP-P and P-AP switching vs. tempe rature. As temperature is decreased, H cAP-P increases faster than H cP-AP. (c) Anti-parallel and para llel resistance vs. tem-
perature curves are obtained by extracting R apand R pat H¼0 Oe. (d) As temperature is decreased, zero-field TMR increases monotonically in ideal MTJ cells.114506-2 Kan et al. J. Appl. Phys. 114, 114506 (2013)
Downloaded 23 Sep 2013 to 128.143.23.241. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsthese MTJs, the electrodes are symmetrical so P 1¼P2¼P),
and S is a prefactor dependent on the density of localized states
in the barrier and reflects the inelastic tunneling conductance.
The temperature dependence of the TMR, shown in Fig.
2(d), is affected by spin-wave excitations of the magnetiza-
tion and can be expressed by Bloch’s law as polarizationscales with magnetic moment
PðTÞ¼P
0ð1/C0aT3
2Þ; (5)
where ais a material dependent spin-wave parameter and P 0
is the full spin polarization. Fitting the experimental data
using Eqs. (4)and(5)gives G T¼3.86/C210/C04(Xlm2)/C01,
S¼6.8/C210/C012(Xlm2)/C01K/C04/3, the full spin polarization
P0¼0.71, and a¼1.7/C210/C05K/C03/2, which is on the same
order of fits previously reported for CoFeB electrodes.11The
very small value of S compared to G Tis a good indicator
that the transport mechanism is dominated by spin selective
tunneling in these ideal MTJs.
Switching state diagrams (SSD) give a quantitative
picture of the effects of applied magnetic field and spin-
polarized current on the MTJ magnetization as shown inFig. 3. For a given field, current with a pulse period of
500ls was swept to generate these maps in DR(H,I) space.
By subtracting the up and down branches of the currentsweeps, we highlight the bi-stable region and the STT
switching boundaries. These switching boundaries provide
insight into parameters that affect the MTJ critical switchingcurrent density that can be estimated from a stability analysis
of the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) equation
J
c0¼2e
/C22ha
gMstH extþHkþHd
2/C18/C19
; (6)
where ais the damping parameter, gis the spin transfer tor-
que efficiency parameter, t is the free layer thickness, and H k
is the uniaxial anisotropy field. In the macrospin regime, the
LLG equation relates the height of this region to H Kand the
slopes of the boundaries to g/(aMst).12
The spin transfer torque efficiency term depends on the
angle between the relative magnetization and polarization as
g¼(p/2)/(1þp2cosh).13Because of the angular dependence
ofg, the slopes for AP-P and P-AP switching boundariesshould not be the same. SSD measurements shown in Fig. 3
are made between 400 K and 10 K on MTJs representative of
the normal population. The measured SSD at 400 K inFig.3(a)shows reduced coercive fields and low slope, asym-
metric boundaries. Low slopes at high temperatures are
attributed to poor charge to spin conversion due to thermallyinduced magnetic disorder. Boundary slopes for both switch-
ing directions become more symmetric as temperature is
decreased to 10 K, indicating that AP-P/P-AP spin torqueefficiencies are becoming balanced. This leads to a decrease
in the measured I
Casymmetry (I cP-AP /IcAP-P ) shown in
Fig.3(b). Throughout the entire temperature range, the AP-P
slope is steeper, qualitatively indicating a higher switching
efficiency in the AP-P direction as expected.
The fabrication process flow for MTJs typically
involves multiple processing steps that must be optimized
in order to minimize issues such as electrical shorts from
redeposition, MgO lattice damage, and magnetic materialdegradation. Etching damage to the sidewalls can reduce
the electrical size of MTJ cells, the MgO barrier, and intro-
duce edge roughness. These etch damaged MTJs are identi-fied in our study by examining the H
Cand R Pof an entire
population of more than 30 MTJs and selecting cells with
high R pand low Hc more than 2 standard deviations from
the mean.
When all other parameters are assumed to be equal, R pis
inversely proportional to the cross sectional area of the MTJ,and H
Cis proportional to the anisotropy. By focusing on the
cells with high R Pand low H C, we are effectively selecting the
low EB tail bits of the population. Fig. 4shows an example of
an MTJ from this population. This MTJ has average room-
temperature D¼30. Room temperature R-H loops of these
cells show low to average H C, but stable intermediate magnet-
ization states begin to appear at temperatures lower than
100 K. At this temperature, marked loss of squareness occurs,
and TMR becomes reduced as the fully remnant AP and Pstates cannot be reached. This loss of squareness suggests that
both AP-P and P-AP switching in these cells are accomplished
incoherently by domain nucleation and propagation. A fitof the linear portion using Eqs. (4)and (5)gives G
T
¼3.86/C210/C04(Xlm2)/C01,S¼1.2/C210/C09(Xlm2)/C01K/C04/3,
the full spin polarization P 0¼0.66, and a¼1.7/C210/C05K/C03/2.
The S parameter in this fit is markedly higher than the S of the
FIG. 3. (a) SSD measurements of a primary population MTJ at various temperatures. The slopes of the tilted switching boundaries are reflective of the sp in
transfer torque efficiency. Dashed lines are guides for the eye. (b) Ic asymmetry vs. temperature measured by extracting I cAP-P and I cP-AP from a series of SSD
measurements at H ¼0 Oe.114506-3 Kan et al. J. Appl. Phys. 114, 114506 (2013)
Downloaded 23 Sep 2013 to 128.143.23.241. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://jap.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsprimary population MTJ and indicates a larger inelastic, spin-
independent tunneling component. This is a general trend forthis population of damaged devices and R-H loops of these tail
bits often show unexpected features such as stable intermediate
states characterized by an intermediate resistance and poorsquareness. A similar loss of squareness in MTJ devices at low
temperature has been associated with magnetic pinning sites
brought on by the formation of a spin-glass-like phase that pre-vents full alignment of magnetic spins below a spin-freeze
temperature.
14This results in an inhomogeneous distribution
of the spins in the free layer and reduces spin polarization andTMR as shown in Fig. 4(c).
Domain nucleation and propagation type switching is
prevalent in these MTJs because sidewall etching damageaids nucleation of domains and provides pinning sites for
domain wall motion.
15These states are unstable and cannot
be observed at higher temperatures because thermal activa-tion can provide the additional energy necessary for depin-
ning processes. However, it has been shown that initial
magnetization conditions and specific switching modes havean influence on the observed energy barrier at room tempera-
ture.
16With these metastable domain states present within
the MTJ, a macrospin like picture cannot be used to com-pletely describe the MTJ. Sun et al. have shown that increas-
ing the nominal size of the MTJ will induce a transition from
macrospin to sub-volume activation type behavior.
17This
transition comes with degradation in the spin-torque switch-
ing efficiency as well as EB.
IV. CONCLUSION
In conclusion, we have shown the magnetotransport
behavior of both normal and failure bit MTJs. MTJ failurebits damaged by the RIE process can exhibit a number of
defects that cannot be observed in room temperature mag-
netic characterization such as metastable intermediate statesand loss of spin-polarization. Low temperature measure-
ments suggest that domain states in failure bits are stabilizedby edge pinning sites and have a negative impact on overall
data retention.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Research at UCSD was supported by NSF Award No.
DMR-1008654 and by UC Discovery Grant No. 21294.
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FIG. 4. (a) Resistance vs. field loops measured at various temperatures for an etch-damaged MTJ. The magnetic field is swept at a rate of 10 Oe/s with a con-
stant 5- lA read current. Intermediate states are present below 100 K. (b) Anti-parallel and parallel resistance vs. temperature curves are obtained by extrac ting
Rapand R pat H¼0 Oe. (c) Zero-field TMR vs temperature in etch-damaged MTJs show a characteristic roll off at around 100 K corresponding to the onset of
intermediate states.114506-4 Kan et al. J. Appl. Phys. 114, 114506 (2013)
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1.4895073.pdf | Proximity effect between a topological insulator and a magnetic insulator with large
perpendicular anisotropy
Wenmin Yang, Shuo Yang, Qinghua Zhang, Yang Xu, Shipeng Shen, Jian Liao, Jing Teng, Cewen Nan, Lin Gu,
Young Sun, Kehui Wu, and Yongqing Li
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 092411 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4895073
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4895073
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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128.59.226.54 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 08:34:50Proximity effect between a topological insulator and a magnetic insulator
with large perpendicular anisotropy
Wenmin Y ang,1Shuo Yang,1Qinghua Zhang,2Yang Xu,1Shipeng Shen,1Jian Liao,1
Jing Teng,1Cewen Nan,2Lin Gu,1Young Sun,1,a)Kehui Wu,1,b)and Yongqing Li1,c)
1Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy
of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
2Department of Materials Science and Engineering, State Key Laboratory of New Ceramics and Fine
Processing, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
(Received 9 July 2014; accepted 27 August 2014; published online 5 September 2014)
We report that thin films of a prototype topological insulator, Bi 2Se3, can be epitaxially grown onto
the (0001) surface of BaFe 12O19(BaM), a magnetic insulator with high Curie temperature and
large perpendicular anisotropy. In the Bi 2Se3thin films grown on non-magnetic substrates, classic
weak antilocalization (WAL) is manifested as cusp-shaped positive magnetoresistance (MR) in
perpendicular magnetic fields and parabola-shaped positive MR in parallel fields, whereas in
Bi2Se3/BaM heterostructures the low field MR is parabola-shaped, which is positive in perpendicu-
lar fields and negative in parallel fields. The magnetic field and temperature dependence of the MR
is explained as a consequence of the suppression of WAL due to strong magnetic interactions at the
Bi2Se3/BaM interface. VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4895073 ]
The surface of a three-dimensional topological insulator
(TI) hosts a fascinating Dirac electron system with momen-
tum locked to real electron spins,1,2in contrast to the valley-
related pseudospins in graphene.3The helical spin structure
has been exploited theoretically as the basis for realizing top-
ological magnetoelectric effects and spintronic applica-
tions.4–12In many proposals, a key ingredient is to open an
energy gap near the Dirac point via the proximity effect
between a TI and a magnetic insulator (MI). In case of mag-
netization of the MI parallel to the interface, obtaining a siz-able gap would require significant Fermi surface
warping.
13,14In contrast, an MI with out-of-plane magnetic
order can break time reversal symmetry, thereby opening alarge energy gap on any TI surface as long as the interfacial
exchange interaction is sufficiently strong. Unfortunately,
the easy magnetization axis in most known MIs, such as fer-romagnets EuO,
15EuS,16,17EuSe,18GdN,19and ferrimagnet
yttrium iron garnet (YIG),20lies inside the thin film/plate
plane. Magnetic insulators with perpendicular magnetocrys-talline anisotropy are very scarce.
21Thus far, strong proxim-
ity effect between a TI and an MI with perpendicular
anisotropy has not yet been reported, even though stronginterface interaction has been realized recently in a TI/mag-
netically doped TI heterostructure.
22
Here, we demonstrate that Bi 2Se3thin films can be epi-
taxially grown onto BaFe 12O19, a room temperature mag-
netic insulator with large perpendicular anisotropy. When a
magnetic field is applied perpendicular to the Bi 2Se3/
BaFe 12O19heterostructure, positive magnetoresistance (MR)
is observed. It has quadratic field dependence in weak mag-
netic fields and crosses over to logarithmic dependence instronger fields. Applying parallel magnetic field leads to neg-
ative MR. The magnetotransport data suggest strongsuppression of weak antilocalization (WAL) due to the mag-
netic proximity effect at the Bi
2Se3/BaFe 12O19interface.
M-type Barium hexaferrites (BaFe 12O19, BaM), is an
important magnetic material that has been studied for deca-des due to applications in magnetic recording and micro-
wave devices.
23–27It is highly insulating and has a Curie
temperature of 723 K.27In this work, the flat (0001) surfa-
ces of nearly hexagon-shaped single crystalline thin plates
(Fig. 1(a)) were used as the substrates for epitaxial growth
of Bi 2Se3thin films. Fig. 1(b) shows magnetization curves
FIG. 1. (a) Schematic diagram of a Bi 2Se3/BaM Hall bar device. The upper-
left inset shows a micrograph of a 200 lm wide Hall bar device, and the
upper-right inset is an optical image of a hexagon-shaped BaM single crys-
talline plate with a size of /C246/C24/C21m m3. (b) Magnetization curves meas-
ured at T¼2 K with an external magnetic field Happlied parallel (open
circles) or perpendicular (solid squares) to the (0001) plane of BaM. (c)Cross-section TEM image of the interface region of a Bi
2Se3/BaM hetero-
structure. (d) X-ray diffraction pattern of a Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure.
Diffraction peaks can be indexed either (0,0,0,2n) for BaM or (0006) for
Bi2Se3.a)Electronic mail: youngsun@iphy.ac.cn
b)Electronic mail: khwu@iphy.ac.cn
c)Electronic mail: yqli@iphy.ac.cn
0003-6951/2014/105(9)/092411/4/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 092411-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 092411 (2014)
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
128.59.226.54 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 08:34:50of a typical BaM sample with magnetic field Happlied per-
pendicular and parallel to the (0001) plane at T¼2K . T h e
magnetization Mreaches saturation at l0H¼0.5 T and
1.75 T for perpendicular and parallel field orientations,respectively. For both orientations, Mhas a nearly linear
dependence on Hbelow the saturation. These features are
in agreement with those previously reported for high qual-ity single crystals.
23,25The large perpendicular anisotropy,
the simple M-H relationship, and the high Curie tempera-
ture make BaM a valuable platform for investigation of the
interfacial interactions between TIs and magnetic materials.
Furthermore, the large remnant magnetization in some spe-cially engineered BaM thin films
28could be very useful for
pursuing topological magnetoelectric effects without exter-
nal magnetic fields.
Fig.1(c)is a high resolution cross-section transmission
electron microscopy (TEM) image of a Bi 2Se3/BaM hetero-
structure. It shows that the 1 nm thick Se-Bi-Se-Bi-Se quin-tuple layers are parallel to the (0001) surface of BaM despite
some minor ripples. The interface between BaM and Bi
2Se3
is quite sharp, even though the first 1/2 quintuple layer is
imaged less clearly than the other layers. The crystalline
structure of the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterojunction is further con-
firmed with x-ray diffraction, as shown in Fig. 1(d).
Low temperature electron transport measurements were
used as a probe for interfacial magnetic interactions. A thick-
ness of 10 nm was chosen for the Bi 2Se3thin films grown on
the BaM substrates. Such a thickness is well above the 5 nm
threshold, below which the wavefunctions of the top and bot-
tom surfaces overlap substantially, resulting in a hybridiza-tion gap near the Dirac point.
29This would modify the Berry
phase of the surface states, and produce transport characteris-
tics similar to those brought by strong magnetic interac-tions.
30–32We also carried out transport measurements of the
Bi2Se3thin films grown on SrTiO 3(STO) substrates in order
to provide a reference system with non-magnetic substrates.Hall resistance R
xyhas a nearly linear dependence on the
magnetic field.33The extracted electron densities are in the
range of 2–3 /C21013cm/C02, consistent with previous transport
and photoemission studies.34–41Such high electron densities
indicate that the Fermi level is located above the conduction
band minimum. Both the bulk and the surface electrons areexpected to participate in the transport.
In Fig. 2, we plot the main results of the electron trans-
port measurements with magnetic field applied perpendicularto the Bi
2Se3thin films. As shown in Fig. 2(a), the magneto-
resistance, defined as MR¼½qxxðHÞ/C0qxxð0Þ/C138=qxxð0Þ,i s
positive for the Bi 2Se3thin film grown on BaM. The sign of
the MR is same as that of the Bi 2Se3thin film on STO (Fig.
2(b)). However, the shape of the MR in the Bi 2Se3/BaM het-
erostructure is drastically different from its STO counterpartat low fields. The latter is characterized by the cusp-shaped
MR due to the WAL effect.
35The quantum correction to the
conductivity of the Bi 2Se3thin films on non-magnetic sub-
strates can be described by the Hikami-Larkin-Nagaoka
(HLN) equation43
DrHðÞffi/C0ae2
2p2/C22hw1
2þHu
H/C18/C19
/C0lnHu
H/C18/C19"#
: (1)Here, the magnetoconductivity is defined as DrðHÞ
¼rxxðHÞ/C0rxxð0Þ,wðxÞis the digamma function, Hu¼Bu
l0
¼1
l0/C22h
4el2uis the dephasing field, and luis the dephasing length.
In single channel systems, the prefactor ais equal to 1/2 for
WAL. As illustrated in Fig. 2(d), theDrðHÞdata of the
Bi2Se3/STO sample can be fitted fairly well to the HLN
equation. The obtained avalues are close to 1/2, which can
be attributed to the strong scatterings between the surfaceand the bulk electrons.
37,39,42The magnetoconductivity of
the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure, however, cannot be reason-
ably fitted to the HLN equation. As shown in Fig. 2(c),i t
rather exhibits a quadratic dependence on magnetic field up
to at least l0H¼0:3 T. At fields above the magnetization
saturation of BaM (i.e., l0H>l0Hs¼0:5 T), however, the
MR of the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure crosses over to the
HLN-like (or logarithmic) magnetic field dependence. This
implies that the phase coherent transport may still be rele-vant in the magnetic heterostructure.
In order to gain further insight into underlying physics in
the Bi
2Se3/BaM heterostructure, we performed transport
measurements in tilted magnetic fields at 1.7 K. Fig. 3(a)
shows that, as the magnetic field tilts toward the thin films
plane, the sign of the MR is reversed for h<9/C14, at least at H
below the magnetization saturation. Here, his the tilting angle
relative to the parallel field orientation. In contrast, the MR of
the Bi 2Se3/STO remains positive for any field orientation, as
shown in Fig. 3(b). In the STO case, the positive MR origi-
nates from the WAL-related phase coherent transport if the
magnetic field is not too strong. Our previous work44showed
that both parallel and perpendicular components of the mag-
netic fields Hcan cause destruction of the WAL, and hence
positive MR. Therefore, the negative MR observed here oughtto originate from the influence of the magnetic substrate.FIG. 2. Transport properties of the Bi 2Se3thin films grown on the BaM ((a)
and (c)) and STO ((b) and (d)) substrates in perpendicular magnetic fields.
(a) MR of a 10 nm thick Bi 2Se3film on BaM at T¼1.7–35 K. (b) MR of a
Bi2Se3thin film on STO with comparable longitudinal resistivity to that of
the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure. Shown in panels (c) and (d) are the corre-
sponding magnetoconductivity data. The symbols represent experimentalvalues. The lines in (c) and (d) are the best fits to a quadratic function and
the HLN equation, respectively.092411-2 Yang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 092411 (2014)
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128.59.226.54 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 08:34:50Fig. 4(a) depicts the parallel field MR of the Bi 2Se3/
BaM sample at temperatures up to 70 K. The low field MR is
negative, and has a parabolic shape. The MR reaches a mini-
mum value at l0H’1:55 T, which is close to the in-plane
saturation field ( l0HA¼1:75 T). At H>HA, the magnetiza-
tion of the BaM is aligned parallel to the interface, and one
would anticipate much weaker magnetic proximity effect onthe electron transport. This is evidenced by the resemblance
of the parallel field MR of the Bi
2Se3/BaM heterostructure to
the STO counterpart at H>HA(Fig. 4(b)). This further sup-
ports that the negative MR observed at lower fields is related
to the magnetism in the BaM substrate.
The magnetotransport data presented above can be sum-
marized in the following two key aspects. One is the
parabola-shaped MR existing in a rather broad range of mag-
netic fields for both parallel and perpendicular field orienta-tions. Such a quadratic field dependence has never been
observed in either perpendicular or parallel fields in previous
studies of TI/MI heterostructures such as Bi
2Se3/EuS, Bi 2Se3/
GdN, and Bi 2Se3/YIG.16,17,19,45The other is the strong T-de-
pendence of both types of parabolic MR. This is further illus-
trated in Fig. 5. For the perpendicular field orientation, the
T-dependence of the MR is characterized by K?vs.Tshown
in Fig. 5(a), where the coefficient K?is extracted from fitting
the data in Fig. 2(c)toDrðBÞ¼/C0 K?B2with B¼l0Hup to
0.3 T. Correspondingly, K==is obtained by fitting the MR data
to a similar parabolic function (Fig. 5(b)). Both K?andK==
drop more than three times as Tincreases from 1.7 to 30 K,
whereas the longitudinal resistivity qxxvaries only about 10%
in the same temperature range.
As mentioned above, the MR of the Bi 2Se3thin films on
non-magnetic substrates can be viewed as a consequence of
time reversal symmetry breaking by the externalperpendicular magnetic field, which introduces different
Aharonov-Bohm phases to the time-reversed pairs of pathsalong any of the closed loops.
46Such symmetry breaking
suppresses WAL, leading to the positive, cusp-shaped MR
described by the HLN equation. The parabolic MR observedin the magnetic heterostructure therefore suggests the exis-
tence of an extra source for the suppression of WAL.
In literature, random magnetic impurities
43,46and mag-
netic exchange interaction30are known to be able to break
time reversal symmetry, and suppress the phase coherent
effect. When the strength of magnetic scatterings is weak,the magnetoconductivity can also be described by the HLN
equation, except that the extra dephasing due to the random
magnetic scatterings needs to be taken into account.
43,46The
low field MR would maintain the cusp-like shape. Such
behavior has been observed in GdN/Bi 2Se3heterostructures
as well as conventional metal films (e.g., Au thin films) withmagnetic adatoms.
19,46In case of very strong magnetic scat-
terings, there is a crossover from the symplectic limit ( a¼1/2)
to the unitary limit ( a¼0).43Transport close to the latter
limit30was observed previously in Bi 2Te3thin films capped
with 1 ML Fe, in which the strong magnetic scatterings from
Fe nanoclusters are believed to be responsible for the para-bolic MR.
47In this classical diffusive regime, one would
expect weak T-dependence of the MR at low temperatures.
This is contradictory to the strong T-dependence of the MR
in the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure (Fig. 5(a)). Moreover, it is
also unclear how the magnetic impurity scattering model can
account for the negative MR in parallel fields.
For the MR in perpendicular magnetic fields, the most
pronounced deviation from the WAL behavior takes place in
low magnetic fields. The magnetization of the BaM substrateis featured by micron-sized maze-like domains.
23Even
though the global magnetization is small, the local magnet-
ization has a large perpendicular component inside each do-main because of the large magnetocrystalline anisotropy.
23
The magnetic exchange interaction as well as the local strayfield at the interface breaks the time-reversal symmetry inthe Bi
2Se3layer, leading to the suppression of WAL. This
interface proximity effect is much larger than the conductiv-
ity corrections due to the external field. This can qualita-tively explain the much weaker field dependence of the MR
in the Bi
2Se3/BaM heterostructure than that of Bi 2Se3/STO.
On a quantitative level, Lu et al. calculated the quantum cor-
rections to the conductivity of TI under the influence of per-
pendicular magnetization. They found that in case of strong
exchange interaction and weak magnetic impurityFIG. 4. The MR data taken in parallel magnetic fields. (a) MR of the Bi 2Se3/
BaM heterostructure at T¼1.7–70 K. (b) MR of the 7 nm thick Bi 2Se3film
on STO measured at Tup to 20 K.FIG. 5. Temperature dependence of the magnitude of the quadratic magne-
toconductivity (or MR) in the Bi 2Se3/BaM heterostructure in perpendicular
(a) and parallel (b) magnetic fields.
FIG. 3. MR data recorded in tilted magnetic fields at T¼1.7 K for the
Bi2Se3/BaM heterostructure (a) and a 7 nm thick Bi 2Se3thin film grown on
STO (b). Data from 10 nm thick Bi 2Se3samples on STO are similar, except
with smaller dephasing fields.44092411-3 Yang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 092411 (2014)
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128.59.226.54 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 08:34:50scatterings, the modified Berry phase in the surface states
could result in the positive, parabolic MR.30
The negative MR observed in parallel fields can also be
qualitatively explained within the picture of broken time re-versal symmetry in the phase coherent transport. Since His
applied along the hard axis of BaM, it rotates the magnetiza-
tion out of the perpendicular direction, and hence reducesthe (local) perpendicular magnetization approximately in the
form of (1 /C0H
2=H2
A) when H<HA. This decreases the mag-
netic proximity effect, resulting in the negative MR.
Nevertheless, it should be noted that the negative parabolic
MR has also been observed in magnetic multilayers andmagnetic granular systems, in which the MR is attributed to
spin dependent scatterings.
48–50In these systems, however,
the MR is negative for both parallel and perpendicular fieldorientations. Moreover, the resistance change due to spin de-
pendent scatterings usually has weak T-dependence below
30 K. This is also inconsistent with the strong T-dependence
of the MR of the Bi
2Se3/BaM heterostructure (Fig. 5).
Therefore, we conclude that the MR observed in this work
can be mainly attributed to the interplay between the mag-netic interactions at the interface and the phase coherent
transport. Nevertheless, further work is needed in order to
determine whether these properties mainly originate fromthe interface exchange interactions or from the local stray
field induced effects on the quantum diffusive transport.
In summary, we have demonstrated the strong magnetic
proximity effect in the Bi
2Se3/BaM heterostructure. It is
manifested as the parabola-shaped positive MR in perpendic-
ular fields and negative MR in parallel fields. Such a uniquetype of MR has not been observed previously in any low
dimensional magnetic system, including ferromagnetic thin
films, magnetic multilayer structures, magnetic granular sys-tems, and TI/MI heterostructures. The strong proximity
effect achieved in this work with the magnetic insulator that
has a large perpendicular anisotropy and the Curie tempera-ture higher than room temperature may pave a way to realiz-
ing many topological spintronic effects with potential for
practical applications.
We are grateful for stimulating discussions with P. Xiong
and S. von Moln /C19ar. This work was supported by the National
Basic Research Program of China (Grant Nos. 2012CB921703,
2013CB921702, and 2014CB921002), the National ScienceFoundation of China (Grant Nos. 91121003, 11374337, and
51332001), and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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1.4817302.pdf | Nb2O5 nanofiber memristor
A. M. Grishin, A. A. Velichko, and A. Jalalian
Citation: Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 053111 (2013); doi: 10.1063/1.4817302
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4817302
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Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsNb2O5nanofiber memristor
A. M. Grishin,1,2,a)A. A. Velichko,3and A. Jalalian1
1Department of Condensed Matter Physics, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE-164 40 Stockholm-Kista,
Sweden
2INMATECH Intelligent Materials Technology, SE-127 45 Sk €arholmen, Sweden
3Department of Physical Engineering, Petrozavodsk State University, 185910 Petrozavodsk, Russia
(Received 21 April 2013; accepted 17 July 2013; published online 31 July 2013)
Non-woven bead-free 100 lm long and 80–200 nm in diameter highly crystalline orthorhombic
T-Nb2O5nanofibers were sintered by sol-gel assisted electrospinning technique. Electrical and
dielectric spectroscopy tests of individual fibers clamped onto Pt coated Si substrate were
performed using a spreading resistance mode of atomic force microscope. Reproducible resistiveswitching with ON-OFF resistance ratio as high as 2 /C210
4has a bipolar character, starts with a
threshold voltage of 0.8–1.7 V, and follows by continuous growth of conductivity. Resistive
memory effect is associated with a voltage-driven accumulation/depletion of oxygen vacancies atNb
2O5/Pt cathode interface. Poole-Frenkel emission from the electronic states trapped at reduced
NbO xcomplexes determines a shape of Nb 2O5/Pt diode I-Vcharacteristics. Simple thermodynamic
model explains a threshold character of switching, relates experimentally observed characteristicsin low and high resistive states, and gives a reasonable estimate of the concentration of oxygen
vacancies.
VC2013 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4817302 ]
During the last two decades, significant progress made
in synthesis of nanowires and nanofibers raised an intensive
quest for their applications as chemical and bio-sensors,nanophotonic, nanoelectronic, and energy storage devices,
field emission and electrochromic displays, actuators, and
neural interfaces.
1Simple and effective electrospinning tech-
nique was patented in 1934 (Ref. 2), and since mid-1990s it
attracts continuously growing interest for fabricating ultra-
thin ceramic threads.3There were several reports on electro-
spun nanofibers: magnetic,4luminescent,5multiferroic,6as
well as various ferrites.7Despite a reach portfolio of avail-
able materials, yet the characterization of fibers functionalproperties is severely limited to phase content, morphology
by electron microscopy, field, and temperature dependencies
of the magnetization in the case of ferromagnetic fibers.Among the most recent results, we observed broad band res-
onant microwave absorption in ferrite Y
3Fe5O12(Ref. 8) and
ferroelectricity in biocompatible (Na,K)NbO 3nanofibers.9
Herein, we report reproducible bipolar resistive switch-
ing in continuous highly crystalline electrospun Nb 2O5nano-
fibers. Fibers withstand without breakdown electric field ashigh as 1 MV/cm and demonstrate ON-OFF resistance
switching ratio of 2 /C210
4. Opposite to nonvolatile unipolar
resistive switching in amorphous anodic NbO x/Nb thin film
cells (observed in 1965 (Ref. 10) and explored recently in
Ref. 11), Nb 2O5nanofiber/Pt cathode memristor does not
require electroforming process preceding to write-in andread-out operation but has a bipolar character while transi-
tions from high to low resistive state occur as a continuous
growth of conductivity when a bias exceeds a threshold volt-age. Following the classification of resistive storage mecha-
nisms,
12all the observed features relate a switchable contact
resistance in Nb 2O5fiber/Pt junction to the redox-based volt-
age-driven oxygen migration memory.Nb2O5nanofibers were fabricated by ethoxide-rout sol-gel
assisted electrospinning technique. To prepare 5 ml of precur-
sor solution with 0.2M concentr ation, 0.251 ml of niobium(V)
ethoxide Nb(OCH 2CH 3)5was mixed at room temperature with
2 ml of acetylacetone CH 3COCH 2COCH 3and magnetically
stirred in a closed cap glass bottle for 15 min. Then, followingin succession, 1 ml of 2-methoxyethanol CH
3OCH 2CH 2OH
was added to this solution and stirred for 10 min and then
mixed with 2 ml of ethanol C 2H5OH and kept stirred for
10 min. Finally, 250 mg of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) was
added, and mixture was stirred 30 min until a viscous solution
becomes homogeneous and highly transparent.
Electrospinning stock solution was ejected from the sy-
ringe pump that feeds PVP/Nb 2O5solution at a constant rate
of 0.5 ml/h. 11 kV voltage was applied between the stainlesssteel needle and grounded conducting collector placed at
8 cm below the needle tip. Bead-free nanofibers’ mat on the
collector was dried at 100
/C14C in nitrogen atmosphere for
12 h, then collected from the surface of the collector and
annealed at 700/C14C for 1 h in air.
Fibers morphology was observed with a field emission
scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM, JEOL JSM-7500
FA). After drying at 100/C14C, as-spun mat consists of binder-
contained jelly-like threads 350 nm in diameter (not shown).They have a smooth surface and amorphous structure.
During annealing at 700
/C14C in air, threads experience strong
shrinkage and transform to the crystallized non-woven dense100lm long and 80–200 nm in diameter fibers with a rough
crystalline faceted surface (see Fig. 1).
Phase content and crystalline structure of calcined
Nb
2O5fibers were examined by x-ray diffraction (XRD)
using a Siemens D-5000 powder diffractometer. All the lines
inH-2Hscan in Fig. 2were indexed on the basis of an
orthorhombic unit cell.13Diffraction angles are in the best
correspondence with all the main and superstructure Bragg
peak positions observed by Waring for Nb 2O5powdera)Electronic mail: grishin@kth.se
0003-6951/2013/103(5)/053111/5/$30.00 VC2013 AIP Publishing LLC 103, 053111-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 103, 053111 (2013)
Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsspecimen heated to 700/C14C.14As for relative intensities, a no-
ticeable enhancement of (00 l) Bragg reflections indicates
Nb2O5orthorhombic cells that have dimensions a¼6.199 A ˚,
b¼29.124 A ˚, and c¼3.938 A ˚are packed inside fibers pref-
erentially along the b-axis direction.
To assign sintered Nb 2O5nanofibers to one of eight
known different polymorphs, we recorded their unpolarized
backscattered Raman spectrum at room temperature using a
confocal Jobin Yvon LabRam HR800 microscope with a
CCD detector and 632.8 nm light pumping from a He-Ne
laser. Nanofiber spectrum in inset to Fig. 2resembles the
Raman spectrum of bulk niobium oxide calcined at 800/C14C.15
According to Tamura,16this orthorhombic T-Nb 2O5phase
crystallizes at 700-800/C14C and forms distorted octahedral and
decahedral Nb-ion sites with 6 and 7 oxygen neighbors, cor-respondingly. The strongest Raman band at 686 cm
/C01is
commonly assigned to the symmetric stretching mode of the
niobia octa- and decahedrons. Weaker bands in the 200-400 cm
/C01region, Jehng and Wachs17ascribed to the bending
modes of the Nb-O-Nb linkages.
Electrical tests of Nb 2O5fibers were carried out using a
spreading resistance mode as an extension of the static force
mode in atomic force microscope (AFM). To obtain reliable
electric characteristics, fibers should be tightly clamped andhave a good electrical contact with a substrate used as a bot-
tom electrode. For this purpose, samples for electrical tests
were spun and then annealed directly on Pt-coated Si wafer.
Very long immobilized fibers are easily located with an opti-cal microscope. Then, AFM probe scans the surface in a con-
tact mode to produce a topography image of an individual
fiber (not shown). Next, the cantilever tip is positioned ontothe top of the fiber, and a tip current is recorded whilst
sweeping the voltage applied to the tip.
We used wear-resistant conductive DCP20 AFM probes.
Nitrogen-doped diamond-like carbon (DLC) 100 nm thick film
is coated on the tipside of the cantilever. Tip’s curvature radiusis about 100 nm. I-Vcharacteristics were recorded in a constant
voltage mode using Keithley 2400 SourceMeter with a serially
connected ballast resistor. Keithley 6485 Picoammeter was
used to increase accuracy in a low voltage-small cu rrent range.
Prior to tests, measurement circ uit was calibrated using a kit of
reference 1 k X–22 MXresistances. I-Vcharacteristic of the
direct contact between the A FM DLC-probe and Pt layer on
silicon wafer (not shown) is a non linear, symmetrical irrespec-
tive of the voltage polarity and fitted to the power lawI½Amp/C138¼4:5/C210
/C05/C2½1þðV=0:205Þ1:2/C138/C2V½Volt/C138.F o r
currents below 10 lAt h e DCP20 DLC-probe can be consid-
ered as an ohmic contact with the resistance of 22 k X.U s i n g
DLC film resistivity qtip¼0.5-1Xcm, asserted by a vendor, we
estimated tip’s contact area to be (2–4) /C210/C010cm2.
Current-voltage characteristics of immobilized fibers to
a significant extent are reproducible and delineate similar
features. Semilog I-Vplots of DLC/Nb 2O5fiber/Pt diode are
collected in Figs. 3and4. A sequence of several resistive
switching obtained after the reversal of bias voltage is shown
FIG. 1. Scanning electron micrographs of Nb 2O5nanofibers calcined at
700/C14C for 1 h in air.
FIG. 2. XRD Cu Karadiation pattern of Nb 2O5nanofibers annealed at
700/C14C in air. Nb 2O5Bragg reflections are notified by Miller indices for
orthorhombic unit cell (Refs. 13and14). Inset shows the Raman spectrum
of Nb 2O5fibers.
FIG. 3. I-Vcharacteristics of DLC/Nb 2O5nanofiber/Pt junction recorded in
aconstant voltage mode with a 100 k Xballast resistor. The voltage drop
across the tip and the ballast resistor were subtracted, so hereinafter RandV
stand for a fiber resistance and a voltage applied directly to the fiber, respec-
tively. “Forward” and “Reverse” directions correspond, respectively, to a
positive and a negative voltage applied to the DLC tip. Ascending branch of
the curve 1 shown with triangular symbols Dwas recorded for a fresh
“virgin” contact between AFM probe and the fiber. Continuous sequence of
I-Vloops is denoted by Nos. 1-1 -2-2-3-4-5-6-6 -7. Underlined numerics
mark loops traced in the reverse direction. Bias voltage was swept at firstwith the rate of 0.25 V/s within 61.5 V, then 0.5 V/s and 1 V/s in the forward
and reverse directions, respectively.053111-2 Grishin, Velichko, and Jalalian Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 053111 (2013)
Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsin Fig. 3. The curve No. 1 with triangular symbols Dwas
recorded for a fresh “virgin” contact between the probe and
the fiber. Fiber appeared to be in the high resistive state(HRS) with the resistance R
HRS¼40 GX. At threshold volt-
ageVth¼þ0.8 V current starts to increase, grows 45 times at
V¼þ1.5 V, and then keeps almost constant though voltage
decreases down to þ0.8 V along the descending branch. This
is a low resistive state (LRS). ON-OFF (LRS-to-HRS)
switching occurred when voltage was reversed to /C01.5 V
(curve No. 1 ). At positive voltage, HRS was restored and
gradually switched to LRS along the ascending I-Vbranch
(curve No. 2). After reversing the voltage to /C06 V (curve
No. 2 ) HRS of a full value (curve No. 3) was achieved.
When we cycled the voltage keeping the same positive
polarity, the sequential descending branches of I-Vcurves
(Nos. 4, 5, and 6) repeat each other whereas their ascending
branch currents gradually decrease with a number of cycles.
It demonstrates the degradation of LRS with a positive volt-age cycling. Finally, HRS (curve No. 7) was restored again
after voltage reversal along the curve No. 6
.
To summarize, at low voltages multiple change of polar-
ity shows approximately the same resistance as high as
RHRS¼30–50 G X. Using above calculated tip’s contact area
of (2–4) /C210/C010cm2, we conclude in HRS the fiber has a re-
sistivity as high as qHRS¼(1–3)/C2106Xcm. Then, in the
forward direction when a positive bias on DLC probe goes
beyond a threshold voltage Vth, varying between þ0.8 and
þ1.7 V, current gradually increases and grows exponentially
along the ascending branch fitted to the expression
I¼ðV=RHRSÞexpðþ2a1ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
V/C0Vthp
Þ: (1)
When voltage decreases, a hyste resis occurs indicating a LRS.
Experimental data fairly fo llow descending branch of I-Vcurve
I¼ðV=RLRSÞexpðþ2a2ffiffiffiffi
Vp
Þ: (2)
As seen in Fig. 4, ON-OFF current ratio reaches the value as
high as 2 /C2104. LRS with a high current flow is maintained
as long as a bias voltage is applied.Reverse current always remains several orders of magni-
tude smaller than a forward one. It slightly increases at vol-
tages beyond /C01 V, and there was no breakdown detected at
voltages as high as /C06 V. Hysteresis is much smaller than in
the forward direction, if any. Voltage reversal repeatedly
returns DLC/Nb 2O5fiber/Pt junction back to the HRS.
Contrary to abrupt switching in amorphous anodic
Nb2O5(90 nm)/Nb film cells,11resistive switching in Nb 2O5
fibers does not require electroforming process, has a bipolarcharacter, and goes on continuously. Switchable contact re-
sistance in DLC/Nb
2O5fiber/Pt junction we attribute to the
NbO xredox process induced by electromigration of oxygen
vacancies. Polarity of the resistive switching in our I-Vchar-
acteristics coincides with those that Sawa observed in n-type
oxide/high work function cathode junctions.18In our case, Pt
template layer works as an active electrode while oxygen
vacancies form donor-type reduced NbO xcomplexes thus
render n-type conductivity in Nb 2O5matrix.19
At negative voltage applied to DLC tip, oxygen vacancies
leave the fiber/Pt interface and disperse into Nb 2O5matrix.
Depletion layer in Nb 2O5widens, contact resistance increases,
and memory cell is reset to a HRS. Positive voltage at DLC
brings vacancies back to Pt electrode, reduces resistance, and
sets a LRS in the junction. Enriched concentration of oxygenvacancies near the Pt cathode remains stable as long as bias
voltage is applied, and, being metastable at zero bias, it decays
with a read-out (positive voltage) cycling.
Since a LRS is associated with donors caught at Pt cath-
ode, the descending branch of hysteretic I-Vcharacteristics
in the forward direction Eq. (2)can be explained with a
Poole-Frenkel emission from the localized electronic states
j/Eexp/C0qð/B/C0ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
qE=p/C15dp
Þ
kT/C20/C21
: (3)
This standard expression relates current density jand electric
field strength Ethrough the depth of the trap potential /Band
dynamic dielectric permittivity /C15d.20qis elementary charge, k
is the Boltzmann constant, and Tis the temperature. We fitted
one of the experimental hysteresis loop (No. 7 in Fig. 4)t o
Eqs. (1)and(2)with the solid lines and obtained the following
parameters: RHRS¼40 GX,Vth¼1.56 V, a1¼5.8 V/C01/2;a n d
RLRS¼490 MX,a2¼2.2 V/C01/2. Comparing Eqs. (3)and(2)
with experimentally achieved constant 2 a2¼ðq=kTÞffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
q=pd/C15dp
¼4:4V/C01=2and fiber thickness d¼80 nm, we can
calculate /C15d:Obtained value /C15d¼5:54/C2/C15o(/C15ois the electric
permittivity of free space) we consider as a reasonable esti-mate of dynamic dielectric permittivity of Nb
2O5fiber.
To produce HRS-to-LRS switching, electric field Eapplied
to the fiber should collect uniformly distributed oxygen vacan-cies back to Pt cathode producing a work against the entropy of
mixing. Let a mole fraction g(z) to define the spatial distribu-
tion of oxygen vacancies inside the DLC/Nb
2O5fiber/Pt capaci-
tor. Then, Gibbs free energy Fextended over the capacitor
thickness 0 <z<dcontains two competing terms
F½J=mole/C138¼ðd
0dz
d2qE
/C15dzgþkTglng
e/C18/C19
: (4)
FIG. 4. Forward part of I-Vcharacteristics Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 7 from Fig. 3.
Solid lines show fitting of experimental data No. 7 to Eqs. (1)and(2). Inset
shows schematics of AFM spreading resistance test.053111-3 Grishin, Velichko, and Jalalian Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 053111 (2013)
Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissionsThe first is the electrostatic energy of O2þvacancies carrying
an electric charge of þ2qwhile the second term is the en-
tropy of an ensemble of vacancies considered as a non-
equilibrium ideal gas.21To determine g(z) we should mini-
mizeFfrom Eq. (4)with respect to g(z):dF=dgðzÞ¼0 and
then normalize g(z) to the total amount of oxygen vacancies
d/C2goinduced in Nb 2O5matrix during the growth process:Ðd
0dzgðzÞ¼d/C2go. Resultant distribution of O2þvacancies
is governed by the Boltzmann distribution function
gðzÞ¼go2qV
/C15dkTð1/C0e/C02qV=/C15dkTÞ/C01e/C0ð2qV=/C15dkTÞðz=dÞ:(5)
At zero bias V¼0, vacancies fill Nb 2O5fiber uniformly
g(z)¼go. When voltage goes beyond þ100 mV, their con-
centration in proximity of DLC anode drops exponentially as
go2qV
/C15dkTe/C0ð2qV=/C15dkTÞðz=dÞ¼13:94Volt/C01/C2goVe/C00:17Volt/C01nm/C01/C2Vz.
Here we substituted fiber’s thickness d¼80 nm and dynamic
permittivity /C15d¼5:54/C2/C15oobtained previously from Eqs. (3)
and(2).A tV¼0.1, 0.5, 1, and 1.7 V, relative O2þvacancies’
concentration at the anode g(d)/gobecomes as small as
0.35, 6.6 /C210/C03, 1.2/C210/C05, and 1.2 /C210/C09. Meanwhile, at
Pt cathode concentration of vacancies grows linearly asgð0Þ¼g
o2qV=/C15dkT¼13:94Volt/C01/C2goV.
Switching from a HRS to a LRS has a threshold charac-
ter. It occurs when the NbO xcomplexes collected at the cath-
odez¼0 completely replace all the undistorted Nb 2O5unit
cells: gð0Þ¼1. This condition relates the threshold voltage
Vthrequired to set a LRS to the parameter goas follows:
Vth¼/C15dkT
q1
2goifgo/C281;
/C15dkT
qð1/C0goÞifgo!1:8
>><
>>:(6)
Lowering the temperature diminishes the role of the entropy
thus linearly reduces a threshold voltage. At room tempera-
ture, using experimental values Vth¼0.8–1.7 V, we found
the mole fraction of O2þvacancies goranged from 8 :9
/C210/C02to 4:2/C210/C02.
As an independent examination of a LRS, we employed
impedance spectroscopy using IET/QuadTech 7600 Plus
Precision LCR Meter operating in the range of 10 Hz–2 MHz.
Alternating voltage Vac¼500 mV was superimposed on a bias
voltage Vdc¼þ2V . F i g . 5presents -Im Z–Re ZCole-Cole
diagram22for the DLC/Nb 2O5fiber/Pt cell in the LRS. The
equivalent circuit comprises those connected serially: inductor
L¼5 mH and parallel-connected resistor Rac¼680 kXwith
capacitor C¼1.7 pF. The apparent resistance Racas low as
680 kXmatches well the quasistatic resistance in the LRS
which can be obtained from Figs. 3and4atVdc¼þ2V .
It is worth comparing our results with a charge carrier
transport in commercial amorphous anodic NbO thin film
capacitors.23They comprise three layers structure: semicon-
ducting MnO 2, amorphous anodic Nb 2O5, and metallic NbO.
Their I-Vcharacteristics also show threshold voltages de-
pendent on barrier heights at MnO 2/Nb 2O5interface in one
polarity and at Nb 2O5/NbO in opposite polarity. Within a
rated voltage range, Poole-Frenkel is a dominant conduction
mechanism and the best capacitor technologies, which giverelatively small or no change of leakage current after ageing,
have the Rin Eq. (2)above 100 M X.
In conclusion, highly crystalline orthorhombic T-Nb2O5
nanofibers were sintered by sol-gel assisted electrospinning
technique. Reproducible bipolar resistive switching with
ON-OFF resistance ratio as high as 2 /C2104was observed in
individual fibers put in intimate contact with Pt coated Si
substrate. Switching from a high to a low resistive state
mimics some features of a 2ndorder field-induced insulator-
to-metal phase transition: starts with a threshold voltage and
continues gradually with a growth of conductivity. In electric
field oxygen vacancies migrate to Pt cathode and form therereduced NbO
xcomplexes. Hysteretic current-voltage charac-
teristic of Nb 2O5/Pt diode is determined by Poole-Frenkel
emission from NbO xcomplexes trapped at the interface
between Nb 2O5fiber and Pt cathode.
This work was partially supp orted by the Vetenskapsra ˚det
(Swedish Research Council) through the Advanced Optics and
Photonics (ADOPT) Linn /C19ec e n t e rg r a n t .
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Ellenbogen, and C. M. Lieber, Nature (London) 470, 240 (2011); R. Yan,
D. Gargas, and P. Yang, Nat. Photonics 3, 569 (2009); T. Palacios, Nature
(London) 481, 152 (2012).
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3Yu. Dzenis, Science 304, 1917 (2004); N. Tucker, J. J. Stanger, M. P.
Staiger, H. Razzaq, and K. Hofman, “The history of the science and tech-nology of electrospinning from 1600 to 1995,” J. Eng. Fibers Fabrics
Special Issue - Fibers 7, 63–73 (2012).
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(2007).
5H. Wang, Y. Li, L. Sun, Y. Li, W. Wang, S. Wang, S. Xu, and Q. Yang,J. Colloid Interface Sci. 350, 396 (2010).
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Tan, Appl. Phys. Lett. 92, 062901 (2008).
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Technol. 68, 1704 (2008); W. Ponhan and S. Maensiri, Solid State Sci. 11,
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(2003); X.-W. Zhang, J. Cryst. Growth 310, 3235 (2008).
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Lett. 99, 102501 (2011).
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10W. R. Hiatt and T. W. Hickmott, Appl. Phys. Lett. 6, 106 (1965).
FIG. 5. Symbols: experimental -Im Z/C0ReZplot for the low resistance state
of DLC/Nb 2O5fiber/Pt memory cell. Solid line: Cole-Cole fit with serially
connected inductor L¼5 mH and parallel connected resistor Rac¼680 kX
with a capacitor C¼1.7 pF.053111-4 Grishin, Velichko, and Jalalian Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 053111 (2013)
Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions11T. V. Kundozerova, A. M. Grishin, G. B. Stefanovich, and A. A. Velichko,
IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 59, 1144 (2012).
12R. Waser, R. Dittmann, G. Staikov, and K. Szot, Adv. Mater. 21, 2632
(2009).
13JCPDS-International Center for Diffraction Data, Card No. 30–0873.
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77A(6), 705 (1973).
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K. Kato and S. Tamura, Acta Crystallogr. B 31, 673 (1975).
17J.-M. Jehng and I. E. Wachs, Chem. Mater. 3, 100 (1991).18A. Sawa, Mater. Today 11(6), 28 (2008).
19NbO possesses metallic conductivity whereas NbO 2is a narrow gap
semiconductor.
20J. Frenkel, Phys. Rev. 54, 647 (1938); S. M. Sze, Physics of Semiconductor
Devices (John Wiley & Sons, 1981).
21L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshits, Statistical Physics (Pergamon Press,
Oxford, 1980).
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23J. Sikula, V. Sedlakova, J. Hlavka, and Z. Sita, in CARTS EU (2006), pp.
189–196; J. Sikula, V. Sedlakova, H. Navarova, J. Hlavka, M. Tacano, and
Z. Sita, in CARTS USA (2007), pp. 337–345.053111-5 Grishin, Velichko, and Jalalian Appl. Phys. Lett. 103, 053111 (2013)
Downloaded 03 Aug 2013 to 129.93.16.3. This article is copyrighted as indicated in the abstract. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://apl.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions |
1.4742150.pdf | ZnO-based graphite-insulator-semiconductor diode for transferable and low thermal
resistance high-power devices
ZhiKun Zhang, Jiming Bian, Jingchang Sun, Zhenhe Ju, Yuxin Wang, Fuwen Qin, Dong Zhang, Yingmin Luo,
and Hongzhu Liu
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 101, 052108 (2012); doi: 10.1063/1.4742150
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4742150
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/101/5?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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128.143.1.222 On: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 22:23:36ZnO-based graphite-insulator-semiconductor diode for transferable and low
thermal resistance high-power devices
ZhiKun Zhang,1Jiming Bian,1,a)Jingchang Sun,2Zhenhe Ju,3Yuxin Wang,1,2Fuwen Qin,1
Dong Zhang,1Yingmin Luo,1and Hongzhu Liu4
1School of Physics and Optoelectronic Technology, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, China
2School of Physics and Electronic Technology, Liaoning Normal University, Dalian 116029, China
3New Energy Source Research Center of Shenyang Institute of Engineering, Shenyang 110136, China
4Dalian Zebon Fluorocarbon Paint Stock Co., LTD, Dalian 116036, China
(Received 3 July 2012; accepted 18 July 2012; published online 31 July 2012)
ZnO-based graphite-insulator-semiconductor (GIS) diode was fabricated on the high thermal and
electrical conductive graphite substrate, with a SiO 2thin layer employed as the insulator layer. The
current-voltage characteristics exhibit an excellent rectifying diode-like behavior with an obviousturn on voltage of 2.0 V and rather low leakage current of /C2410
/C04A. An interesting negative
capacitance phenomenon was also observed from the GIS diode. The excellent heat dissipation
performance of the GIS diode compared with conventional sapphire based devices wasexperimentally demonstrated, which was of special interest for the development of high-power
semiconductor devices with sufficient power durability.
VC2012 American Institute of Physics .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4742150 ]
ZnO has recently become one of the most attractive
materials for a wide range of solid-state optoelectronic and
electronic applications because of its distinctive optical andelectrical properties. It has been regarded as one of the most
promising candidates for the next generation of short-
wavelength light emitting diode and lasing devices.
1,2Recent
improvements in the control of background conductivity of
ZnO and demonstrations of p-type doping have intensified
interest in this material for applications in optoelectronicfield.
3,4Although great progress has been made in related
area, some difficulties remain challenging and unresolved.
For example, one particular issue for application as high-power devices is the severe heat dissipation problem, which
might significantly affect the power persistence of a high-
power device based on ZnO structure.
5Hence, an important
and key issue with the optoelectronics application of ZnO
material is the selection of substrates, since the properties of
ZnO based film and the subsequent device process are highlydependent on the employed substrates. So far, a variety of
methods have been employed to fabricate high-quality ZnO
films on various single-crystal substrates, such as GaAs, sap-phire, ZnO, ScMgAlO
4, and Si.6–10Nevertheless, the heat
dissipation performance would not be satisfied due to the rel-
atively high thermal resistance of these substrates. In addi-tion, for some special applications such as large area
foldable and high-power devices, it is necessary to transfer
crystalline ZnO films onto foreign substrates, such as flexibleplastic or metal substrates.
11,12However, it is difficult to sep-
arate the ZnO film from the above mentioned single-crystal
substrate because of strong bonding between them, thispresents one of the major limits for such applications. Our
previous study demonstrates the feasibility of growing ZnO
on graphite substrate.
13The advantage of graphite lies in its
excellent mechanical and chemical stability, especially theelectrical and thermal conductivity even higher than cop-
per,14as well as the potential advantage for transferable
optoelectronics devices since it consists of multi-layer sys-tem with nearly decoupled 2D graphene planes. Therefore,
direct growth of ZnO based semiconductor devices onto
graphite substrates would be a good solution for transferableand high-power devices with sufficient power durability.
Nevertheless, so far there has been little research on
ZnO-based devices grown on graphite substrate and its heatdissipation performance compared with those devices on
conventional substrates.
Due to the well established difficulties with device qual-
ity reliable and reproducible p-type ZnO, the fabrication of
ZnO-based homojunction devices remains challenging and
problematic.
15,16Fortunately, many of the advantages of
ZnO can also be realized by the fabrication of ZnO-based
graphite-insulator-semiconductor (GIS) devices. In this let-
ter, ZnO-based GIS diode was fabricated on the high thermaland electrical conductive graphite substrate, with a SiO
2thin
layer employed as the insulator layer. The carrier transport
properties of the GIS device were analyzed based on current-voltage (I-V) and capacitance-voltage (C-V) characteristics.
The excellent heat dissipation performance of the GIS diode
compared with conventional sapphire based devices wasexperimentally demonstrated, which was crucial for the de-
velopment of high-power semiconductor devices with suffi-
cient power durability.
A schematic diagram of the ZnO-based GIS diode struc-
ture is shown in the left top inset of Fig. 3. The fabrication
procedures for this GIS structure were as follows: (1) Priorto the deposition, the graphite substrate with the size of 10
/C210 mm
2was washed with acetone, ethanol, and deionized
water for 3 min, respectively, then blown dry with nitrogen.(2) A SiO
2thin layer (150 nm) was deposited on the graphite
substrate as the insulator layer by conventional electron
beam (E-beam) evaporation technique with quartz as thesource. (3) ZnO film (50 nm) was deposited on top of thea)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
jmbian@dlut.edu.cn.
0003-6951/2012/101(5)/052108/4/$30.00 VC2012 American Institute of Physics 101, 052108-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 101, 052108 (2012)
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128.143.1.222 On: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 22:23:36SiO 2layer by radio frequency (rf) magnetron sputtering with
a ZnO ceramic target and high purity argon (99.999 %) as the
working gas, the working pressure and sputtering power
were kept at 3.0 Pa and 120 W, respectively. Prior to deposi-tion, the target was pre-sputtered for 10 min in order to
remove any contamination. (4) For electrode contact, a thin
indium tin oxide (ITO, 50 nm) layer was deposited onto theZnO layer. (5) Then the device was annealed in nitrogen
atmosphere at 400
/C14C for 3 min to reduce contact resistance
as well as increase adhesive force.
The crystalline quality and orientation of the as-deposited
ZnO films on SiO 2/graphite were determined by x-ray diffrac-
tion (XRD) using a D/Max-2400 (CuK a1:k¼0.154056 nm).
The device temperature was measured by the infrared radia-
tion thermometer (Fluke 561). The characteristics of current-voltage (I-V) and capacitance-voltage (C-V) of the ZnO-based
GIS diodes were measured by KETHLEY semiconductor
characterization system (4200-SCS). To designate the polarityof bias on the devices, the forward/reverse bias refers to the
fact that graphite is connected to positive/negative voltage.
One of the major advantage of graphite substrate is its
excellent thermal conductivity K of /C242/C210
3W/mK at room
temperature, which is better than copper ( /C24400 W/mK).17
To investigate the heat dissipation performance of the GIS
diode, the device temperature under a certain working cur-
rent was measured as a function of duration time and the
results were shown in Fig. 1. For comparison, the conven-
tional ZnO/P-GaN heterojunction LED grown on sapphire
substrate under the same work conditions was also measured
as reference. As can be seen in Fig. 1, the temperature of the
conventional sapphire based device raised quickly beyond
35/C14C within a short time of 100 s as operated at 40 mA
(Fig. 1(b)), it increased quickly over 40/C14C within 100 s as
operated at 100 mA (Fig. 1(a)). After the rapid upstroke
region, the ascendant trend became slow and then the tem-
perature increased gradually. In contrast, for our ZnO basedGIS diodes, nearly undetectable temperature increase was
observed under the same operating conditions (Figs. 1(c)and
1(d)). Therefore, the superb thermal conduction property of
GIS structure was clearly demonstrated, which might beespecially beneficial for high power electronic applications
where severe heat dissipation problem generally present.
Although the electroluminescence (EL) under forward bias
injection current (graphite positive) from the ZnO-based GISdiode was clearly observed by naked eyes in a dark ambient,
it was not intense enough to be measured by the spectrome-
ter. No emission was observed under revise bias conditionsand in device without a SiO
2insulting layer. Similar EL per-
formance has been reported previously.18The mechanism of
forward-bias EL in ZnO and other wide-band gap semicon-
ductor (ZnSe,GaN) based metal-insulator-semiconductor
(MIS) devices is still not well understood.19Here, the weak-
ness of light emission under electrical injection was sup-
posed to be attributed to the relatively poor crystalline
quality of the as-grown ZnO-based GIS junction, i.e., a largeamount of defects were unavoidable present in the GIS junc-
tion which may act as non-radiative recombination centers.
This was in agreement with the following XRD analysis.Therefore, further studies on improving material quality as
well as the optimization of the ZnO-based GIS junction pro-
cess are required to achieve desired performance.
Fig. 2shows the representative XRD patterns of the
ZnO based GIS structure after rapid thermal annealing treat-
ments. The dominant diffraction peak at /C2426.4 correspond-
ing to the graphite substrate (002), the peaks at /C2442.4, 44.5,
54.6, 77.5 can be indexed to SiO
2(200), (008), (202), (220),
respectively, while only one diffraction peak correspondingto ZnO (002) was observed at /C2434.4. No peak from other
compounds is detected beside those of ZnO, SiO
2, and
graphite. The results indict that wurtzite polycrystalline ZnOfilms with c-axis preferred-orientation have been grown on
SiO
2/graphite. It should be noted that it is nearly impossible
to grow epitaxial and single crystal ZnO based GIS structuredirectly on amorphous graphite substrate due to the
extremely large lattice mismatch between ZnO, SiO
2, and
graphite substrate, as well as the relatively low growth tem-perature of sputtering. It was well accepted that when the
films were deposited at lower temperature, the reactive
species on the substrate surface have lower energy and poormobility which trend to deteriorate the crystalline quality of
as-grown ZnO films.
20Therefore, there are much room for
FIG. 1. The variation of devices temperature under different operating cur-
rent as a function of duration time. (a) P-GaN/ZnO LED at 100 mA; (b)P-GaN/ZnO LED at 40 mA; (c) GIS diode at 100 mA; and (d) GIS diode at
40 mA.
FIG. 2. The representative XRD patterns of the ZnO based GIS structure af-ter rapid thermal annealing treatments.052108-2 Zhang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 101, 052108 (2012)
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128.143.1.222 On: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 22:23:36the improvement of crystalline quality of ZnO based GIS
structure by optimizing the growth process and annealing
treatments.
The I-V characteristic of the ZnO-based GIS diode was
shown in Fig. 3. According to the I-V curve in Fig. 3, the
ZnO-based GIS diode shows an excellent rectifying diode-
like behavior with a turn on voltage near 2.0 V and reversebreakdown voltage higher than 9 V. The good ohmic contact
behavior between ITO electrode and the ZnO layer can be
demonstrated by the perfect I-V linear dependence as shown
in the right bottom inset of Fig. 3, which confirms that the
rectification behavior arises from the ZnO-based GIS dioderather than the ZnO/ITO contacts. In addition, the current
rectification ratio reached /C241100 at the bias voltages of
68.0 V with a rather low leakage current of /C2410
/C04Aw a s
observed under a reverse bias, which may result from defects
produced at the interface between SiO 2insulating layer and
ZnO film due to a large difference in lattice constant andstructure.
21,22It should be noted that the deviation from that
of the ideal MIS junction suggests that there might be several
current transportation mechanisms in the ZnO-based GISjunction. Moreover, the I-V characteristic of the ZnO-based
GIS junction was highly dependent on the thickness of SiO
2
insulating layer with the optimized thickness of 150 nm.23
To further investigate the carrier transport properties of
the fabricated ZnO-based GIS junction. The C-V characteris-
tics were measured in a wide range of frequency at roomtemperature, and the typical C-V characteristics of the ZnO-
based GIS diodes were shown in Fig. 4. As shown in
Figs. 4(a)–4(d), the present ZnO-based GIS diodes exhibit a
roughly symmetric C-V characteristics under positive and
negative biases in the measured frequency range, i.e., a re-
markable rise of the value of capacitance with the increasingvoltage under both positive and negative biases within a low
voltage range and then stabilized at a certain capacitance.
Moreover, the values of the stabilized capacitance show anobvious increase with the measured frequency from 1 KHz
to 10 MHz. This behavior was typical for MIS structures and
the mechanism has been well elucidated.
24It should be notedhere that an interesting negative capacitance (NC) phenom-
enon (i.e., negative values of the capacitance versus fre-quency) was observed from our ZnO-based GIS diode
structure. Similar NC phenomena have been previously
reported on a variety of devices based on crystalline or amor-phous inorganic semiconductors.
25,26Though numerous
explanations for NC have been presented that involved mi-
nority carrier flow, interface states, slow transient time ofinjected carriers, charge trapping, or space charge effect, the
exact mechanism still remains an open issue.
27,28The charge
and discharge process was even more complex for the GISdiode discussed here due to the multiple inter-grain scatter-
ing by the metal islands embedded in the SiO
2layer.29Thus,
it presently remains a challenge for us. The NC is tentativelyattributed to the nonradiative recombination of injected car-
riers into the trap levels, or to the capture-emission of
injected carriers between multilevels. We can write the fre-quency xdependent capacitance according to the following
formula:
24
CðxÞ¼C0þ1
xdVð1
0/C0ddjðtÞ
dt/C20/C21
sinxtdt : (1)
Here, C 0is the geometric capacitance, and dj(t) is the relaxa-
tion component, which results from the electron transport,
trapping, impact ionization, and other physical processes,
versus an applied small voltage variation dV(t). C( x) can be
negative when the function /C0ddj(t)/dt is negative and monot-
onically increasing to zero, i.e., NC effect can be obtained
when the time-derivative of the inertial current is positive-valued or nonmonotonic with time. For high frequency elec-
tronic and optoelectronic applications involving the GIS
diode, the NC effect would be especially attractive due to itsdecreasing response time.
24
In conclusion, a high-quality ZnO-based GIS diode was
fabricated. The excellent heat dissipation performance of theGIS diode compared with conventional sapphire based devi-
ces was experimentally demonstrated, indicating the GIS
structure reported here would be of special interest for thedevelopment of high-power semiconductor devices with suf-
ficient power durability. This GIS structure exhibits an excel-
lent rectifying diode-like behavior with rather low leakage
FIG. 4. The typical C-V characteristics of the ZnO-based GIS diodes meas-
ured under various frequency: (a)1 KHz; (b)100 KHZ; (c)1 MHZ; and (d)
10 MHz.
FIG. 3. I-V characteristic of the ZnO-based GIS diode illustrating an excel-lent rectifying diode-like behavior. The left top inset shows the schematicdiagram of the ZnO-based GIS diode. The right bottom inset shows the I-V
characteristics of ITO contact to ZnO film.052108-3 Zhang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 101, 052108 (2012)
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128.143.1.222 On: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 22:23:36current of /C2410/C04A. An interesting NC phenomenon was also
observed from the GIS diode. In addition, the successful fab-
rication of ZnO-based GIS diode on graphite substrate offers
the significant opportunity to be readily transferred onto anyrigid or flexible foreign substrates, since the graphite sub-
strates consist of weakly bonded layer structure.
This work was supported by SRF for ROCS, SEM;
the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Univer-
sities (DUT12ZD(G)01); Natural Science Foundation ofChina (11004092); and Science Found of Dalian
(No.2011J21DW013).
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1.4899059.pdf | Rapid microfluidic solid-phase extraction system for hyper-methylated DNA enrichment
and epigenetic analysis
Arpita De, Wouter Sparreboom, Albert van den Berg, and Edwin T. Carlen
Citation: Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4899059
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4899059
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/bmf/8/5?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29Rapid microfluidic solid-phase extraction system for
hyper-methylated DNA enrichment and epigenetic analysis
Arpita De,1,a),b)Wouter Sparreboom,1Albert van den Berg,1
and Edwin T. Carlen1,2,a)
1BIOS Lab on a Chip Group, MESA þInstitute for Nanotechnology, University of Twente,
Enschede 7522NH, The Netherlands
2Graduate School of Pure and Applied Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba,
Ibaraki 305-8571, Japan
(Received 28 July 2014; accepted 10 October 2014; published online 21 October 2014)
Genetic sequence and hyper-methylation profile information from the promoter
regions of tumor suppressor genes are important for cancer disease investigation.
Since hyper-methylated DNA (hm-DNA) is typically present in ultra-low concen-trations in biological samples, such as stool, urine, and saliva, sample enrichment
and amplification is typically required before detection. We present a rapid micro-
fluidic solid phase extraction ( lSPE) system for the capture and elution of low con-
centrations of hm-DNA ( /C201n gm l
/C01), based on a protein-DNA capture surface,
into small volumes using a passive microfluidic lab-on-a-chip platform. All assay
steps have been qualitatively characterized using a real-time surface plasmon reso-nance (SPR) biosensor, and quantitatively characterized using fluorescence spec-
troscopy. The hm-DNA capture/elution process requires less than 5 min with an
efficiency of 71% using a 25 ll elution volume and 92% efficiency using a 100 ll
elution volume.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4899059 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
The emerging field of epigenetics is primarily concerned with DNA modifications, such as
DNA methylation, post-translational modifications of histone proteins, and chromatin remodel-ing, amongst others, without an actual change in the DNA sequence.
1Epigenetic assays are
becoming increasingly important due to their potential for the early diagnosis of cancer, and
new analysis tools have already increased the number of candidate oncogenes by the specific
recognition of hyper-methylation patterns in the promoter regions of tumor suppressor genes.2
In particular high-throughput, small volume sample processing and analysis system will be im-
portant, which are ideally realized in microfluidic lab-on-a-chip (LOC) platforms. In particular,
hyper-methylated DNA (hm-DNA) is characterized as the abnormal methylation of cystosine
residues in CpG dinucleotides of normally non-methylated CpG islands in promotor sequences,and is associated with the transcriptional inactivation of tumor suppressor genes, thus it is crit-
ically important for epigenentic based assays.
3However, the amount of hm-DNA in typical
samples is very small, e.g., 160 pg hm-DNA was recovered from human-genomic DNA usingmethyl-binding domain (MBD) protein enrichment and numerous PCR cycles,
4,5and hm-DNA
has been reported to be present in concentrations less than 6 pM in 1 ml of homogenized stool.6
Therefore, hm-DNA enrichment is a necessary sample processing step for the analysis of bio-
logical samples such as stool, urine, saliva.7–9Small volume LOC systems are well suited for
processing small sample volumes, which is based on sample manipulation in microfluidic
a)Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic addresses: arpita.de@wsi.tum.de and
ecarlen@ims.tsukuba.ac.jp
b)Present address: Department of Molecular Electronics and Walter Schottky Institute, Technical University Munich,Germany.
1932-1058/2014/8(5)/054119/11/$30.00
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 8, 054119-1BIOMICROFLUIDICS 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29channels. LOC systems have been previously applied to clinical and molecular biology assays,
where assay steps can be combined into a single miniaturized analytical system.10Although
microfluidic LOC systems have been applied extensively to DNA extraction, to the best of our
knowledge they have not been previously reported for hm-DNA extraction and enrichment.
Conventional DNA extraction from silica-based resins have been reported to have extrac-
tion efficiencies around 70%–80%,11and microfluidic solid phase extraction ( lSPE) systems
have been reported to have extraction efficiencies around 40%–50% from genomic sam-
ples.12–15There have been many reports of lSPE DNA extraction.12–27Previous reports
describe DNA lSPE systems with integrated polymerase chain reaction21,22and electrophoretic
separation.23–25Furthermore, DNA lSPE has been applied to forensics, where samples are typi-
cally very dilute.26,27Recently, a hm-DNA analysis platform based on a temperature gradient
microfluidic bisulfite assay was reported.28MBD protein-based hm-DNA extraction is particu-
larly promising as it facilitates both enrichment and purification of hm-DNA.6,28–30
In this article, we present a passive hm-DNA lSPE system, where the captured hm-DNA
is eluted into a reduced sample volume, thus resulting in enrichment and purification. ThelSPE system is comprised of a high surface area microfluidic chip that is functionalized with
MBD proteins that serve as the capture agents. The capture and elution of hm-DNA from the
MBD surfaces is based on modifying the electrostatic effects of binding through the variationof the ionic strength of the supporting buffer solution. The lSPE system is intended to process
samples with low hm-DNA concentrations, in contrast to conventional hm-DNA enrichment
systems that work best with more concentrated samples. The lSPE system is demonstrated with
small hm-DNA concentrations ( <1n gm l
/C01), which results in an enrichment factor of 28 /C2
using a small 25 ll elution volume. The main advantages of the lSPE system compared to the
conventional hm-DNA enrichment methods include: a small volume sample enrichment step,simple operation with a reduced number processing steps, and potential for high throughput
sample analysis. The details of the microfluidic chip fabrication, surface functionalization
schemes, and assay capture and elution characterization protocols are presented.
II. EXPERIMENTAL
A. Materials and chemicals
Amine functional monolayers are covalently attached to silicon dioxide (SiO 2) surfaces
using 3-amino propyl trimethoxy alkyl silane (APTES, Sigma Aldrich). Biotinylated surfaces
are formed using a 10 mM biotin N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (NHS) (Thermo Scientific) in aphosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution. The MBD-Biotin protein (MBD2b protein conjugated
to biotin, MethylMiner
TMKit, Life Technologies) is supplied in 0.5 mg ml/C01concentration and
is diluted to 35 lgm l/C01for further use. Streptavidin (SA) (Life Technologies) is used for
attachment to the biotinylated surfaces. The hm-DNA sample used for capture is 80 bp ds-DNA
with eight symmetric 5-methyl-CpG islands, with sequence (methylated CpG dinucleotides are
in bold): 50-GCTATACAG GG MGTGTTAA MGATATAA MGTTTTGGCT MGACCAGTGAC
MGGACTCT MGTTCCTACCAG MGCAAMGCCCCC-30and 30-CGATATGTCCC GMACAA
TTGMTATATT GMAAAACCGA GMTGGTCACTG GMCTGAGA GMAAGGA TGGTGGTC
GMGTTGMGGGGG-50(Eurogentec).31The non-hm DNA used as control is identical in
sequence to the hm-DNA without the methylated cytosines. The non-hm-DNA sequence is as
follows (non-methylated CpG dinucleotides are in bold): 50-GGCC CGGCGGTCGCCACACCA
ATTCGTTACTCAGGGA CGTTACCA CGGCTACTAT CGTCGCAATTCAGTCAGGGATCT
CG–30and 30-CCGG GCCGCCAGCGGTGTGGTT AA GCAATGAGTCCCT GCAATGGT GC
CGATGATA GCAGCGTTAAGTCAGTCCCTAGA GC–50(Eurogentec).31The 160 mM NaCl
incubation and wash buffers, MBD-Biotin proteins, and elution buffer (2 M NaCl) were useddirectly from the Methyl Miner Kit.
31Fluorescence imaging was done using two different fluo-
rescent dyes: Alexa Flour 488 (AF488) conjugated directly to SA (SA-AF488) (Streptavidin,
Alexa Fluor 488 conjugate, Life Technologies), and the PicoGreen intercalating dye (Quant-iTTM
Technology, Life Technologies). The DNA and MBD-Biotin concentrations were measured
prior to each experiment using a spectrophotometer (Nanodrop 2000c, Thermo Scientific). The054119-2 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29surface plasmon resonance (SPR) imaging measurements were done using thiolated reagents
conjugated to gold-coated sensor disks (SPRchipTM, GWC Technologies). 11-mercapto-undecyl-
amine (MUAM, Dojindo Molecular Technologies, Inc.) was used to form amine functionalmonolayers on the SPR sensor disk surfaces.
B. Surface functionalization
The MBD-biotin protein conjugation to SiO 2surfaces is shown in Scheme 1. Following
immersion in a 2% APTES solution, the glass-silicon chip was washed with ethanol and heated
at 120/C14C for 15 min prior to further processing steps. The biotinylated surface was subsequently
exposed to a 1 lM SA solution. The MBD-biotin protein is then attached to the available SA
sites on the surface.
All surface functionalization steps were performed for 30 min by first flowing the sample in
the microchannel and then stopping the flow and allowing incubation for 30 min. Fluorescenceimaging with the AF488 dye is used to assess the surface coverage of the MBD-biotin function-
alization in the microchannels, as shown in Figure 1, which demonstrates the attachment of the
MBD protein to the biotinylated surface.
SCHEME 1. Surface functionalization of MBD-biotin proteins to the SiO 2surface of the microchannel.
FIG. 1. Fluorescence image (AF488) of MBD-biotin attachment to the SiO 2surface of the microfluidic channel. Inset
shows a magnified view of the microfluidic channel.054119-3 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29C. Capture assay protocol and quantification
Following the preparation of the surface with MBD-biotin capture proteins, the microfluidic
chip was used to extract hm-DNA from the sample solutions. An 80 bp non-hm-DNA, ds-
DNA, is used as a control. Briefly, the hm-DNA in incubation/wash buffer is loaded into themicrofluidic chip by flowing a 1 ml load volume through the microfluidic chip for 1 hr with a
flow rate of Q¼18llm i n
/C01(applied pressure: DP¼10 kPa). The microfluidic channels are
then immediately washed with a 100 ll wash buffer, followed by a wash step with a 1 ml elu-
tion buffer with a flow rate of Q¼200llm i n/C01(DP¼100 kPa). For the small enrichment vol-
ume of 25 ll, the capture and elution flow rates are Q¼18llm i n/C01. The capture and elution
experiments were done using different DNA concentrations. The eluted DNA was de-saltedwith ethanol precipitation and re-suspended in 1 ml wash buffer and the concentration was
quantified with a fluorescent assay (PicoGreen intercalating dye) and spectrometer (Perkin
Elmer). A calibration curve was created and used for quantification of the capture/elution assay(Fig. S3, supplementary material).
35Using the calibration curve, the output hm-DNA concentra-
tion from the MBD-chip was quantified by dilution into a 2 ml volume.
D. Real-time assay monitoring
SPR imaging (SPRimagerVRII, GWC Technologies) is used to qualitatively assess to validate
the overall capture and elution assay protocol, as well as to assess the specificity of the MBD
protein for hm-DNA compared to non-hm-DNA. Prior to any surface functionalization, the SPRchips were cleaned in a fresh 3:7 piranha solution (H
2SO4:H2O2) for 3 min, and subsequently
incubated in a 5 mM ethanolic MUAM solution overnight (12 h) to form the MUAM monolayer
on the gold surface. The MUAM treated SPR sensor disks were then treated with NHS for30 min in 1 /C2PBS buffer pH 7.4, followed by incubation with 1 lM SA, which is used to con-
jugate the MBD-biotin proteins to the SPR sensor disk surface. Scheme 2shows the complete
surface functionalization to the SPR sensor disk surface.
The formation of the MUAM-biotin-SA-biotin-MBD capture surface is done using a con-
ventional procedure. Since the MBD-biotin protein availability is limited, the surface prepara-
tion and assay steps were performed in a microchannel to reduce reagent consumption.
E. Microfluidic chip design
The capture of target hm-DNA from solution requires transport from the flow stream to the
MDB protein capture moieties tethered to the surfaces of the microfluidic channels. Pressuredriven fluid transport in microfluidic channels is laminar with a parabolic velocity profile across
the channel cross-section and transport by diffusion is the dominant mechanism at the micro-
channel surfaces.
32Due to the parabolic velocity flow profile, the majority of the hm-DNA in
the sample flow in the microchannel is not utilized because the interaction occurs only at the
channel surfaces, where the flow velocity is small, and therefore, a balance of the diffusion-con-
vection-reaction regimes is required. There are different ways to break the boundary condition
SCHEME 2. Surface functionalization of MBD-biotin proteins on Au SPR sensor disks.054119-4 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29of static flow on the microchannel walls, such as microparticles,19,20sol-gels,11,19and pillar
structures.12,13In this article, we use vertical pillar structures integrated into parallel microchan-
nels to achieve the large capture surface area, as shown in Figure 2. The microfluidic lSPE sys-
tem is implemented with 12 parallel microchannels, each with length Lc¼8.8 mm, width
Wc¼0.25 mm, and height hc¼0.05 mm; each microchannel is packed with a two-dimensional
array of vertical pillars. Square vertical pillars, 10 lm on a side, and spaced 10 lm apart, are
integrated into the microfluidic channel. The pillar design is based on the need for high pillar
density, for large surface area, while ensuring that the hydrodynamic resistance to fluid flow is
not too large, which would require large applied pressures to achieve the desired flow rates forthe assay. A three-dimensional finite element model was constructed and used to simulate
(Multiphysics, Comsol, Inc.) the flow velocity in microchannels with different pillar orienta-
tions. A rotated pillar design was determined to facilitate a more efficient capture and elutionprocess (Fig. S1, supplementary material).
35
F. Microfluidic chip fabrication
The microfluidic chip is comprised of a bonded glass-silicon structure that is implemented
using conventional micromachining and anodic bonding microfabrication methods. The silicon
layer is first processed where a 50 lm deep channel was first etched in a silicon substrate using
deep reactive ion etching (AMS100-SE ICP, Adixen) to form the high aspect ratio pillar struc-tures using a patterned photoresist layer (OIR 907-17, Arch Chemicals, Inc.). Following the
cleaning step, a 300 nm thick SiO
2layer was reactively grown (1000/C14C) on the silicon sub-
strate. The thickness of the SiO 2layer is sufficient to avoid quenching of the fluorescent dyes.
The inlet and outlet holes in the glass substrate are next microfabricated. A 1.1 mm thick glass
wafer (Borofloat 33, Schott) is covered with a polymer foil (BF410, Ordyl) and subsequently
exposed to UV light (EVG-620, EV Group) through a lithography mask to form the maskinglayer for the inlet and outlet holes. The exposed foil is then developed in a bicarbonate solution
to form the inlet and outlet hole opening in the polymer foil. The exposed glass in the patterned
mask is then removed using powder-blasting (29 lm diameter alumina particles), thus forming
the through-wafer inlet and outlet ports. The remaining polymer foil is afterwards removed by
sonication in deionized water. The silicon and glass wafers are aligned and anodically bonded
(EV-501, EV Group). The bonded glass-silicon wafer is finally diced into 10 /C220 mm
2pieces
(DAD-321, Wafer dicing saw, Disco Hi-Tec). The entire fabrication process for the glass-
silicon MBD capture chip is shown in Figure S2 (supplementary material).35Figure 3shows
images of the microfabricated chips. Figure 3(a) shows a scanning electron micrograph (SEM)
image of the microchannel chip design etched in the silicon substrate. The inset in Figure 3(a)
shows a single pillar with the scalloped pillar sidewall due to etch and passivation cycles of the
Bosch etching process. Figure 3(b) shows an optical image of representative microfabricated
glass-silicon chip with inlet and outlet holes aligned to the microchannels, which is used for
sample inlet and waste outlet, respectively. Although we have used a silicon-glass microchip
FIG. 2. Schematic diagram of the microchannels of the lSPE LOC system.054119-5 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29structure, which can be conveniently implemented in our research group, the entire microfluidic
chip can be manufactured in low cost plastic, such as cyclic olefin copolymer (COC) or cyclic
olefin polymer (COP), using injection molding since all feature sizes are 10 lm and greater.
G. Assay test system
The diced chips are clamped into a custom-made chip holder. Poly-ether-ketone tubing
(PEEK tubing, Upchurch Scientific) with 150 lm inside diameter is connected to the microflui-
dic chip with standard fittings (Nanoport, Upchurch Scientific). The sample fluids were trans-
ported through the PEEK tubing and microfluidic chip assembly using hydrostatic pressurefrom a regulated pressure source and controller (MFCS-8C, Fluigent). The capture of hm-DNA
by the MBD proteins is performed by flowing 1 ml of hm-DNA (concentration <1n gm l
/C01)
through the microchannel for 1 h (applied pressure drop: DP¼10 kPa), and followed by wash-
ing and elution. The elution step is performed at a higher flow rate Q¼200ll min/C01
(DP¼100 kPa) using a 1 ml elution volume. This was used for concentrations of DNA higher
than 1 ng ml/C01. For smaller enrichment volumes of 25 ll, both capture and elution flow rate is
Q¼18llm i n/C01(DP¼10 kPa). A small enrichment volume was tested for concentrations of
hm-DNA less than 1 ng ml/C01. Figure 4shows the MBD microchip assay test system.
FIG. 4. Experimental setup for the MBD capture/elution microfluidic chip testing. (a) Complete test system. (b)
Microfluidic chip mounted in chip holder.
FIG. 3. Microfabricated LOC system. (a) SEM image of pillar array etched in the silicon substrate. (b) Optical image of
glass-silicon bonded chips with inlet and outlet holes.054119-6 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A. Real-time MBD assay monitoring
Each step of the MUAM-biotin-SA-biotin-MBD protein capture layer formation was moni-
tored using real-time SPR measurements, and the major steps are depicted in Figure 5. The
MBD-biotin protein treated SPR sensor disks are exposed to the hm-DNA and non-hm-DNA
samples in the wash buffer and then subsequently treated with the elution protocol with the elu-tion buffer (2 M NaCl). All sample handling, hm-DNA incubation, and washing steps are done
in 1/C2wash buffer (160 mM NaCl) from the MethylMiner
TMKit, Life Technologies.
The real-time capture and elution sequences are demonstrated using the SPR experiments,
shown in Figures 6and7. The real-time sensorgram trace is first recorded and demonstrates the
conjugation of each component of the MUAM-biotin-SA-biotin-MBD complex.
In Figure 6(a), the MUAM treated gold SPR sensor disks are biotinylated with Biotin-
NHS. Starting with a biotinylated gold surface, SA is introduced to the surface at t¼180 s,
which saturates in about 150 s. The MBD protein is injected at t¼500 s and washed with buffer
att¼625 s. The baseline does not completely return to the starting level, as there is some bind-
ing of the MBD-biotin complex on the SA layer. The MBD protein is diluted from the com-
mercial stock, and is not prepared by reconstituting dry protein with the same buffer used for
SA and hm-DNA, which results in a bulk refractive index shift. The hm-DNA injection to theMBD protein capture surface starts at t¼800 s, thus giving rise to the association binding
curve, and subsequently exhibits no dissociation when washed with buffer at t¼900 s. The top
left inset in Figure 6(a) shows the response of a SPR sensor surface not treated with MBD pro-
teins, and thus shows no binding response to the hm-DNA sample injection. Figure 6(b) shows
the response of the capture surface to the injection of non-hm-DNA samples (solid black trace)
and to bare gold surfaces (solid red trace). Biotin-SA binding is very strong and saturates thesurface, as observed during the washing step at t¼350 s (solid black trace). The non-hm-DNA
is injected on a MBD surface at t¼1150 s and most of the non-hm-DNA is removed with the
FIG. 5. hm-DNA capture and elution protocol using a MBD capture surface.
FIG. 6. Real-time SPR sensorgrams. (a) Monitoring the biotin-SA/MBD-biotin complex conjugation and subsequent bind-
ing of hm-DNA. (b) Selectivity of non-hm-DNA that is minimally hybridized with the MBD moiety. The measured signals
are reported in the instrument RU.054119-7 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29wash buffer injection at t¼1300 s, however, the response indicates a larger than expected sig-
nal following the wash step and requires further investigation to determine if this is a function
of the MBD protein or the gold surface. A bare gold surface, which is not biotinylated, does
not bind any target, as shown in the red trace.
Figure 7shows the capture and elution process of hm-DNA by the MUAM-biotin-SA-
MBD surface during the assay protocol. Figure 7(a) shows the sensor response during the prep-
aration of the gold surface with the MBD-biotin protein. In Figure 7(b), the elution process is
demonstrated with a surface prepared with the MBD protein. The hm-DNA sample prepared in
1/C2wash buffer is injected at t¼200 s, followed by a wash step at t¼380 s. It is important to
note that the starting response in Fig. 7(b) is lower than that shown in Fig. 6(a), which is due
to baseline shift of the SPR instrument between different experiments. Despite this difference
in baseline signal, the hm-DNA binding response in Fig. 7(b) at t¼200 s is of similar magni-
tude in response units (RUs) to the binding response of hm-DNA in Fig. 6(a) at t¼800 s.
There is a small amount of dissociation in the wash buffer injected at t¼380 s, followed by the
elution buffer injection at t ¼580 s, where the baseline returns to the pre-injection response
level after t ¼700 s, thus confirming that captured hm-DNA has been removed. The elution pro-
cess produces a large bulk refractive index change response due to the difference in the compo-
sition of the elution buffer and wash buffer.
B. MBD microfluidic chip assay
Table Ilists the capture/elution results quantified using the complete assay protocol and flu-
orescence spectroscopy. The sample flow rate during the capture process is 18 ll min/C01. A cali-
bration plot of the fluorescence intensity as a function of hm-DNA concentrations was meas-
ured and used for all quantification experiments (Fig S3, supplementary material).35For input
concentrations less than 1 ng ml/C01, the capture/elution assay performs with an efficiency of 89%
(Table S1, supplementary material).35The surface appears to saturate with concentrations above
100 ng ml/C01.
Considering that the capture surface area is approximately 1.7 cm2, the protein attachment
density is approximately 3 /C21010MBD-biotin molecules per cm2(assuming 100% capture
TABLE I. Measured average input and output capture/elution concentrations from the hm-DNA capture/elution assay with
1 ml elution volume ( n¼3).
Input concentration (ng ml/C01) Output concentration (ng ml/C01)
1 0.9 60.01
123 4.0 60.14
200 3.8 60.14
FIG. 7. Real-time SPR sensorgrams. (a) MBD protein attachment step. (b) hm-DNA capture and elution steps. The meas-
ured signals are recorded in the instrument RU.054119-8 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29efficiency), which is reasonable considering the mass of the MBD protein.33The assay results
show a linear capture/elution relationship for concentrations less than 1 ng ml/C01(Figure 8).
Table IIlists a summary of the small volume hm-DNA elution results using the same assay
with 1 ng ml/C01hm-DNA concentration. We used three different elution volumes, 25 ll, 50 ll,
and 100 ll, followed by ethanol precipitation and quantification with the fluorescence assay.
For elution volumes larger than 100 ll, the elution efficiency is improved, at the expense
of a reduced enrichment factor. The elution efficiency is 71% using an elution volume of 25 ll.
A5 0 ll elution volume resulted in an increased efficiency of 90%, and increased only margin-
ally to 92% using a 100 ll elution volume. A 28 /C2enrichment of input hm-DNA with 1 ng ml/C01
sample concentration was obtained for the lowest elution volume of 25 ll. The elution effi-
ciency for the 100 ll elution volume is 92%, which is higher than the large volume 1 ml elution
experiments (Table I). The large elution volume of 1 ml during post processing with ethanol
precipitation could be the reason for loss of sample. MBD proteins can discriminate hm-DNA
from non-hm-DNA, however, there is a larger than expected amount of non-specific attachmentof the non-hm-DNA to the MBD modified surface, as previously confirmed qualitatively with
SPR measurements (Figure 6). A control experiment with 1 ng ml
/C01non-hm-DNA, in a 200 ll
elution volume, resulted in a 32% capture efficiency, which is similar to the non-specific attach-ment shown in the SPR results (Figure 6(b)). We are not certain if this higher than expected
level of non-specific attachment of non-hm-DNA to the MDB surface is due to the MBD pro-
tein or the surface as no blocking layers were used in either experiment, and more investigationis required to determine the cause of the non-specific adsorption, which will improve the per-
formance of the assay. The efficiency was calculated as a ratio of the output concentration in
the small volume eluent to the input concentration. Since the capture and elution of hm-DNAon MBD surfaces is based on modifying electrostatic binding effects by varying the ionic
strength of the supporting buffer solution, the use of poly-MBD proteins may decrease the non-
specific binding of non-hm-DNA.
34The hm-DNA lSPE system can be further miniaturized and
optimized for integration with down-stream amplification or a detection chamber. The smallest
volume used for elution, i.e., 25 ll, is limited by the ability to effectively reconstitute the hm-
DNA into the elution buffer and can be further optimized by improving the target dissociationfrom the capture surface. We estimate the reproducibility of the protocol to be about 80%,
which can be further improved with optimization to each of the protocol steps. Regardless, this
FIG. 8. hm-DNA capture and elution profile from MBD chip.
TABLE II. Summary of measurements from capture-elution MBD-chip-hm-DNA assay ( n¼3).
hm-DNA (ng ml/C01) Elution vol. ( ll) Eluted hm-DNA (ng ml/C01) Efficiency %
12 5 2 8 627 1
15 0 1 8 659 0
1 100 9 629 2054119-9 De et al. Biomicrofluidics 8, 054119 (2014)
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216.165.95.69 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 19:38:29first report of a hm-DNA lSPE system is promising for application in an analytical platform
that combines an integrated system for hm-DNA purification, enrichment and subsequent
detection
IV. CONCLUSIONS
A small volume lSPE system has been presented that is designed for capturing low hm-
DNA concentrations ( <1n gm l/C01). The elution into a small buffer volume provides sample
enrichment and purification. All assay steps have been qualitatively characterized using a real-
time surface plasmon resonance imaging biosensor, and quantitatively characterized using cali-brated fluorescence spectroscopy. The lSPE system performs the capture-elution process with
an efficiency greater than 90%, which is comparable to the efficiency of conventional large vol-
ume extraction kits, such as Epimark (New England Biolabs), Methyl Collector Ultra (ActiveMotif), and Methyl Miner (Life Technologies). The commercially available hm-DNA enrich-
ment kits use MBD-protein based capture of hm-DNA, where the MBD protein is functional-
ized onto paramagnetic beads. Target hm-DNA capture and elution efficiencies are higher than95% through repeated wash-elution cycles in the commercial kits. The lSPE system has been
characterized with a 80-bp ds-hm-DNA and a 28 /C2enrichment factor was obtained using a
25ll elution volume. In principle, we can reach an enrichment factor near 100 /C2with a 5 ll elu-
tion volume, which requires further optimization of the elution protocol. The advantages of the
lSPE system compared to the conventional hm-DNA enrichment methods include (1) small
volume sample enrichment step, (2) simple operation and a reduction of sample handling steps,which facilitates automation, and (3) a clear path to high throughput sample analysis.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a private cancer research foundation in the Netherlands, and
NanoNextNL, a nanotechnology consortium with 130 partners that is funded by the Government ofthe Netherlands. The authors thank Lennert de Vreede, Johan Bomer, Jan van Nieuwkasteele, and
the MESA þNanolab staff for helpful comments with device processing, and Mark Smithers for
assistance with SEM imaging.
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1.4898095.pdf | Terahertz magnetic modulator based on magnetically clustered nanoparticles
Mostafa Shalaby, Marco Peccianti, Yavuz Ozturk, Ibraheem Al-Naib, Christoph P. Hauri, and Roberto Morandotti
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 151108 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4898095
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4898095
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/15?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.89.98.137 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:30:58Terahertz magnetic modulator based on magnetically clustered
nanoparticles
Mostafa Shalaby,1,2,a)Marco Peccianti,3Y avuz Ozturk,1Ibraheem Al-Naib,1,b)
Christoph P . Hauri,2,4and Roberto Morandotti1,a)
1INRS-EMT, Varennes, Quebec J3X 1S2, Canada
2SwissFEL, Paul Scherrer Institute, 5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland
3Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Sussex, Pevensey Building II, 3A8,
Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QH, United Kingdom
4Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
(Received 17 September 2014; accepted 2 October 2014; published online 15 October 2014)
Random orientation of liquid-suspended magnetic nanoparticles (Ferrofluids) gives rise to a zero
net magnetic orientation. An external magnetic field tends to align these nanoparticles into clusters,
leading to a strong linear dichroism on a propagating wave. Using 10 nm-sized Fe 3O4, we experi-
mentally realize a polarization-sensitive magnetic modulator operating at terahertz wavelengths.We reached a modulation depth of 66% using a field as low as 35 mT. The proposed concept offers
a solution towards fundamental terahertz magnetic modulators.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4898095 ]
Terahertz (THz) signal processing recently rose to promi-
nence with numerous potential applications. On the one side,the increasing demand for high bandwidth and data rate in
sub-THz wireless communication systems keeps pushing up
the frequency limit, reaching the edge of the THz band.
1On
the other hand, great efforts are dedicated to extend the well-
established infrared materials and spectroscopic techniques to
the THz regime. Terahertz is capable of superior matter com-position discrimination due to the inherently compound-
dependent fingerprints exhibited in this bandwidth.
2–8
Although sources9–13and detectors14have evolved rap-
idly over the past years, THz radiation is still difficult to
manipulate mainly because of the lack of both suitable mate-
rials and efficient modulation (control) techniques. Terahertzmodulation has been demonstrated by optical,
15–20elec-
tronic,21–23and thermal24,25means. Those techniques differ
in bandwidth, complexity, flexibility, and modulation depth,hence preferences are usually dictated by application con-
straints. For instance, optical beams can dramatically change
the electric current density in a semiconductor and modulatea propagating THz pulse in fractions of a picosecond, but
this technique depends on the availability of intense ultra-
short femtosecond laser sources. On the other hand, THzmodulation through a VO
2film can be triggered just heating
up the sample with a small electric current flowing in a con-
ducting wire. However, the material response is limited tothe scale of tens of a millisecond.
Magnetic fields are an important tool to change the ma-
terial response against a propagating electromagnetic wave,but their effect is generally weak.
26Efficient modulation,
thus, requires a significant propagation length, which is pre-
vented by the associated losses (generally increasing withfrequency). Hence, a practical THz magnetic modulator has
not been realized so far.In this paper, we use liquid-suspended magnetic nano-
particles (i.e., a Ferrofluid
27) to achieve an efficient modula-
tion of short THz pulses using very low magnetic fields. A
modulation depth as high as 66% is shown using a magnetic
field as low as 35 mT. The concept proposed here may openinteresting alternatives and perhaps a paradigm for future
THz modulation devices and systems.
Our sample consists of a Ferrofluid-filled 10 mm-long
cuvette. Such Ferrofluid is commercially available and con-
sists of 10 nm-sized Fe
3O4particles suspended in a carrier
liquid. The nanoparticles are coated with a stabilizing surfac-tant providing electrostatic resistance against agglomeration,
in turn preserving their free movement as non-interacting
particles. This property makes them sensitive to small (milli-Tesla level) magnetic fields. A non-uniform (spatially vary-
ing) magnetic field can impose a strong force on those nano-
particles that not only rotate them but can also sweep themalong the field gradient. On the contrary, uniform fields tend
to simply align the nanoparticles along the field direction.
Typically, two kinds of contributions to the magneticmoment reorientation can be recognized here: Brown and
Neel type contributions. While the former tends to physically
rotate the particles towards the field direction, the latter justrotates the magnetic moments without any physical rota-
tion.
28The otherwise randomly oriented (Fig. 1(a)) particles
appear to be organized in the form of clusters in the directionof the field lines (Figs. 1(b)and1(c)).
Cluster formation is a basic mechanism responsible for
many of the unique properties Ferrofluids exhibit.
29For
example, if the particles get aligned along the direction of
the wave propagation, this builds up net magnetization (M)
in the same direction, which, in turn, leads to a difference inthe propagation velocity of the wave circular eigenmodes
and thus in the rotation of the plane of polarization (Faraday
rotation).
30,31An in-plane magnetic field induces a direc-
tional absorption (linear dichroism) associated to a propagat-
ing electromagnetic wave. This interesting phenomenon has
exciting consequences. For example, following oura)most.shalaby@gmail.com and morandotti@emt.inrs.ca
b)Present address: Department of Physics, Engineering Physics and
Astronomy, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada.
0003-6951/2014/105(15)/151108/4/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 151108-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 151108 (2014)
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130.89.98.137 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:30:58measurements of the tunable in-plane magnetic properties of
Ferrofluids at THz frequencies,32Chen et al. , measured the
H-induced tunability of the in-plane real refractive index.33
Here, we show that it is possible to magnetically control the
THz absorption to modulate broadband THz pulses.
Magnetic particle alignment and cluster formation
induce a variation in the absorption coefficient Da¼a(0)
–a(H).a(H) and a(0) are the absorption coefficients in the
presence and absence of an external magnetic field H,
respectively. Dais strongly dependent on the angle between
the cluster axis (external magnetic field direction) and the
THz electric polarization. Two main absorption mechanisms
can be responsible for the attenuation:34(a) Absorption by
the propagating field induced imaginary magnetic polariza-
tion (Eddy currents losses), which is ignored here because of
the low macroscopic conductivity among magnetic nanopar-ticles, (b) Absorption by the field induced imaginary electric
polarization. This latter component represents the current
generated within the colloidal nanoparticles. Even in thepresence of weak magnetic fields, this component can lead to
significant attenuation and is, thus, the main mechanism re-
sponsible for the absorption of light considered here. A prop-agating wave with the electric field polarized parallel to the
cluster orientation— the extraordinary wave , undergoes
absorption (Fig. 1(c)), as opposite to the non-clustered(randomly oriented particles) case (Fig. 1(a)). At the same
time, a wave polarized orthogonal to the cluster direction
(Fig. 1(b))—the ordinary wave —undergoes a reduced
attenuation and shows an increase in transmission relative tothe reference (isotropic) case (Fig. 1(a)).
We performed our experimental measurements using a
time domain terahertz spectroscopy setup. The laser pulses(energy ¼/C242 mJ, duration ¼130 fs, repetition rate ¼1 kHz,
center wavelength ¼800 nm) were split between the tera-
hertz generation—through optical rectification—and detec-
tion—via electro-optical sampling—in two different ZnTe
crystals. The sample is placed in the x-y plane and z is takento be the direction of propagation. We used the EFH ferro-
fluid series (EFH1 and EFH3 with particles concentrations of
7.8% and 12.4%, respectively) because of their organic sol-vent that exhibits significantly lower absorption in the THz
band when compared to water-based Ferrofluids. Unless oth-
erwise stated, EFH1 was used.
To demonstrate the magnetic field-induced dichroism, we
consistently probed the transmission of the ordinary and extra-
ordinary wave components. We placed the sample in anx-aligned (planar) magnetic field generated using an electro-
magnet (GMW-3470). To measure the transmitted extraordi-
nary wave, the THz was (horizontally) x-polarized. Two wiregrid polarizers (with wires aligned along y) were placed before
and after the sample to ensure the THz horizontal polarization.
In the case of an ordinary wave measurement, THz generation,detection, and wire grid polarizers were rotated by 90
/C14.
Figure 2shows the transmitted pulses and the corresponding
spectra of the extraordinary and ordinary waves for severalmagnetic field levels, specifically 0, 8, 17, 35, and 106 mT.
With the increase in the magnetic field, the transmitted
extraordinary/ordinary polarization decreases/increases con-firming the dichroism over the broad THz spectrum. This is
accompanied by a magnetic field-induced birefringence. The
magnetic field-induced absorption coefficients of the extraor-dinary ( k) and ordinary ( ?) polarizations are related by
Da
k¼/C02Da?: (1)
This relation was verified using near infrared probing.29
However, it is purely related to the average domain reorienta-
tion and does not depend on the frequency as long as the wave-length is greater than the nmscale of the particle chain. The
measured change in transmissi on can originate from both the
FIG. 1. Nanoparticles alignment with the external static magnetic field (H)
and its effect on THz propagation. (a) In the absence of an external field, the
nanoparticles are randomly oriented giving rise to a zero magnetic state andthe THz experiences isotropic absorption. (b) and (c) An external magnetic
field tends to align the particles along its direction inducing THz linear
dichroism. If the particles orientation is orthogonal/parallel to the THz elec-
tric field (b)/(c), a lower/higher absorption is expected.
FIG. 2. Transmitted THz waves underthe application of different external
magnetic fields. When the THz field is
polarized parallel to the applied field
(a) and (c), a strong attenuation is
observed. A THz polarized orthogonal
to the external magnetic field shows anincrease in transmission (b) and (d) in
comparison with the zero-field ran-
domly oriented case. The rate of the
induced attenuation decreases with the
increase in the applied magnetic field.151108-2 Shalaby et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 151108 (2014)
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130.89.98.137 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:30:58change in the Fresnel reflection l osses at the interfaces and the
bulk attenuation. The perturbation in the complex refractiveindex of the sample was found to be less than 3% for the levels
of the magnetic fields used in our experiment. We, therefore,
assume no change in the Fresnel losses and the bulk losses aresolely responsible for the change in the transmission. To
extract the magnetic field-induced absorption ( Da
kandDa?)
from the experimental measurement, we first write the spectralcomponents of the THz field as E
tðxÞ¼E0ðxÞeDad,w h e r e
d¼10 mm is the sample thickness. EtandE0are the modu-
lated and unmodulated fields, respectively. From this, Dacan
be readily extracted using the logarithmic transmission t1¼
lnEtxðÞi
E0xðÞ¼Daid;i2k ;?ðÞ . Figure 3(a) shows the extracted
extraordinary- induced absorption for two levels of magnetiza-tion (17 mT and 35 mT). A good agreement over the wide THz
bandwidth with the prediction obtained from Eq. (1)is also
shown.
To evaluate the efficiency of the modulation process, we
calculate the energy spectral density modulation depth
I
mxðÞ¼jE0xðÞj2/C0jEtxðÞj2
jE0xðÞj2: (2)
The frequency-resolved modulation intensity is presented in
Fig.3(b) for the extraordinary wave at the two levels of the
magnetic field (17 mT and 35 mT) shown in Fig. 3(a), where
up to 66% modulation is found for a field of 35 mT. We
stress here that in a perspective modulation device, therequired (very) low magnetic field can be locally obtained by
a moderate current flowing in a wire.
The modulation increases with both frequency and
applied magnetic field. In principle, the induced magnetiza-tion and, thus, modulation should continue to increase until
saturation ( /C241 T for EFH1). However, at higher magnetic
field levels, the magnetization build up has a nonlinear trend(saturates). This behavior is described by the Langevin rela-
tion M ¼cothðKHÞ/C01=KH, where K is a temperature-
dependent parameter.
30AsDakis proportional to M, the
induced absorption is expected to have a similar Langevian
dependence. This is experimentally demonstrated in Fig.
4(a), where both M and the extraordinary Dakare shown for
fields up to 600 mT. We would like to emphasize here that
EFH1 requires 1 T to reach the magnetization saturation
ðMs¼40 mT Þ. Yet, due to the nonlinear behavior, only
30 mT is required to reach M s=2 (with a magnetization
approximately linear with the applied field up to this level).
The attenuation process is mediated by an increase in
the electrical conductivity proportional to the number of par-
ticles aligned with the magnetic field. The modulation pro-
cess is thus expected to be independent of the THz polarity.This is confirmed in Fig. 4(b), where the THz pulses are
measured under two equal but oppositely polarized magnetic
fields. Finally, the effect of the nanoparticles concentration
FIG. 3. The induced absorption of the extraordinary (E) and ordinary (O)
waves for applied fields of 17 mT (top) and 35 mT (bottom), respectively.The experimental measurements are shown in blue and red solid lines. The
asterisks underline the E-wave measurement after applying Eq. (1)to calcu-
late the attenuation in the O-wave. (b) Modulation depth of the E-wave cal-
culated using Eq. (2)for the two magnetic field levels.
FIG. 4. Langevian behavior of both the magnetization and the induced THz
absorption of the E-wave. (b) Waveforms of the THz E-wave in the absence
of an external field and in the case of two equal but oppositely polarizedfields. (c) The induced absorption of the E-wave in EFH3 (solid lines) and
EFH1 after scaling by 1.5 (asterisks) to account for the difference in concen-
tration. The agreement between the plot pairs demonstrates the scalability of
the induced absorption with the concentration.151108-3 Shalaby et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 151108 (2014)
This article is copyrighted as indicated in the article. Reuse of AIP content is subject to the terms at: http://scitation.aip.org/termsconditions. Downloaded to IP:
130.89.98.137 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:30:58is briefly considered here by comparing two Ferrofluids from
the same series, EFH3 and EFH1. The particle concentration
of the former is 1.5 times higher than that of the latter.
The induced absorption is directly proportional to the
particle concentration29and so is DaEFH3¼1:5/C2DaEFH1:
This last relation is experimentally verified and shown in
Fig. 4(c), which demonstrates an excellent agreement with
the theoretical predictions. This implies that a higher absorp-
tion modulation can be obtained by increasing the concretion
of the sample. However, this comes at the expense of higher
absorption. The advantage of using higher concentration
liquids over longer sample lengths can be seen if this liquidis coupled with other structures, where the thickness cannot
be arbitrarily varied (like metamaterials) or where a higher
thickness induces more losses associated with the structureitself (like waveguides).
In conclusion, we demonstrated terahertz magnetic modu-
lation using magnetic field-induced clustering of nanoparticlesin Ferrofluids. The demonstrated technique combines a high
modulation depth and low magnetic field requirements, while
preserving the flexibility given by the possibility of usingliquids. We believe that our results will pave the way to a class
of THz modulators that can be integrated in other magnetic/
nonmagnetic systems such as metamaterials and waveguides.
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130.89.98.137 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:30:58 |
1.4894801.pdf | Isentropic wave propagation in a viscous fluid with uniform flow
confined by a lined pipeline
Y ong Chen, Yiyong Huang, Xiaoqian Chen,a)and Yuzhu Bai
College of Aerospace Science and Engineering, National University of Defence Technology, 410073,
Changsha, People’s Republic of China
(Received 11 February 2014; revised 17 June 2014; accepted 19 August 2014)
The axisymmetric wave propagation in a viscous fluid with the presence of a uniform flow confined
by a circular pipeline is investigated. Particular considerations are imposed on the features of theacoustic wave propagating in the liquid where the thermal conduction is neglected. The boundary
constraints at the wall are reasonably discussed for both lined-walled and rigid-walled pipelines.
Numerical comparisons of the phase velocity and wave attenuation among three different boundaryconfigurations (rigid wall, steel-composed wall, and aluminum-composed wall) are presented.
Meanwhile, the effects of the fluid viscosity and acoustic impedance are coherently analyzed. In the
end, parametric analysis of the influence of the acoustic impedance is given in the case of a steel-composed pipeline.
VC2014 Acoustical Society of America .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4894801 ]
PACS number(s): 43.55.Rg, 43.35.Bf, 43.20.Mv, 43.20.Hq [JDM] Pages: 1692–1701
I. INTRODUCTION
Wave propagation in a moving fluid confined by a circu-
lar pipeline is a common configuration existed in many
industrial applications such as ultrasonic flow measure-
ment,1,2noise attenuation,3,4and so forth. Present paper
takes into consideration the effects of the fluid viscosity3,5–8
and acoustic impedance3,4,9–11of the wall as the two mecha-
nisms bring about energy dissipation.
Accounting the effects of the fluid viscosity and thermal
conductivity in a stationary gas, Kirchhoff12first proposed a
complex transcendental acoustic equation in the case of alossless rigid wall. Tijdeman
5gave a numerical solution to
the Kirchhoff formulation and summarized consecutive
work. In the case of a uniform pipeline flow, Dokumaci3,6
investigated the fundamental acoustic mode based on the
Zwikker and Kosten approximation. Numerical study
showed that the assumption of a uniform flow could closelypredict the features of an acoustic wave propagating in the
shear flow. In the case of a stationary liquid, Elvira-Segura
13
assumed the acoustic wave to be isentropic, neglecting the
process of thermal conduction. Chen et al.7expanded the
problem in the case of a uniform flow profile.
If the wall is not rigid, its influence may alter the propaga-
tion speed and attenuation as well. Roughly speaking, two dif-
ferent methodologies exist in the literature to analyze the
influence of the wall on wave propagation. By expressing thedisplacement and stress of the wall and describing the bound-
ary condition at the fluid-wall interface, the features of wave
propagation in the stationary fluid can be numerically ana-lyzed. Such a conception was adopted by Grosso,
14Greenspon
and Singer,15Lafleur and Shields,16Elvira-Segura,13Sinha
et al. ,17Plona et al. ,18and Leighton’s group,10,11to name a
few.On the other hand, many researchers prefer to establish
the boundary condition at the fluid-wall interface through the
acoustic impedance of the wall. In the framework of an
inviscid fluid, the theory of the Ingard–Myers boundary con-dition
9,19–21was widely used in the literature. However,
such a method neglects the energy loss due to the fluid vis-
cosity.22By analyzing the features of wave propagation in
the viscous boundary layer, different types of modified
boundary condition were proposed by Brambley et al. ,19
Rienstra and Darau,9Auregan and co-workers,22–24and so
on. Although the viscous dissipation was taken into consid-
eration at the viscous boundary layer, the governing equation
in the fluid was yet based on the inviscid assumption.
The present paper coherently analyzes the effects of the
fluid viscosity and acoustic impedance on the acoustic wave
propagating in the uniform pipeline flow. Although the uni-form flow is controversial in reality, such an approximation
can give a reasonable prediction of wave propagation in the
shear flow as revealed by Dokumaci.
3,6As the present paper
pays particular attention to the acoustic wave in the liquid
flow, an isentropic acoustic assumption with the influence of
thermal conduction omitted7,13is reasonable.
II. MATHEMATICAL FORMULATION
In this section, the comprehensive mathematical formula-
tion of the isentropic wave propagation is deduced from the
conservation of mass and momentum. A viscous fluid isassumed to move uniformly along a circular pipeline while the
FIG. 1. Geometric configuration of the problem in the circular cylindrical
coordinate system. r,h, and zdenote the radial, circumferential, and axial
directions, respectively. yis the vertical axis.a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
chenxiaoqian@nudt.edu.cn
1692 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 136(4), October 2014 0001-4966/2014/136(4)/1692/10/$30.00 VC2014 Acoustical Society of America
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42thermal conduction is neglect ed. The isentropic acoustic wave
is considered to be linear a nd axisymmetric. Figure 1presents
the configuration of the problem in the cylindrical coordinate
system. Specifically, RandZdenote the inner radius of the
pipeline and the acoustic impeda nce of the wall, respectively.
q,p,a n d vrepresent the fluid density, pressure, and velocity.
The uniform flow profile is expressed by U0¼const.
A. Governing equation
The basic equations of the problem are the conservation
of mass and momentum, expressed by
@q
@tþr/C1 qvðÞ¼0; (1)
@v
@tþv/C1rðÞ v¼/C0rp
qþg
qr2vþ1
qfþg
3/C18/C19
rr /C1 vðÞ ;
(2)
where gandfare the coefficients of the shear and bulk vis-
cosity which are assumed to be constant.3,10,13When the
viscous fluid experiences a small-amplitude acoustic disturb-
ance ( q0,p0,a n d v0), its ambient physical variables change to
q¼q0þq0;p¼p0þp0, and v¼v0þv0, where the varia-
bles with the subscript 0 denote the steady mean flow. As the
steady density and velocity satisfy the conditions of
q0¼const and v0¼½0;0;U0/C138(expressed in the cylindrical
coordinate system as shown in Fig. 1), one obtains
v0/C1rðÞ v0¼/C0rp0
q0þg
q0r2v0
þ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19
rr /C1 v0 ðÞ ¼0: (3)
If the acoustic wave is considered to be linear, Taylor expan-
sion of Eqs. (1)and(2)can be simplified to
@q0
@tþv0/C1rðÞ q0þq0r/C1v0¼0; (4)
q0@v0
@tþv0/C1rðÞ v0þv0/C1rðÞ v0/C20/C21
¼/C0 r p0þgr2v0þfþg
3/C18/C19
rr /C1 v0 ðÞ : (5)Due to the assumption of the isentropic acoustic wave,
the acoustic pressure can be expressed by
p0¼c2
0q0; (6)
where c0represents the adiabatic sound speed which is
assumed to be constant in this paper. Then Eq. (4)can be
simplified to
@p0
@tþv0/C1rðÞ p0þq0c2
0r/C1v0¼0: (7)
If a harmonic axisymmetric wave is presumed, the
acoustic variables can be expressed as exp ½iðxt/C0k0KzÞ/C138
with xð¼2pfÞ,K, and k0¼x=c0being the angular fre-
quency, the dimensionless axial wavenumber, and the invis-
cid wavenumber, respectively. Then Eqs. (7)and(5)can be
reduced to7
ix1/C0KMðÞ p0þq0c2
0r/C1v0¼0)p0
¼/C0q0c2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞr/C1v0;
(8)
ixq01/C0KMðÞ v0¼/C0 r p0þgr2v0
þfþg
3/C18/C19
rr /C1 v0 ðÞ ; (9)
where M¼U0=c0represents the flow Mach number.
Insertion of Eq. (8)into Eq. (9)yields
ixq01/C0KMðÞ v0¼gr2v0þq0c2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþfþg
3/C18/C19"#
/C2r r/C1 v0 ðÞ : (10)
By expanding Eq. (10) in the cylindrical coordinate
system and non-dimensionalizing the radial coordinate by
x¼r=Rwith x2½0;1/C138, the governing function of the acous-
tic velocity v0¼½v0r;v0z/C138(due to the axisymmetric acoustic
assumption, the circumferential component of the acoustic
velocity is omitted) can be deduced into
ixR21/C0KMðÞ v0r¼g
q0@
x@xx@v0r
@x/C18/C19
/C01
x2v0
r/C0k2
0R2K2v0
r/C20/C21
þc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
@
@x1
x@
@xxv0
rðÞ /C0ik0RKv0
z/C20/C21
;
(11)
ixR21/C0KMðÞ v0z¼g
q0@
x@xx@v0z
@x/C18/C19
/C0k2
0R2K2v0
z/C20/C21
/C0ik0RKc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
1
x@
@xxv0
rðÞ /C0ik0RKv0
z/C20/C21
:
(12)
Using the separation-of-variables principle, the components of the acoustic velocity can be expressed by
J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline 1693
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42v0
r¼urðxÞexp½iðxt/C0k0KzÞ/C138;v0
z¼uzðxÞexp½iðxt/C0k0KzÞ/C138; (13)
where the functions urðxÞanduzðxÞare stepwise and regular in the interval x2½0;1/C138. Insertion of Eq. (13)into Eqs. (11) and
(12), respectively, gives
ixR21/C0KMðÞ ur¼g
q0d
xdxxdur
dx/C18/C19
/C0ur
x2/C0R2k2
0K2ur/C20/C21
þc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
d
dxd
xdxxurðÞ /C0iRk0Kuz/C20/C21
;
(14)
ixR21/C0KMðÞ uz¼g
q0d
xdxxduz
dx/C18/C19
/C0R2k2
0K2uz/C20/C21
/C0ik0Kc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Rd
xdxxurðÞ /C0iR2k0Kuz/C20/C21
:
(15)
Obviously, the axisymmetric acoustic wave propagating
in the uniform flow can be governed by a set of two second-
order differential equations with the unknown functions
urðxÞanduzðxÞplus the dimensionless axial wavenumber
K.
B. Boundary conditions
In the rigid-walled pipeline, the non-invasive condition
at the wall leads to the vanishment of the radial acoustic
velocity3,7
v0
rðxÞ¼0)urðxÞ¼0a tx¼1: (16)
Furthermore, the fluid viscosity promises the non-slip condi-
tion3,6,13with
v0
zðxÞ¼0)uzðxÞ¼0a tx¼1: (17)
As a result, Eqs. (16)and(17)constitute the boundary condi-
tion in the case of a rigid-walled pipeline. It should be
noticed that the non-slip constraint on the steady flow is
relaxed, which prevails in the literature.3,6
If the wall’s effect is taken into consideration, the non-
invasive condition collapses but the non-slip condition [Eq.
(17)] holds. According to the work of Auregan et al. ,22–24
the acoustic pressure and radial velocity in the viscous fluid
satisfy
@
@tþ1/C0b/C23 ðÞ c0M@
@z/C20/C21
p0
Z¼@v0r
@t; (18)
where b/C23represents the transfer of momentum into the lined
wall induced by the fluid viscosity and Zis the acoustic im-
pedance of the wall. If the acoustic frequency is largeenough, b
/C23vanishes22–24and the Ingard–Myers boundary
condition9,19recovers
@v0r
@t¼@
@tþc0M@
@z/C18/C19
p0
Z: (19)
Under the assumption that the acoustic impedance is inde-
pendent of the axial coordinate, one obtainsv0
r¼1/C0KMðÞp0
Z: (20)
Substituting Eq. (8)into this equation results in
v0
rþq0c2
0
ixZr/C1v0¼0)urxðÞ
þq0c2
0
ixZd
xdxxurðÞ /C0iRk0Kuz/C20/C21
¼0:
(21)
Using the non-slip condition [Eq. (17)] yields
q0c2
0
ixRZdurxðÞ
dxþ1þq0c2
0
ixRZ/C18/C19
urxðÞ¼0;atx¼1:(22)
As a result, Eqs. (17) and (22) constitute the boundary
condition of wave propagation in the lined-walledpipeline.
Furthermore, the axisymmetric wave promises the van-
ishment of the radial acoustic velocity at the pipeline centerwith u
rðxÞ¼0;atx¼0. Meanwhile, the axial acoustic ve-
locity remains finite.
III. SOLUTION BASED ON FOURIER–BESSEL THEORY
According to the Fourier–Bessel theory,25the bounded
functions urðxÞanduzðxÞmay be expressed by
urðxÞ¼X1
n¼1Cr
nJ1ðkr
nxÞ; (23)
uzðxÞ¼X1
n¼1Cz
nJ0ðkz
nxÞ: (24)
The functions J0ðkz
nxÞand J1ðkr
nxÞare Bessel functions of
the zeroth and first orders, respectively. In the rigid-
walled pipeline, kr
nandkz
nare determined by Eqs. (16)
and(17),
1694 J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42J1ðkr
nÞ¼J0ðkz
nÞ¼0: (25)
In the lined-walled pipeline [Eq. (22)], the constraint equations are changed to
q0c2
0
i2xZRJ0kr
n/C0/C1/C0J2kr
n/C0/C1/C0/C1kr
nþ1þq0c2
0
ixZR/C18/C19
J1kr
n/C0/C1¼0; (26)
J0ðkz
nÞ¼0: (27)
According to the orthogonal property of Bessel function, the rigid-walled configuration leads to
ð1
0J1kr
nx/C0/C1J1kr
mx/C0/C1xdx¼J2
2kr
m/C0/C1
2dmn; (28)
ð1
0J0kz
nx/C0/C1J0kz
mx/C0/C1xdx¼J2
1kz
m/C0/C1
2dmn; (29)
where the symbol dmndenotes the Kronecker delta function. Given specific acoustic velocity components [ urðxÞanduzðxÞ],
the corresponding coefficients in Eq. (23)can be calculated by
Cr
n¼2
J2
2kr
n/C0/C1ð1
0urxðÞJ1kr
n/C0/C1xdx; (30)
Cz
n¼2
J2
1kz
n/C0/C1ð1
0uzxðÞJ0kr
n/C0/C1xdx; (31)
which shows that these coefficients are independent of the radial coordinate.
In the lined-walled pipeline, the orthogonal property of Bessel function can be expressed by
ð1
0J1kr
nx/C0/C1J1kr
mx/C0/C1xdx¼1
8J0kr
m/C0/C1/C0J2kr
m/C0/C1/C0/C12þ1
21/C01
kr
m/C0/C12 !
J2
1kr
m/C0/C1"#
dmn; (32)
ð1
0J0kz
nx/C0/C1J0kz
mx/C0/C1xdx¼J2
1kz
m/C0/C1
2dmn: (33)
As in the case of the rigid-walled pipeline, the coefficients ( Cr
nandCz
n) are independent of the radial coordinate.
If the Fourier–Bessel sequences [Eqs. (23)and(24)] are substituted into Eqs. (14)and(15), respectively, one obtains
X1
n¼1ixR21/C0KMðÞ Cr
nJ1kr
nx/C0/C1¼X1
n¼1(
/C0g
q0kr
n/C0/C12þR2k2
0K2/C16/C17
Cr
nJ1kr
nx/C0/C1
þc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
ikz
nRk0KCz
nJ1kz
nx/C0/C1/C0kr
n/C0/C12Cr
nJ1kr
nx/C0/C1/C16/C17)
; (34)
X1
n¼1ixR21/C0KMðÞ Cz
nJ0kz
nx/C0/C1¼X1
n¼1(
/C0g
q0kz
n/C0/C12þR2k2
0K2/C16/C17
Cz
nJ0kz
nx/C0/C1
/C0ik0Kc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞþ1
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Rkr
nCr
nJ0kr
nx/C0/C1/C0iR2k0KCz
nJ0kz
nx/C0/C1/C16/C17)
: (35)
Some rearrangements yield
X1
n¼1ixR21/C0KMðÞ þg
q0R2k2
0K2þc2
0kr
n/C0/C12
ix1/C0KMðÞþkr
n/C0/C12
q0fþ4g
3/C18/C19"#
Cr
nJ1kr
nx/C0/C1
¼X1
n¼1c0kz
nRK
1/C0KMðÞþikz
nRk0K
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Cz
nJ1kz
nx/C0/C1; (36)
J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline 1695
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42X1
n¼1ixR21/C0KMðÞ /C0ixR2K2
1/C0KMðÞþgkz
n/C0/C12
q0þ1
q0fþ4g
3/C18/C19
R2k2
0K2"#
Cz
nJ0kz
nx/C0/C1
¼X1
n¼1/C0c0kr
nRK
1/C0KMðÞþikr
nk0RK
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Cr
nJ0kr
nx/C0/C1: (37)
Multiplying Eq. (36) byJ1ðkr
mxÞxand Eq. (37) byJ0ðkz
mxÞx,
respectively, and then integrating over the interval x2½0;1/C138
lead to
RRðÞmCr
mþX1
n¼1RZðÞn
m
/C2c0kz
nRK
1/C0KMðÞþikz
nRk0K
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Cz
n¼0; (38)
ZZðÞmCz
mþX1
n¼1ZRðÞn
m
/C2c0kr
nRK
1/C0KMðÞþikr
nRk0K
q0fþg
3/C18/C19"#
Cr
n¼0; (39)
where
RRðÞm¼ixR21/C0KMðÞ þg
q0R2k2
0K2
þc2
0
ix1/C0KMðÞkr
m/C0/C12þ1
q0fþ4g
3/C18/C19
kr
m/C0/C12;
(40)
ZZðÞm¼ixR21/C0KMðÞ /C0ixR2K2
1/C0KMðÞþg
q0kz
m/C0/C12
þ1
q0fþ4g
3/C18/C19
k2
0R2K2; (41)
ðRZÞn
m¼ðHRÞmð1
0J1ðkz
nxÞJ1ðkr
mxÞxdx; (42)
ZRðÞn
m¼2
J2
1kz
m/C0/C1ð1
0J0kr
nx/C0/C1J0kz
mx/C0/C1xdx; (43)
withðHRÞm¼/C08ðkr
mÞ2=½ðJ0ðkr
mÞ/C0J2ðkr
mÞÞ2ðkr
mÞ2þ4ððkr
mÞ2
/C01ÞJ2
1ðkr
mÞ/C138in the lined-walled pipeline and ðHRÞm
¼/C02=J2
2ðkr
mÞin the rigid-walled pipeline.
If the number of the Bessel functions in Eqs. (23) and
(24)isN, Eqs. (38)and(39)can be expressed by
GðKÞX¼0; (44)
where X¼½Cr
1;Cr
2;…;Cr
N;Cz
1;Cz
2;…;Cz
N/C138Tis the
coefficient-composed vector. GðKÞis a matrix of 2 N/C22N
whose element is a function of the dimensionless axial wave-number KifM,R, and xð¼2pfÞare specified. According to
Eqs. (23) and(24), it can be learned that the coefficients of
the Fourier–Bessel series do not vanish simultaneously dueto the non-zeros of the acoustic velocity, thus one mayobtain the constraint of X6¼0. Physically speaking, the con-
dition of X¼0reveals that the acoustic velocity disappears.
Consequently, the corresponding determinant of Eq. (44)
vanishes,
detðGðKÞÞ ¼ 0: (45)
As a result, the dimensionless axial wavenumber Kcan be
numerically solved.
7,8,26
IV. SPECIAL CASE: INVISCID FLUID
In the framework of an inviscid fluid, the convected
wave equation can be represented as a function of the acous-tic pressure p
0¼upðxÞexp½iðxt/C0k0KzÞ/C138.1,19If the mean
flow is uniform, an analytical solution exists with
upðxÞ¼J0ðk0Rffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
ð1/C0KMÞ2/C0K2q
xÞ: (46)
On the neglect of the fluid viscosity, substituting Eq. (46)
into Eq. (9)gives the expression of the radial acoustic
velocity,
urxðÞ¼/C01
ixq0R1/C0KMðÞdupxðÞ
dx: (47)
In the lined-walled pipeline, insertion of Eqs. (46) and
(47)into Eq. (19)yields the constraint function of the acous-
tic pressure,
dup
dxþiq0xR1/C0KMðÞ2
Zup¼0a tx¼1: (48)
In the rigid-walled pipeline with Z¼1 , Eq. (48) can
be simplified to
dupxðÞ
dx¼0a tx¼1: (49)
V. NUMERICAL STUDY
In what follows, wave propagation in water is consid-
ered. The constant parameters27areq0¼1000 kg =m3,
c¼1500 m =s,g¼1/C210/C03kg=ðsmÞ,f¼2:4g,R¼4m m ,
andf¼1 MHz. If the lined wall is composed of Helmholtz
resonators,9the acoustic impedance can be expressed by
ZxðÞ¼Z0þix~m/C0iq0c0cotxD
c0/C18/C19
; (50)
where Z0is the specific acoustic resistance of the wall, ~mð¼
0:02q0þð1=3Þq0DÞis the damping inertance, and Dis the
1696 J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42liner depth. Equation (23) reveals that the number Nof the
Bessel functions should be large enough to make sure that
the numerical calculation of the axial wavenumber is con-
verged. According to the previous research,7the selection of
N¼50 can give an acceptable numerical result. In the nu-
merical calculation, particular considerations are placed on
the phase velocity ( cp¼c0=KR;) and attenuation coefficient
(A¼j8:686k0KIj:dB=m), where the subscripts “R” and “I”
denote the real and imaginary components, respectively. To
get a normalized expression of the phase velocity, the rela-tive phase velocity is defined by c
p=c0¼1=KR.
A. Rigid wall and lined wall
In this subsection, comparisons of the relative phase ve-
locity and attenuation coefficient among three differentconfigurations (rigid wall, steel-composed wall, and
aluminum-composed wall11) are given. As an example, the
liner depth is assumed to be D¼2 mm. From Eq. (50), the
acoustic impedance can be calculated as shown in Table I.
Special concentrations are given to the features of the firsttwo modes while the discussions of other modes are omitted.
Comprehensive analysis of higher order modes propagating
in the uniform flow confined by the rigid wall can be foundin Chen et al.
7
1. Phase velocity
Figure 2demonstrates the relative phase velocity of the
first mode as a function of the Mach number propagating in
the downstream (a) and upstream (b) directions. Meanwhile,
Fig.3illustrates the corresponding relative phase velocity of
the second mode. Obviously, the relative phase velocity of
each mode increases along with the Mach number in the
downstream propagation but decreases against the Machnumber in the upstream propagation.
Physically speaking, as the downstream propagation is
along the flow direction, the effect of the steady flow accel-erates the propagation speed. On the other hand, as the
FIG. 3. The relative phase velocity of the second mode confined by the three
different walls in the downstream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.TABLE I. The acoustic impedance of the two configurations.
Material Z0:P as =m Absolute value of Z:P as =m Phase of Z: deg.
Steel 4 :48/C21071:38/C210871:07
Aluminum 1 :73/C21071:32/C210882:47
FIG. 2. The relative phase velocity of the first mode confined by the three
different walls in the downstream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.
J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline 1697
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convection decelerates the propagation speed. If the flowMach number is higher, the effect of flow convection on the
propagation velocity becomes more obvious.
A careful comparison of the relative phase velocity
among the rigid, steel-composed and aluminum-composed
walls shows that the elastic vibration of the wall speeds up
the propagation velocity. With the increase of the specificacoustic resistance ( Z
0), the relative phase velocity of each
mode slows down in the downstream and upstream direc-
tions. However, the difference of the relative phase velocityis minor between the steel-composed and aluminum-
composed walls as the absolute values of acoustic imped-
ance are nearly the same. Physically speaking, if the specificacoustic resistance ( Z
0) is higher, the absolute value of the
corresponding acoustic impedance ( Z) becomes larger (see
Table I). Then the rigid property of the wall shows more
obvious (the absolute value of the acoustic impedance of the
rigid wall can be assumed infinite).
From Fig. 2, it can be learned that the impact of the
three different walls on the relative phase velocity of the firstmode is very small, which applies to the second mode as
shown in Fig. 3. Furthermore, comparison between Figs. 2
and3shows that the relative phase velocity of the second
mode is larger than that of the first mode in the downstream
and upstream propagation. Numerical comparisons of 1 =KR
among different modes can be found in Chen et al.7
2. Wave attenuation
While Fig. 4displays the attenuation coefficient of the
first mode in the downstream (a) and upstream (b) propaga-
tion, Fig. 5illustrates the scenarios of the second mode.
With the increase of the Mach number, the attenuation coef-
ficient of each mode decreases in the downstream propaga-
tion but increases in the upstream propagation depending onthe configuration of the wall. Especially, the energy dissipa-
tion due to the fluid viscosity and acoustic impedance
becomes slight in the downstream propagation. Physicallyspeaking, the effect of steady flow accelerates the acoustic
propagation, the processes of viscous dissipation in the fluid
and wave absorption at the wall become less obvious
FIG. 5. Attenuation coefficient of the second mode confined by the three dif-
ferent walls in the downstream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.
FIG. 4. Attenuation coefficient of the first mode confined by the three differ-ent walls in the downstream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.
1698 J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:42compared with the case of the stationary fluid. With the
increase of the uniform flow profile, the attenuation coeffi-cient caused by the two mechanisms becomes smaller and
smaller. On the other hand, the energy dissipation in the
upstream propagation is strengthened as the processes of theviscous dissipation and wave absorption are reinforced by
the decelerated propagation speed.
If acoustic impedance is considered, careful investiga-
tion reveals that as the flow Mach number goes up, the incre-
ment ratio of the attenuation coefficient in the upstream
propagation is more rapid than the decrement ratio in thedownstream propagation. Such a phenomenon indicates that
the influences of the flow convection on the acoustic wave
between the downstream and upstream propagation areasymmetric with respect to the case of the stationary fluid.
Among the three configurations, the attenuation coeffi-
cient in the steel-composed wall is the largest while theattenuation coefficient in the rigid wall is the smallest. In the
rigid-walled pipeline, the source of wave attenuation is only
from the viscous loss. In the lined-walled pipeline, theenergy dissipation from the wall impedance is added, which
leads to a greater attenuation coefficient. An interestingphenomenon is that the attenuation coefficient in the
steel-composed wall is bigger than that in the aluminum-
composed wall, even though the absolute value of the acous-tic impedance in the steel-composed wall is nearly identical
to that in the aluminum-composed wall (see Table I). It can
be seen from Table Ithat the phase of the acoustic imped-
ance in the steel-composed wall is 71 :07
owhile the phase in
the aluminum-composed wall is 82 :47o. This may be a possi-
ble interpretation of the distinct difference between the steel-composed and aluminum-composed walls.
It has been demonstrated that the effects of the fluid vis-
cosity and wall impedance lead to the energy dissipation inwave propagation. An attractive question may be that
whether the two mechanisms of energy dissipation take
effect independently. Figure 6gives a numerical analysis in
the case of the steel-composed wall. Specifically, Fig. 6dis-
plays the attenuation coefficient of the first mode in the
downstream [Fig. 6(a)] and upstream [Fig. 6(b)] propagation.
Clearly, the attenuation coefficient in the presence of the
fluid viscosity and acoustic impedance (“vis þimpedance”)
FIG. 7. The absolute values of the amplitude (a) and phase (b) of the acous-
tic impedance as functions of the liner depth.
FIG. 6. Attenuation coefficient of the first mode due to the effects of the vis-
cosity and acoustic impedance in the downstream (a) and upstream (b)
propagation.
J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline 1699
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by the fluid viscosity (“vis þrigid”) and the acoustic imped-
ance (“inv þimpedance”). The inequality is more obvious in
the upstream propagation when a larger Mach number is
present. These phenomena illustrate that one should considerboth the effects of fluid viscosity and wall impedance to get
a precise prediction of wave attenuation in the lined-walled
pipeline.
B. The effect of the liner depth
In this subsection, the effect of liner depth ( D) on wave
propagation is discussed. Figure 7exhibits the amplitude
[Fig. 7(a)] and phase [Fig. 7(b)] of the acoustic impedance
[Eq. (50)] as functions of the liner depth. Numerical calcula-
tion is proceeded for the first acoustic mode with M¼0:1
confined by the steel-composed wall.
1. Phase velocity
Figure 8presents the effect of liner depth on the relative
phase velocity in the downstream [Fig. 8(a)] and upstream[Fig. 8(b)] propagation. At the same time, the difference
between the inviscid (“inv”) and viscous (“vis”) assumptionsis clarified. Specifically, the relative phase velocity in the
inviscid fluid is larger than that in the viscous fluid in the
downstream and upstream propagation. It then can berevealed that the existence of fluid viscosity decelerates the
propagation speed.
Although the variation trend of the relative phase velocity
with respect to the liner depth is complex, the relationship
between the relative phase velocity and the amplitude of the
acoustic impedance [Fig. 7(a)] may be simple. Generally
speaking, a larger amplitude value of the acoustic impedance
corresponds to a smaller propagation velocity in the viscous
and inviscid assumptions. Although the amplitude range ofthe corresponding acoustic impedance is large, the change
interval of the relative phase velocity remains short. Such a
phenomenon can also be found in Figs. 2and3.F u r t h e r m o r e ,
the influence of acoustic impedance on the relative phase ve-
locity is more obvious in the viscous fluid than that in the
inviscid fluid.
FIG. 9. The effect of liner depth on the attenuation coefficient in the down-
stream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.
FIG. 8. The effect of liner depth on the relative phase velocity in the down-stream (a) and upstream (b) propagation.
1700 J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 136, No. 4, October 2014 Chen et al. : Wave propagation in lined pipeline
Redistribution subject to ASA license or copyright; see http://acousticalsociety.org/content/terms. Download to IP: 130.113.111.210 On: Wed, 24 Dec 2014 06:15:422. Wave attenuation
Figure 9illustrates the effect of liner depth on the
attenuation coefficient in the downstream [Fig. 9(a)] and
upstream [Fig. 9(b)] propagation. Comparison between the
viscous and inviscid assumptions is simultaneously shown.
The variation of attenuation coefficient as a function of the
liner depth is sharper compared with the case of the relativephase velocity. If the amplitude of the acoustic impedance is
high [Fig. 7(a)], the absolute value of the corresponding
phase may reach the maximum point of 90
o[Fig. 7(b)]. The
attenuation coefficient then goes down to the case of the
rigid wall as shown in Fig. 9.
Comparison between Figs. 7and9reveals that the tend-
ency of the attenuation coefficient with respect to the abso-
lute value of the phase [Fig. 7(b)] may be simple while the
relationship between the attenuation coefficient and linerdepth is complicated. As the absolute value of the phase
increases and finally goes to the maximum point of 90
o, the
attenuation coefficient decreases and eventually simplifies tothe case of the rigid-walled configuration. Similar results can
be found in Figs. 4and5. It should be noted that the differ-
ence between the viscous and inviscid assumptions is moreapparent under the condition of a smaller phase. As a result,
to get a comprehensive description of wave propagation with
high quality, the effects of fluid viscosity and wall imped-ance should be taken into consideration synchronously.
VI. CONCLUSIONS
Present paper investigates the axisymmetric wave prop-
agation in the viscous fluid with uniform flow confined by a
circular pipeline. As particular considerations are given to
the phase velocity and wave attenuation in the liquid, theeffect of thermal conduction can be neglected. The effects of
acoustic impedance at the wall and fluid viscosity on phase
velocity and attenuation are analyzed synchronously.Numerical calculations reveal the following results.
(1) The phase velocity of each mode seems dominantly
determined by the amplitude of the acoustic impedance.As the amplitude of the acoustic impedance goes up, the
phase velocity decreases and finally goes down to the
rigid-walled configuration (see Figs. 2and3, and 8).
Furthermore, the phase plays a more important role on
the wave attenuation of each mode compared with the
amplitude. As the absolute value of the phase goes up to90
o, the attenuation coefficient goes down to the case of
the rigid wall (see Figs. 4and5, and 9).
(2) The energy dissipation due to the fluid viscosity and
acoustic impedance should be considered synchronously
to get a comprehensive description of wave propagation.
The two processes coherently impose influences on thephase velocity and wave attenuation. With the increase
of the acoustic impedance of the wall, its effect becomes
small and the wall finally behaves rigid.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The work described in this paper is funded by the
National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants Nos.11404405, 91216201, 51205403, and 11302253). The
authors gratefully acknowledge the funding.
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1.4895579.pdf | Copper oxide assisted cysteine hierarchical structures for immunosensor application
Chandra Mouli Pandey, Gajjala Sumana, and Ida Tiwari
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 103706 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4895579
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4895579
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/10?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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120.117.138.77 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 02:27:31Copper oxide assisted cysteine hierarchical structures for immunosensor
application
Chandra Mouli Pandey,1,2Gajjala Sumana,1,a)and Ida Tiwari2
1Biomedical Instrumentation Section, CSIR-National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi 110012, India
2Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221005, India
(Received 13 July 2014; accepted 29 August 2014; published online 11 September 2014)
The present work describes the promising electrochemical immunosensing strategy based on copper
(II) assisted hierarchical cysteine structures (CuCys) varying from star to flower like morphology.
The CuCys having average size of 10 lm have been synthesised using L-Cysteine as initial precursor
in presence of copper oxide under environmentally friendly conditions in aqueous medium. To delin-eate the synthesis mechanism, detailed structural investigations have been carried out using character-
ization techniques such as X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and Fourier transform
infrared spectroscopy. The electrochemical behaviour of self-assembled CuCys on gold electrodeshows surface controlled electrode reaction with an apparent electron transfer rate constant of
3.38/C210
/C04cm s/C01. This innovative platform has been utilized to fabricate an immunosensor by co-
valently immobilizing monoclonal antibodies specific for Escherichia coli O157:H7 ( E. coli ). Under
the optimal conditions, the fabricated immunosensor is found to be sensitive and specific for the
detection of E. coli with a detection limit of 10 cfu/ml. VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4895579 ]
The fabrication of hierarchically structured materials
with desired properties and their controlled assembly is a
key step for nanofabrication techniques and the realization
of advanced nanodevices for biomedical applications.1–3In
particular, implementing ordered nanostructures of biocom-
patible organic-inorganic hybrid nanomaterials using transi-
tion metal oxides for drug delivery systems, clinicaldiagnostics, and biosensing has lots of futuristic scope.
4–6To
optimize the preparation conditions and processing of these
materials tailored to specific requirements, a better under-standing of the reaction mechanism, facile and biocompati-
ble synthesis conditions are very essential.
7,8
The discovery and development of biomaterials which
can undergo self-assembly into well-ordered structures have
shown burgeoning interest in nanotechnology.9,10The strat-
egies for the refinement of nanomaterials also offer potentialbenefits in biological research and recently the study of mem-
brane proteins and their applications in device fabrication is
especially challenging.
11,12These membrane proteins may
further organize in a 3D membrane lattice, thus opening ave-
nues to their biochemical study, crystallization, and integra-
tion into nanodevices.9,13Therefore, efforts should be
focussed on the discovery, selection, and development of bio-
materials for use in nanofabrication.14,15Research is under
progress to control and organize the nanocrystals of the nano-fibres for their potential applications in biomolecular synthe-
sis.
16,17Among the numerous biomolecules, L-cysteine (Cys)
is of particular interest in biomedical applications, especiallyfor biosensing due to its favourable multifunctional groups
(–SH, –NH
2,a n d– C O O/C0) which can be used for the conjuga-
tion of metallic ions and bioanalytes.18–20
Previously, we have synthesized different cystine hier-
archical structures at controlled pH and concentration, wherethe formation of microstructures took almost 8 h.21,22In the
present work, the results relating to systematic one pot syn-
thesis methodology for producing highly symmetric ordered
structures of copper (II) assisted hierarchical 3D cysteinestructures (CuCys) using easy, reproducible, and rapid syn-
thetic technique have been elucidated. In addition, we dem-
onstrated that the CuCys based platform could serve as apromising probe material for fabrication of highly sensitive,
specific, and stable immunosensor.
The protocol relating to the synthesis of CuCys and the
immunosensor fabrication has been shown in Figure S1.
36
The structural analysis of the prepared Cys, copper oxide(CuO), and CuCys were investigated by X-ray diffraction(XRD), and the results are shown in Figure 1(a). The diffrac-
tion pattern shows that the CuCys exhibited clearly distinct
diffraction pattern in comparison to that of pristine CuO andCys. The major peaks (2 /H9052¼24.57) for cysteine (curve (i))
and CuO (2 /H9052¼26.48, curve (ii)) diminished in CuCys
(curve (iii)), which suggests the formation of new phaseprobably due to the complexation.
To estimate the amount of Cu(II) entrapped within the
CuCys, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was carried out inthe range 30
/C14C–800/C14C in inert nitrogen atmosphere at the
heating rate of 10/C14C/min (Fig. 1(b)).20The TGA measure-
ments of CuO show a mass loss of 10.35 wt. % (256.19/C14C),
which indicates that the total mass of nanoparticles are com-
posed of 89.65 wt. % copper oxide (curve (i)). The TGA
curves of CuCys show that there was a distinct weight loss at237
/C14C inferring the melting of the cysteine. Further, there
was a gradual and significant weight loss as the temperature
was increased (237 to 450/C14C) above the melting point. The
change in wt. % (48.03%) may be due to the expulsion of
molecules of SO 2,N H 3, and CO 2from the cysteine chain
(curve (ii)). Further, the TGA of Cys shows a completedecomposition temperature of carbon at about 680
/C14C and af-
ter that no significant mass loss was detected (curve (iii)).18a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
sumanagajjala@gmail.com, Tel: 91-11-42342439.
0003-6951/2014/105(10)/103706/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 103706-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 103706 (2014)
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120.117.138.77 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 02:27:31The formed CuCys composite was analyzed using
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and com-pared to the spectrum of Cys (Table ST1).
36The FTIR
spectra of the CuCys exhibit several significant spectral dif-
ferences than the spectrum of the cysteine without copperoxide. The disappearance of the thiol (SH) stretch at
2552 cm
/C01in the CuCys complexes indicates deprotonation
of the thiol group and subsequent binding of Cu(II) to cyste-ine via the sulphur atom (Fig. 1(c)). The appearance of
strong IR bands for the NH
2stretch at 3179 cm/C01and the
disappearance of the bands in the CuCys signify their depro-tonation. The symmetric stretch, in plane bending, and out of
plane bending frequencies of the carboxylate functionality
remained unchanged in the CuCys complexes (curve (i))compared to the pristine cysteine (curve (ii)), indicating that
the carboxylate functionality played little or no role in bind-
ing Cu(II) to the cysteine.
23Further, evidence of this can be
observed as the CO stretch and in plane bending of the OH
associated with carboxylate functionality in the 1408 cm/C01
and 1338 cm/C01region were similar in both free ligand and
the complex.24Moreover, the strong band of –CN at
1196 cm/C01present in the L-cysteine and the CuCys indicates
that—CN did not take part in bonding. The prepared CuCyshave been further characterized using NMR spectroscopy
and compared with the spectra of pristine L- cysteine (Fig.S2).
36It was observed that the addition of Cu(II) results in
broadening of the a-CH resonance which get shifted towards
a higher field. There was also broadening of the b-CH 2reso-
nance of the Cys, which shifted towards a lower field (curve
i) in comparison to the spectra of L-cysteine (curve ii).
Moreover, the b0-CH 2andb00-CH 2resonances were also not
equivalent, which suggest that the thiol group of Cys partici-
pates in the binding to Cu(II).25
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) investigations
indicate the uniform granular morphology of copper oxide
nanoparticles, with average diameter of /C248 nm (Fig. 1(d)
(i)). The Cys hierarchical structures were grown in presenceof Cu(II) and it was observed that the symmetric structures
were formed rapidly and the crystallization growth process
was completed within 1 h. When the Cys concentration was100 mM, the structures were well oriented in uniform flower
like structures having a petal diameter of 100 nm, where the
size of each flower was found to be 10 lM (Fig. 1(d)(ii) and
(iii)). However, on reducing the concentration of Cys
(10 mM), star shaped structures having six arms of equal
length ( /C241.5lM) were formed, which clearly indicate the
FIG. 1. (a) X-ray diffraction pattern of (i) Cys, (ii) CuO nanoparticle, and (iii) CuCys. (b) TGA of (i) CuO, (ii) CuCys, and (iii) Cys. (c) FTIR spectra o f (i)
CuCys and (ii) Cys, and (d) Transmission electron micrograph of (i) CuO nanoparticles, (ii) CuCys at lower magnification, (iii) single CuCys at higher magnifi-
cation, and (iv) star like structure of CuCys at 10 mM concentration.103706-2 Pandey, Sumana, and Tiwari Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 103706 (2014)
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120.117.138.77 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 02:27:31most symmetrical structures were grown in presence of
Cu(II) (Fig. 1(d)(iv)).
From the above observations, it may be incurred that cop-
per (II) plays a major role in the oxidation of the thiol (RS)residues of the L-cysteine resulting in the formation of inter-
molecular CuCys complex.
26,27The formation of a CuCys
complex not only depend on the hard–soft acid–base classifi-cation of the ligand but also to the structure that plays an im-
portant role in the complex stability.
28According to the
structure of the peptides, inter-molecular copper complexes
are easiest to form because they have higher enthalpy.29,30
Thus, Cu2þions enhance the inter-molecular reactions coming
from an inner sphere electron transfer.31Further, when gold
nanoparticles (AuNPs) were introduced into the Cys solution,
no such intermolecular oxidation was observed (Fig. S3).36
These AuNPs have the potential to electro-statically interact
with the hydrophilic zwitter-ionic layer, resulting in the higher
density of polar residues on the hexagonal faces than on therectangular ones.
32This anisotropic decoration on the hexago-
nal faces arise due to the attachment of conducive functional
groups (–COOH, –NH 2) and lead to the attachment of AuNPs
by other intermolecular interactions.32This assembly of
AuNPs on the surface inhibits the interaction of other Cys
flakes due to which there is no formation of star (Figs. S3(a)and S3(b)) and flower like (Figs. S3(c) and S3(d)) Cys struc-
tures.
36On the basis of above observation, the plausible mech-
anism for the interaction of Cu(II) with Cys may be givenas
33,34
H2O!H/C1þ/C1OH ;
HO/C1þ/C1OH!H2O2;
RSH!
H2O2RS-SR :(1)
CuðIIÞþRSH!
H2ORS-Cu-SR ;
R¼HOOCCH ðNH 2ÞCH2:(2)
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to study
the surface morphology of CuCys/Au electrode before and
after antibody immobilization. Figure 2(a)shows the self as-
sembly of CuCys on the Au surface. It can be seen that each
flower comprises of several irregular flakes arranged in orna-
mental manner (Fig. 2(b)). Contradictory to what obtained in
the absence of Cu(II).22Further, change in morphology was
observed after immobilization of antibody onto CuCys/Au
electrode, which may be due to well-oriented functionalgroups present in the CuCys that help in covalent binding of
the antibody (Fig. 2(c)). When the concentration was low-
ered to 10 mM, there was formation of several stars likestructures, well separated from each other (Fig. 2(d)).
The interfacial properties of the electrode after each
modification step were investigated using electrochemicalimpedance spectroscopy (EIS). The impedance spectra fol-
low the theoretical shapes and include a semicircle portion,
observed at higher frequencies, which corresponds to theelectron transfer limited process, followed by a linear part
characteristic of the lower frequency attributed to a diffusion
limited electron transfer.
22Figure 3(a)shows the impedance
plots for the bare Au electrode, CuCys/Au electrode, anti-
bodies (Ab) immobilized on CuCys/Au electrode (Ab/CuCys/Au), and after incubation of Ab/CuCys/Au electrode
with target E. coli cells. After modification of the Au surface
with CuCys, the interfacial electron-transfer resistance (R ct)
corresponding to the respective semicircle diameter
increases from 30 X(curve iv) to 214.4 X(curve iii). This
increase in R ctvalue is due to the presence of negative
charges from –COO/C0groups of CuCys that perhaps perturb
the interfacial electron-transfer rate between the electrodeand the electrolyte solution.
21Interestingly, in comparison to
Cys/Au electrode (Fig. S4, curve i), there was a decrease in
the R ctvalue, owing to the electron facilitation of the Cu(II)
present in the hierarchical structure (Fig. S4, curve ii).36
After the immobilization of antibodies on CuCys/Au elec-trode, the increase in diameters of the semicircle wasobserved (Fig. 3(a); curve ii), which results in the generation
of kinetics barrier for [Fe(CN)
6]3/C0/4/C0redox probe, leading to
the increase in the corresponding R ct. Finally, on incubation
ofE. coli O157:H7 cells on Ab/CuCys/Au electrode, further
increase in the Rct was obseved (Fig. 3(a); curve i). When
theE. coli cells are attached to the electrode surface, there is
formation of antibody–bacteria complexes that could create
a barrier for the electrochemical process, thereby hindering
the access of the redox probe to the electrode surface, result-ing in increase in the R
ctvalue.35To elucidate the interfacial
electrochemical changes after each fabrication steps, the
measured impedance spectra were analyzed using Randlesequivalent circuit fitting method (inset Fig. 3(a)), in which a
solution resistance (R
s), a constant phase element (CPE)
instead of capacitance in parallel with an electron transferresistance, (R
ct) and a Warburg resistance (W) are included.
The fitting values of the equi valent circuit elements are
shown in Table ST2.36Within the time domain, where a ki-
netic semicircle is observed in the complex impedance plot,
the electrode reaction is totally controlled by the electron-
transfer kinetics.21Thus, the exchange current per unit
FIG. 2. Scanning electron micrograph of (a) self assembled CuCys micro-
structure on Au electrode, (b) single CuCys microstructure, (c) antibody im-
mobilized on CuCys/Au electrode, and (d) star like structure of CuCys at
10 mM concentration.103706-3 Pandey, Sumana, and Tiwari Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 103706 (2014)
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120.117.138.77 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 02:27:31geometric area may be given as: R ct¼1R T / i oF; and the
apparent electron transfer rate constant (k app)o fe a c ho ft h e
electrodes was obtained using equation: k app¼RT/
n2F2AR ctC; where n is the number of electrons transferred,
F is the Faraday constant, R is gas constant, T is Kelvin
temperature, A is experimentally determined area of the
electrode, the R ctvalue is obtained from the fitted Nyquist
plots, and C is concentration of the [Fe(CN) 6]3/C0/4/C0(in mol
cm/C03). Table ST2 shows the various value obtained for the
different modified electrodes, indicating that the k appvalues
increase after each modification.36Similar results were also
obtained using cyclic voltammetry (CV) as shown in Fig.
S5.36
The immobilization of optimum concentration of anti-
body on CuCys/Au electrode was determined to be 80 lg/ml
(Fig. S6(a)) and the optimized incubation time between E.
colicells and the antibodies was 25 min (Fig. S6(b)).36The
quantitative assessment of the detection limit of the immuno-
sensor was recorded using Nyquist plots for differentconcentrations of E. coli target cells (Fig. 3(b);
1/C210–1/C2109cfu/ml). It was observed that the semicircle
of impedance spectra increases with increase in the E. coli
cells. The linear increase in impedance indicates the genera-tion of a resistant and capacitive double layer between the
surface and electrolyte. As the concentration of E. coli anti-
body increases, more cells are captured on CuCys modifiedelectrode, thus generating a higher blocking effect.
Moreover, the R
ctvalues of these impedance signals dis-
played a good linearity with the concentration of target bac-teria in the range from 10–10
9cfu/ml (Fig. 3(c)). The linear
equation was calculated as R ct(X)¼17.56–22.67 (log cfu/ml
ofE. coli cells) having a correlation coefficient of 0.996. The
detection limit of the developed impedimetric immunosensor
is estimated to be 10 cfu/ml, where R ctof antibodies-
immobilized on CuCys/Au electrode, in PBS solution wastaken as the control background. The high sensitivity in this
system was achieved by increasing the immobilization effi-
ciency of antibodies and reducing the large open area of the
FIG. 3. (a) Nyquist diagram (Z imversus Z re) for the Faradic impedance measured for (i) E. coli cells/Ab/CuCys/Au electrode, (ii) Ab/CuCys/Au electrode, and
(iii) CuCys/Au electrode (iv) Au electrode. (b) EIS plot showing the immuno-sensing response of the Ab/CuCys/Au electrode. (c) EIS linearity plot sh owing
the immuno-sensing response of the CuCys immunosensor with variation in the concentration of E. coli cells (10 cfu/ml to 1 /C2109cfu/ml) in PBS solution
(pH 7.4) containing 5 mM [Fe(CN) 6]3/C0/4/C0, in the frequency range from 105to 0.1 Hz.103706-4 Pandey, Sumana, and Tiwari Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 103706 (2014)
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120.117.138.77 On: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 02:27:31electrode, thereby effectively impeding ion transfer through
system.5
The selectivity of the immunosensors against three other
bacteria ( Salmonella typhi ,Shigella dysenteriae , and Vibrio
cholera ) was evaluated by measuring the impedimetric
responses at the same concentration level that of E. coli
(1/C2103, 1.0/C2106, and 1 /C2109cfu/ml) (Fig. S7).36When
the bioelectrode was incubated with these bacterial cells,
there was negligible change in R ct, indicating no significant
cross-reaction/interference. These results demonstrated that
the electron-transfer resistance as recorded reflected the
interaction between the antibody and the target E. coli cells,
therefore showing the specificity of the immunosensor for E.
coli. The comparison of the biosensing parameters such as
linear range and detection limit of the present work with therecent reports are shown in Table ST4.
36
Real sample analyses have been carried out by inocula-
tion of the cultured E. coli O157:H7 cells into water by com-
paring the quantitative analysis of the water sample with the
plate count method. A total of five measurements were made
for each E. coli sample, and it was found that the average
values were approximate to the standard results obtained
from the plate count method, and the relative error maximum
was less than 5.0% (Table ST3).36Further, EIS results dem-
onstrated that the proposed immunosensor is stable for at
least 30 days (Fig. S8(a)) and could be regenerated and used
for at least 6 times (RSD 8.79%) (Fig. S8(b)).36
In conclusion, we reported the aqueous phase synthesis
of ordered hierarchical microstructures of CuCys. The addi-
tion of Cu (II) in L-cysteine enhances the kinetics of reac-tion, leading to the formation of stable and highly ordered
flower like structure in a short duration of time. As a proof of
concept, these formed CuCys were self assembled onto Auelectrode for the fabrication of highly sensitive and stable
immunosensor for E. coli detection. The detailed investiga-
tions on the growth of these hierarchical structures in pres-ence of other metal oxides are in progress, which will help in
understanding the physical insights and structure property
relations of these biomaterials and their applications in clini-cal diagnostics.
We thank Professor R. C. Budhani, Director, CSIR-
NPL, New Delhi, India for his interest and support in this
work. C.M.P. is thankful to CSIR, India, for the award ofSenior Research Fellow. We thank Professor B. D. Malhotra
(Delhi Technological University, Delhi) Dr. A. M. Biradar
(NPL, New Delhi), Mr. Ashawani Singh, and Mr. PavneshMani (Delhi University, New Delhi, India) for interesting
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36See supplementary material at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4895579 for ex-
perimental section, scheme relating to the synthesis of CuCys, and the
immunosensor fabrication; results of NMR, TEM, CV, EIS studies, and
Tables.103706-5 Pandey, Sumana, and Tiwari Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 103706 (2014)
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1.4896692.pdf | Strain-assisted current-induced magnetization reversal in magnetic tunnel junctions: A
micromagnetic study with phase-field microelasticity
H. B. Huang, J. M. Hu, T. N. Yang, X. Q. Ma, and L. Q. Chen
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 122407 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4896692
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896692
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/12?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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On: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 18:45:58Strain-assisted current-induced magnetization reversal in magnetic tunnel
junctions: A micromagnetic study with phase-field microelasticity
H. B. Huang,1,2,a),b)J. M. Hu,1,b)T. N. Y ang,1X. Q. Ma,2and L. Q. Chen1
1Department of Materials Science and Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park,
Pennsylvania 16802, USA
2Department of Physics, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China
(Received 23 July 2014; accepted 16 September 2014; published online 25 September 2014)
Effect of substrate misfit strain on current-induced in-plane magnetization reversal in CoFeB-MgO
based magnetic tunnel junctions is investigated by combining micromagnetic simulations withphase-field microelasticity theory. It is found that the critical current density for in-plane magnet-
ization reversal decreases dramatically with an increasing substrate strain, since the effective elastic
field can drag the magnetization to one of the four in-plane diagonal directions. A potential strain-assisted multilevel bit spin transfer magnetization switching device using substrate misfit strain is
also proposed.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896692 ]
Spin transfer torque (STT) effect1,2arises from the trans-
fer of angular momentums from the electrons of the spin-
polarized current to the local ferromagnet when a current goesthrough a spin-valve nanopillar. One of the most attractive
applications is high density magnetic random access memory
(MRAM),
3,4which has the advantage of large storage density,
high addressing speed, low energy consumption, and avoid-
ance of cross writing. A memory cell of MRAM has two ferro-
magnetic layers separated by a non magnetic conductive spacer
or thin insulating interlayer. One of two layers has a fixed mag-
netization along a predetermin ed direction, while the other
magnetization of free layer could be reoriented by externalmagnetic field. Based on the STT effect, the magnetization
reorientation can be induced by in jecting a spin-polarized cur-
rent into the free magnetic layer.
5–7The current-induced
switching eliminates crosstalk between neighboring cells dur-
ing writing in using the external magnetic field.8Furthermore,
STT-MRAM has practically un limited endurance and requires
less energy, and faster than conv entional magnetic field control
MRAM. However, the high critical switching current J cof
STT-MRAM has to be reduced for achieving the compatibilitywith the metal-oxide-semiconductor technology.
Many attempts have been made to reduce J
c. For exam-
ple, using CoFeB as the free layer to reduce M S;9using a dou-
ble spin-filter structure,10an antiferromagnetic pinning
structure,11or inserting a Ru spin scattering layer to increase
spin scattering;12or using a composite free layer consisting of
two ferromagnetic layers with various coupling types;13–16or
using Heusler-based spin valve nanopillar.17–23Another possi-
ble approach to increasing the storage density is to store multi-ple bits per cell.
24–26The combination of small critical current
and multiple bits per cell in one device is the most desired
path towards high density STT-MRAM. In magnetic thinfilms or islands, strain can be effectively utilized to tune the
magnetic domain structures.
27–31For example, the magnetiza-
tion can be switched between an in-plane and out-of-plane ori-entation under isotropic biaxial in-plane strains,
32,33or rotatewithin the film plane under anisotropic biaxial in-plane
strains.34Recently, Pertsev and Kohlstedt35theoretically dem-
onstrated that the critical current density needed for 180/C14mag-
netization switching in a free magnetic layer of spin valve can
be reduced drastically by the assistance of substrate misfit
strain. The conventional micromagnetic simulations do nottake account of such effect of elastic energy and thus cannot
be employed to investigate the assistance of substrate misfit
strain in spin transfer magnetization switching.
In this work, we propose to combine the phase-field
microelasticity theory with micromagnetic simulations to
understand the effect of substrate misfit strain in spin transferswitching. In particular, we investigate strain-assisted spin
transfer switching in CoFeB-based magnetic tunnel junc-
tions. First, we show the strain distribution to illustrate themechanism of strain-induced magnetization reorientation.
Then, we discuss the effect of substrate strain assistance in
spin transfer switching by showing magnetization trajecto-ries and magnetic domain evolutions. At the end, we present
a potential strain-assistance multilevel bit spin transfer mag-
netization switching by using substrate misfit strain.
We investigated spin-valve nanoislands with the structure
of CoFeB (40 nm)/MgO (2 nm)/CoFeB (20 nm) of square
cross section area as shown in Figure 1(a).W ee m p l o y e da
Cartesian coordinate system where the current is along the z
axis in Figure 1(b). The two CoFeB layers are separated by a
thin MgO layer, and the bottom CoFeB layer is the free layerwhose magnetization dynamics is triggered by a spin-
polarized current. The top CoFeB layer is the pinned layer
with its magnetization vector Pfixed in the direction along the
positive x axis. The initial magnetization vector Mof the layer
is along the negative or positive x axis. The free layer lateral
length of spin valve magnetic island is fully constrained by astiff substrate. We generally define the substrate strain repre-
sented by e
ii(i¼1 and 2), and the positive current as electrons
flowing from the free layer to the pinned layer. In this paper,the positive current will lead to the antiparallel structure (AP,
“1”) between the free layer and the pinned layer while the
negative current will lead to the parallel structure (P, “0”)according to the STT theory. To illustrate the mechanism of
strain-assisted magnetization switching, Figure 1(c)shows the a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
houbinghuang@gmail.com.
b)H. B. Huang and J. M. Hu contributed equally to this work.
0003-6951/2014/105(12)/122407/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 122407-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 122407 (2014)
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On: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 18:45:58in-plane strain distributions e11and e22in the y-z and x-z
planes under the condition of isotropic in-plane substrate
strain e11¼e22¼/C00.9%. We observe that the largest strain is
located in the interface of substrate, and the strain in the mid-dle of nanoisland is larger than the strains in the corners. We
use Figure 1(d)to illustrate the mechanical effect of substrate
strain on the x-y plane. The strain will drag the magnetizationfrom its initial direction (axial) to the four corner directions.
Therefore, we can obtain 45
/C14and 135/C14magnetization switch-
ing. Due to four possible diagonal directions, we can obtainfour possible magnetization distributions which could be used
in the multi-bit spin transfer magnetization switching.
The magnetization dynamics i s described by using a gener-
alized Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert- Slonczewski (LLGS) equation
1,2
dM
dt¼/C0 c0M/C2Hef f/C0ac0
MsM/C2M/C2Hef f ðÞ
/C02lBJ
1þa2 ðÞ edM3
sgM;PðÞ M/C2M/C2P ðÞ
þ2lBaJ
1þa2 ðÞ edM2
sgM;PðÞ M/C2P ðÞ ; (1)
where Heffis the effective field, c0¼c/(1þa2),cis the elec-
tron gyromagnetic ratio, and ais the dimensionless damping
parameter. The effective field includes the anisotropy field,
the demagnetization field, the external field, the elastic field,and the exchange field, namely, H
eff¼HkþHdþHext
þHelasþHex, given as
Hef f¼/C01
l0dE
dM; (2)
where E is the total energy, expressed by E ¼EkþEdþEext
þEelasþEex, where E k,Ed,Eext,Eelas, and E exare anisotropy
energy, demagnetization energy, Zeeman energy, elastic
energy, and exchange energy, respectively. The details forobtaining E k,Ed,Eext, and E excan be found in our previous
papers.36–38Note that a finite size magnet magnetostatic
boundary condition39is applied to calculate the demagnet-
ization energy E d, to consider the influence of geometric size
on the magnetic domain structures of such three-dimensional
nanomagnets.
In particular, the elastic energy E elasis calculated based
on a previously developed phase-field model40for a three-
phase system that is comprised of an isolated magnetic nano-
island (the free layer herein), a stiff substrate, and the air. Inthis case, the stress-free boundary condition at the top and
lateral surfaces of the magnetic nanoisland can be automati-
cally incorporated by setting the elastic constants of the airphase as zero. Overall, the integration of such phase-field
model with micromagnetic simulations allows us to study
the effect of the spatially variant strains [that are obtained af-ter the mechanical relaxation of the substrate strain e
ii, also
see Fig. 1(d)] on the magnetic domain structure and magnet-
ization dynamics. Mathematical expression and the detailednumerical solution of E
elascan be found in Ref. 40. The cor-
responding effective elastic field H elascan be expressed as
Hx
elas¼2B2
2mxm2z
c44/C02B1e11mx;
Hy
elas¼2B2
2mym2z
c44/C02B1e22my;
Hz
elas¼2B2
2mz1/C0m2
z/C0/C1
c44þ2B1
/C2c12e11þe22 ðÞ mzþ2B1mzm2
z/C01
3/C18/C19 /C20/C21
c11;(3)
where B1¼/C01.5k100(c11–c12)a n d B2¼/C03k111c44,w i t h k100
andk111representing the magnetostrictive coefficients. From
Eq.(3), it can be seen that the in-plane effective elastic field is
FIG. 1. Schematics of (a) the high den-
sity patterned bit array (b) the building
block of CoFeB/MgO/CoFeB nanois-
land spin valve in Cartesian coordi-
nates. Spin-polarized current is applied
perpendicularly to the island plane. (c)The strain distributions at different
planes from phase-field simulations.
(d) Illustration of strain distributions in
3D coordinate.122407-2 Huang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 122407 (2014)
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On: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 18:45:58biaxial isotropic ( Hx
elas¼Hy
elas) under substrate-induced iso-
tropic in-plane strains (i.e., e11¼e22). In this case, the magnet-
ization vector is likely to align along one of the four in-plane
diagonal axes if not switching out of the film plane.40
The last two terms on the right side of Eq. (1)describe
STT that tends to drag the magnetization away from its ini-
tial state to its final state. The scalar function is given by1,2
gðM;PÞ¼½ /C0 4þð1þgÞ3ð3þM/C1P=M2
sÞ=4g3=2/C138/C01;(4)
where gis the spin polarization constant, MandPare the
magnetizations of free and fixed layers in Figure 1(b), the
angle between MandPish.M/C1P/Ms2¼cosh.HSTTis
the corresponding effective field given by
HSTT¼2lBJgðM;PÞM/C2P=ðcedM3
sÞ; (5)
where lB, J, d, e, and M s, are the Bohr magneton, current
density, thickness of the free layer, electron charge, and satu-
ration magnetization, respectively.The magnetic parameters employed in the simulations are
as follows: saturation magnetization M s¼9.549 /C2105A/m,41
Gilbert damping parameter a¼0.00439,42spin polarization
factor g¼0.5,43magnetocrystalline anisotropy constants
K1¼1.2/C2104J/m3and K 2¼0,35elastic constants c 11¼2.57
/C21011Nm/C02,c 12¼1.62 /C21011Nm/C02, and c 44¼1.05
/C21011Nm/C02,35magnetostrictive constants k100¼139ppm
andk111¼22ppm.41We investigate the influence of normal
substrate strain e11and e22on the magnetization state by
assuming a zero shear strain. The dynamics of magnetization
was investigated by numerically solving the time-dependentLLGS equation using the Gauss-Seidel projection method and
the semi-implicit Fourier spectral method.
44,45The samples
were discretized in computational cells of 2 /C22/C22n m3,a n d
the total size is 80 /C280/C220 nm3.46
Figure 2(a)shows the temporal evolutions of magnetiza-
tion components at the current density of 5.0 /C2106A/cm2.
Three lines represent magnetization component hmxievolu-
tions with different substrate biaxial strains ( e11¼e22¼0,
FIG. 2. (a) Temporal evolutions of the
average normalized magnetization
components hmxiwith different sub-
strate strains at the current density of
5.0/C2106A/cm2. (b) Magnetization tra-
jectories at different strains. (c)
Snapshots of magnetic domains evolu-tion with different substrate strain at
J¼5.0/C210
6A/cm2.
FIG. 3. (a) and (c) Temporal evolu-
tions of effective fields along x axis at
the substrate strains of /C00.5% and
/C00.9%. (b) and (d) The magnetization
trajectories projection on x-y plane at
the strains of /C00.5% and /C00.9%.122407-3 Huang et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 122407 (2014)
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On: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 18:45:58/C00.5%, /C00.9%). At the low current density of 5.0 /C2106A/cm2,
the magnetization cannot be switched by the spin transfer
torque without substrate misfit strain. However, the magnet-
ization switching (180/C14switching) can be achieved with the
assistance of substrate misfit strain /C00.5%. In addition, the
magnetization component hmxiwill switch from /C01.0 to
0.702 at the substrate biaxial strain /C00.9%, which we call
135/C14switching. The substrate misfit strain reduces effec-
tively the critical current and the magnetization switching
time. We show the magnetization precession trajectorieswith zero, /C00.5% and /C00.9% strains at the current density of
5.0/C210
6A/cm2. It is observed that three types of trajectories
in Figure 2(b) show no switching, 180/C14switching, and 135/C14
switching at zero, /C00.5%, and /C00.9%, respectively. The
evolution of magnetic microstructure is illustrated in Figure
2(c)with the numbers corresponding to those in Figure 2(a).
The 180/C14magnetization switching can be accomplished
under the substrate strain of /C00.5% ( e11,e22), while the 135/C14
magnetization switching is obtained at a higher substrate
compressive strain of /C00.9%. As shown in Figure 3,w e
show the evolutions of effective fields along x axis and the
projection of magnetization trajectories on x-y plane at thebiaxial substrate strains of /C00.5% and /C00.9%. The elastic
effective field plays a significant role during the magnetiza-
tion switching from AP to P. With the assistance of elasticeffective field, the magnetization switching is easily accom-
plished by a small current input since the elastic effective
field will drag the magnetization to the diagonal directions.However, the large elastic effective field will impede the
180
/C14magnetization switching. A small current input cannot
overcome the barrier of the elastic effective field, therefore,the 135
/C14magnetization switching is obtained at the large
biaxial substrate strain /C00.9%. In the following, we focus on
the 135/C14magnetization switching to achieve the strain-
assisted four-state magnetization switching.
We use Figure 4(a) to illustrate the process of strain-
assisted spin transfer switching. Three-step magnetizationswitching has four resistance states that are useful in design-
ing multi-bit MRAM. Figure 4(b)shows the hysteresis loops
at different substrate strains ( e
11¼e22¼0,/C00.5%, /C00.9%).
At the biaxial strain /C00.5%, we observe the decrease of criti-
cal current for magnetization switching (blue hysteresis
loop). For the strain /C00.9%, we observe two intermediate
states (45/C14and 135/C14) at a low current density. If we continue
to increase the current density, AP and P structures can be
obtained at larger positive and negative current densities,respectively. Compared with previous multilevel bit spin
transfer switching,16,28our results have several advantages.
First, it may reduce the cost of magnetic devices because
only one free layer is required during the design of multile-vel bit spin transfer switching magnetic devices, while two
soft layers (one is hard layer and the other is soft layer) are
needed in previous multilevel bit spin transfer switchingdevices. Second, certain transitions are prohibited in the pre-
vious structures since the hard soft layer requires a large cur-
rent to switch and the soft layer can be switched by a smallcurrent. For example, “11,” “10,” “01,” and “00” in Ref. 16
are four resistance states, where the first digit refers to the
hard soft layer. Level 00 cannot be switched into 10 state byusing a single current. Only reversible transitions between
11 and 10, 01, and 00 can be achieved. However, all transi-
tions among 0
/C14,4 5/C14, 135/C14, and 180/C14states can be obtained
by adjusting the substrate strain. Third, the substrate strain
can be produced by a piezoelectric substrate, and hence one
can use voltage or electrical field to control the magnitude ofstrain through the converse piezoelectric effect. Despite
these promising impacts, there are issues remain to be solved
before the practical applications of such strain-assistedmulti-bit MRAM. For example, as the memory states along
the diagonal axes are essentially stabilized by biaxial strains,
the possible strain relaxation may somewhat affect the longtimescale device operation.
In conclusion, we investigated strain-assisted spin transfer
switching in CoFeB-based magnetic tunnel junctions by com-bining phase field simulations with micromagnetic simula-
tions. An effective method of strain-assisted spin transfer
magnetization switching is proposed to reorient the magnet-ization instead of using an external magnetic field. The critical
current of spin transfer switching is shown to decrease with
substrate biaxial strain. A potential strain-assistance multilevelbit spin transfer magnetization switching was proposed.
This work was sponsored by the US National Science
Foundation under the Grant No. DMR-1410714, and by the
National Science Foundation of China (No. 11174030). Thecomputer simulations were carried out on the LION and
Cyberstar clusters at the Pennsylvania State University.
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On: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 18:45:58 |
1.4897247.pdf | Grazing incidence angle based sensing approach integrated with fiber-optic Fourier
transform infrared (FO-FTIR) spectroscopy for remote and label-free detection of
medical device contaminations
Moinuddin Hassan and Ilko Ilev
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 85, 103108 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897247
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897247
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/85/10?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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137.99.31.134 On: Thu, 21 May 2015 15:04:45REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS 85, 103108 (2014)
Grazing incidence angle based sensing approach integrated with fiber-optic
Fourier transform infrared (FO-FTIR) spectroscopy for remote and label-freedetection of medical device contaminations
Moinuddin Hassana)and Ilko Ilev
Optical Therapeutics and Medical Nanophotonics Laboratory, Division of Biomedical Physics, Office of
Science and Engineering Laboratories, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food and DrugAdministration, Silver Spring, Maryland 20993, USA
(Received 11 July 2014; accepted 23 September 2014; published online 9 October 2014)
Contamination of medical devices has become a critical and prevalent public health safety concern
since medical devices are being increasingly used in clinical practices for diagnostics, therapeu-
tics and medical implants. The development of effective sensing methods for real-time detectionof pathogenic contamination is needed to prevent and reduce the spread of infections to patients and
the healthcare community. In this study, a hollow-core fiber-optic Fourier transform infrared spec-
troscopy methodology employing a grazing incidence angle based sensing approach (FO-FTIR-GIA)was developed for detection of various biochemical contaminants on medical device surfaces. We
demonstrated the sensitivity of FO-FTIR-GIA sensing approach for non-contact and label-free detec-
tion of contaminants such as lipopolysaccharide from various surface materials relevant to medicaldevice. The proposed sensing system can detect at a minimum loading concentration of approxi-
mately 0.7 μg/cm
2. The FO-FTIR-GIA has the potential for the detection of unwanted pathogen in
real time. [ http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897247 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
Healthcare associated infections (HAIs) in clinics and
hospitals are a major concern for public safety and impose
significant medical, social, and economic consequences. Ap-
proximately, 1 in every 20 inpatients has an infection asso-ciated with hospital care.
1In 2002, 1.7 ×106HAI occurred
in U.S. hospitals and approximately 99 000 deaths were asso-
ciated with it.2Recently published CDC report showed that
2×106people in the United States become infected and at
least 23 000 people die due to antibiotic resistant bacteria.3
Department of Health and Human service (DHHS) and asso-
ciated organization including the U.S. Food and Drug Admin-
istration (FDA) have already setup their action plan to identifythe reduction of HAI caused by any infectious agent, includ-
ing bacteria, fungi, viruses, etc.
1,4
Although there are many factors related to HAI, medi-
cal devices in clinical setting are one of the major risk factor
as the devices are being extensively used in clinical practices
for diagnostics, therapeutics, and indwelling devices such asmedical implants. There are several techniques available in
healthcare facilities to validate cleaning process for prevent-
ing the spread of infection to patients and healthcare com-munity caused by medical device contamination. These tech-
niques are based on ex situ approaches such as swap/wipe
sampling, which are complex, time consuming, and not ad-
equate to monitor and detect pathogen contamination in real
time.
In order to reduce HAI for protecting public health, al-
ternative methods for quantitative, accurate, easy-to-use and
a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
moinuddin.hassan@fda.hhs.gov. Tel.: +1 301-796-3089.real-time detection, and identification of microorganism con-
taminations on medical devices surface in clinical settingare needed. We have recently presented a novel proof-of-
concept platform for label-free, remote, and rapid detection
of medical device surface contamination employing a fiber-optic Fourier Transform Infrared (FO-FTIR) spectroscopy
methodology.
5FTIR has a potential for providing qualitative
and quantitative spectral signature information about the tar-geted samples.
6–9Furthermore, the developed reflection based
FO-FTIR method ensures some unique benefits such as intrin-
sic biochemical specificity, non-destructive, non-contact, andsensitive contamination detection with potential for minia-
turization for in situ on site applications. We demonstrated
the feasibility and sensitivity of the FO-FTIR technology fordetecting and analyzing some reference low-concentration
protein (such as ≤0.0025% or ≤4×10
11molecules of
BSA) and bacterial endotoxins (such as 0.5% or 0.5 EU/ml
endotoxin).5However, since the FO-FTIR design uses a re-
flection sensor mode with a relatively small angle of incidenceof about 20
◦, it is more effective for testing samples with
highly reflected surfaces. In practice, medical device surfaces
are made of different types of materials from metals to dielec-tric (such as vinyl, glass, etc.) with various surface finish qual-
ity from smooth to rough, which provides lower surface re-
flection modes. Therefore, to enhance the FO-FTIR sensitiv-ity for measurement of thin layer of samples on non-reflective
or semi-reflective surface, a significantly increased sensor
path-length through the tested sample is required, which canbe achieved using a grazing incidence angle (GIA) sensing
approach integrated to the FO-FTIR methodology.
Reflection spectroscopic measurement at GIA
is a broadly employed sensing method for various
applications.
10–14Currently, some commercially available
0034-6748/2014/85(10)/103108/5/$30.00 85, 103108-1
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GIA spectroscopic probes have been used in food and drug
manufacturing plants for cleaning validation.11–15However,
a major challenge of this technique is its applicability to anytarget area on medical device surfaces due to large and flat
designs employed. As a continuation of the study, we have
developed a novel simple sensing approach (FO-FTIR-GIA)using a flexible IR hollow-core fiber probe operating in a GIA
mode that is integrated in a FO-FTIR spectroscopy platform.
FO-FTIR-GIA sensing method can provide a non-contact,
label-free tool for detection and identification of contami-
nants on various remote target areas including tough-to-reachareas of different medical device surfaces such as metal
and dielectric materials. In this study, we investigated the
sensitivity of the proposed FO-FTIR-GIA sensing methodutilizing different types of target surfaces (substrates) relevant
to medical device surfaces with biological contaminant such
as lipopolysaccharide as an example. The results suggest thatthe FO-FTIR-GIA method provides reasonable sensitivity for
in situ identification of pathogenic contaminant on medical
device surface.
II. MATERIAL AND METHODS
A. Reagents and chemicals
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Pseudomonas aerug-
inosa was commercially supplied by Sigma-Aldrich (St.
Louis, MO) in powder form and endotoxin-free water was
purchased from Fisher Scientific (Fair Lawn, NJ).
B. Sample preparation
All chemicals were used without further purification. A
thin plastic film (0.1 mm thick) was used as a homogeneoussample to validate the sensitivity of the experimental setup
with different types of sample substrates. LPS was used as a
contaminant sample relevant to microorganism comminationon medical device surface. 100% stock solution of LPS was
prepared by adding 1mg of LPS to 1 ml of endotoxin free wa-
ter at room temperature. The solution was stirred for 10 min or
until the LPS dissolved completely. Using the stock solution,
different concentration samples (such as 50%, 25%, 10%, 5%,etc.) were prepared and stored at 4
◦C until the measurements
were completed, for a maximum of 1 day.
C. Substrate
Different types of substrates were selected relevant to
medical device surfaces including metals (rough and smoothstainless steel, aluminum, etc.) and dielectric (vinyl and
glass). The highly reflected surface (99.9%) of a 25 mm di-
ameter gold mirror (ThorLabs Inc., Newton, NJ) was used asa standard sample substrate.
D. Fiber-optic sensor system
A schematic diagram of the measurement setup is shown
in Fig. 1. We have designed and developed a prototype of
GIA sensing probe that is integrated with the fiber-optic FTIR
FIG. 1. (a) Schematic diagram of the measurement system and (b) grazing
incidence angle.
spectroscopy platform for remote and in situ detection of mi-
croorganism. As shown in Fig. 2, the GIA probe includes two
flexible hollow-core fiber arms to set incidence and detec-
tion angles, respectively. The incidence angle can vary from
70◦to 85◦as compared to the normal incidence angle (0◦),
which allows the sensitivity of IR reflectance measurements
to be maximized for thin layers of biochemical contaminantson any types of metallic (such as steel, aluminum, etc.) and
dielectric (such as glass, polymer, etc.) materials surfaces.
In this study, we used a fixed incidence angle of 85
◦to the
surface for all measurements of contaminations on different
types of reflecting surfaces. The FO-FTIR-GIA sensor head is
connected to the external ports of the FTIR spectrometer (Ver-tex 70, Bruker Optiks, Ettlingen, Germany) by two mid-IR
hollow-core optical fibers (Hollow Waveguide with Acrylate
Buffer, HWEA7501200, Polymicro Technologies, Phoenix,AZ) with diameters of 750 μm and a numerical aperture of
0.05. One of the sensor fibers is employed for light delivery
from a light source (Halogen) to the sample, and the otherfiber for transmitting the signal light to the detector (liquid
Nitrogen cooled MCT) after absorption by the sample. By
using an adjustable stage, the sensor head was placed abovethe sample at a distance where the signal intensity is maxi-
mal. Each spectrum was averaged over 256 scans in the range
of 850–5000 cm
−1a ta4c m−1resolution. Preceding sample
measurement, the background signal was collected from the
corresponding surface (substrate) without the sample.
Prior to FTIR experiments, the substrate of different
types were cleaned with 70% isopropyl alcohol wipes and
dried with scientific grade wipes. Surface finish of differ-ent types was characterized using a digital microscope (VH-
Z500, Keyence Corp., Itasca, MA) with 2000 ×magnifica-
tion. As representative model of a homogenous sample, aplastic thin film is placed on different types of substrates
and measured. LPS solution of different concentrations were
placed on each plate of different material composition in 2 μl
drops of equal size ( ∼4 mm diameter) and allowed to dry for
∼30 min under a covered area to decrease the dust landing on
FIG. 2. Proposed grazing incidence angle (GIA) sensing head.
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the plates. Before each measurement, background spectrum
of the clean surface was collected prior to sample deposition.
Three trials were recorded and averaged at different positionson the sample.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
In our previous study,5we demonstrated the feasibility
to use a fiber-optic FTIR (FO-FTIR) reflection sensing head
for real time detection and analysis of surface contaminations.The method has a potential for detecting surface contamina-
tion in order to control transmission of HAI in health care fa-
cility. However, the sensor head was limited to use for highlyreflected surface with an incidence angle of 22
◦.
In this study, FO-FTIR-GIA sensing head using a flexi-
ble IR hollow-core fiber probe operating in a GIA mode withan incidence angle from 70
◦to 85◦was developed for FTIR
spectroscopic measurement to improve the detection sensitiv-
ity of various types of sample material surfaces (high-, semi-
or non-reflective) relevant to medical device surface contam-
ination detection. The angle of incidence of the FO-FTIR-GIA sensing head was optimized from any kind of distortion
of the spectrum by comparing the spectrum of a plastic film
(0.1 mm homogeneous thickness) on a mirror surface tothe spectra obtained from reflection sensing head. The spec-
trum distortion factors could include peak shift, band shape
changes, band splitting, etc., caused by various refractive in-dex of surface materials, wavelength, incidence angle, etc.
16
After fixing the incidence angle of FO-FTIR-GIA sensinghead at 85
◦, the comparative absorption spectra of the ref-
erence plastic film on a mirror surface are obtained using the
FO-FTIR-GIA and FO-FTIR reflection sensing head. Figure 3
illustrates typical absorption spectra which are identical andreproducible. Moreover, we did not observe any incidence
angle dependent distortion in these spectra.
The effectiveness and sensitivity of the FO-FTIR-GIA
sensing head at the 85
◦incidence angle was further investi-
gated by measuring the absorption spectra of the plastic filmon different types of metallic (steel and aluminum) and di-
electric (clear vinyl and glass) surfaces as well as a gold mir-
ror surface. As shown in Fig. 4, the measured spectra of the
plastic film on different types of substrates are intense and
FIG. 3. Comparative absorbance spectra of plastic film (0.1 mm thick) on
mirror surface obtained by GIA sensing head at incidence angle 85◦and re-
flection sensing head at incidence angle 22◦to the surface normal.
FIG. 4. Absorbance spectra of plastic film on different types of metallic anddielectric surfaces.
the peaks are readily identifiable of the material. The absorp-
tion peaks from plastic film on metal surfaces were found to
be highly reproducible as compare to mirror surfaces. In addi-tion, we did not observe any significant changes due to surface
roughness for stainless steel substrates.
Furthermore, in case of dielectric material surfaces, al-
though these surfaces are generally not reflective enough to
allow beam to successfully reflect off the surface, the pro-
posed novel FO-FTIR-GIA sensing approach provides ade-quate sensitivity which enable the IR light to pass through the
contaminant on a non-reflective surface and to be detected. In
Fig. 4, the absorbance spectra of plastic film on vinyl surface
is lower compared to the metallic surface, but the quality of
spectra is good enough for the identification of peaks. How-
ever, in the spectral range lower than 1500 cm
−1wavenumber,
the spectrum of plastic film on vinyl surface is distorted and
high-intensity fluctuation effects are observed in comparison
with metallic or mirror surfaces. Similar but more intense ef-
fects are also observed for clear glass substrate in the same
region as shown in Fig. 5. These effects on glass surfaces have
been observed and reported in the literature.11However, in the
region above 1500 cm−1in the spectra for the plastic film on
glass substrate are identical to the metallic surface as shownin Fig. 5(inset). At wavenumber greater than 1500 cm
−1,
glass or vinyl materials are transparent to mid-IR radiation,
but there is a strong absorption band at longer wavelengths
FIG. 5. Absorbance spectra of plastic film on glass surface. (Inset) Enlarge-
ment of the region containing the peak used for comparison.
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137.99.31.134 On: Thu, 21 May 2015 15:04:45103108-4 M. Hassan and I. Ilev Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 103108 (2014)
FIG. 6. Absorbance spectra obtained from lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on alu-
minum surface using incidence angle 22◦(reflection sensing head) and 85◦
(GIA sensing head).
that is associated with refractive index of the materials of the
surface.
Medical device contaminations in clinical environment
are mostly pathogen growing on the surface or harmful
residue left on the device surface. As a representative sam-
ple relevant to medical device microorganism contaminations,standard lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was used in this study.
17,18
LPS is the major component of the outer membrane of Gram-
negative bacteria and consists of lipid and polysaccharide.
LPS acts as endotoxins and an excessive amount of LPS (1
μg/kg) in blood may induce shock in human.19We tested
the feasibility and sensitivity of the proposed FO-FTIR-GIA
sensing head as compared to the reflection head (an inci-
dent angle of 22◦) for detecting LPS on different type of
surfaces. The comparative spectra of LPS on aluminum sur-
face are shown in Fig. 6. As compared to the proposed FO-
FTIR-GIA sensing head, the reflection sensing head is notsensitive enough to record spectra of LPS from aluminum
surface (semi-reflective), but there is no significant differ-
ence between the spectra of LPS for a higher reflecting sur-face such as smooth stainless steel or mirror surface. Typical
GIA absorption spectra of LPS in dry condition are shown in
Fig. 7. The LPS spectra can be sub-divided in accordance
FIG. 8. Absorbance spectrum of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on various types
of surface.
to the constituents of biological cells, for example, fatty
acid region or lipid (3000–2800 cm−1), amide region (1800–
1500 cm−1), polysaccharide region (1200–900 cm−1), etc.8
Each region of the recorded spectra was found to be intense
and identifiable thus enabling identification of the LPS. TheLPS spectral signatures observed in this study are similar
to those published earlier.
20Repeated measurements of LPS
on smooth stainless steel demonstrate a high reproducibil-
ity as shown in Fig. 7(a)., whereas in the case of aluminum
surface excellent reproducibility in the LPS spectra (posi-tion and peaks) is accompanied slight variations in the ab-
sorbance magnitudes (Fig. 7(b)). This may be attributed to
the higher degree of LPS homogeneity over the smooth stain-less steel surface relative to rough aluminum surface. Simi-
lar characteristics in the reproducibility were also observed
from other surface types such as rough stainless steel, vinyl,glass, etc. The acquisitions of LPS spectra from dielectric
surfaces (vinyl, glass, etc.) are limited to observations above
1500 cm
−1wavenumber due to high absorption of mid-IR
light as mentioned in previous paragraph. The LPS signature
spectra obtained from various metals and mirror surfaces are
shown in Fig. 8. The spectra of LPS from various substrates
FIG. 7. Typical absorbance spectrum of lipopolysaccrade (LPS) using three consecutive trials (a) on smooth stainless steel surface and (b) on alumin um surface.
The region can be defined according to the components of the cell: lipid (3000–2800 cm−1), amide region (1800–1500 cm−1), and polysaccharide region
(1200–900 cm−1).
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137.99.31.134 On: Thu, 21 May 2015 15:04:45103108-5 M. Hassan and I. Ilev Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 103108 (2014)
FIG. 9. Typical absorbance spectra of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of different
concentrations on aluminum with surface loading 15 μg/cm2–0.7μg/cm2.
are identical to each other. We also investigated the sensi-
tivity of the FO-FTIR-GIA sensing head for LPS of differ-ent concentrations (from 1 μg/ml to 0.025 μg/ml) after de-
positing on each plate in 2 μl drops, which provide average
surface concentrations of LPS ranged from 0.7 μgc m
−2to
15μgc m−2. Measured absorption spectra of LPS at differ-
ent loading concentrations on aluminum surface are shown in
Fig. 9. In this case, we did not observe a linear dependence in
the absorbance intensity due to the inhomogeneous LPS dis-
tributions after depositing on the surface in the dry condition.
We identified a minimum detection limit of ∼0.7μgc m2us-
ing the GIA sensing probe for detecting LPS surface residues
on aluminum when the specific spectral signals are above the
system noise level. As compared to other commercially avail-able devices, the proposed FO-FTIR-GIA sensing probe pro-
vides a detecting sample area much smaller due to the sin-
gle detecting hollow-core fiber design with a numerical aper-
ture of 0.05 used for the system (spot size approximately 0.5
mm). The minimal detection threshold is also in agreementwith other surface materials such as metals and dielectric ma-
terials used in this study. In addition, depending on the spe-
cific quantitative applications or area of interest, the minimumthreshold level could be improved by adjusting the spot size
of fiber-optic sensor system.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
Employing the mid-infrared FTIR sensing methodology,
we have developed FO-FTIR-GIA sensing approach for non-
contact, label-free identification of pathogen from various
types of surface materials relevant to medical device surfaces
in real time. Due to the fiber-optic advanced features, theFO-FTIR-GIA sensing head is flexible to fit at any target area
on medical device surface. However, further work is required
to determine the limits for in situ detection and identifica-
tion of pathogen contamination from medical device in clin-
ical environment. The proposed sensing system has the po-
tential for real time identification of pathogen in conjunctionwith mathematical algorithm and possible to control transmis-
sion of infection in healthcare industry as well as to address
infectious disease threats for the nation determined by pub-
lic health needs and Emergency Medical Countermeasures
Enterprise.
21In addition, the proposed technique could be
useful for regulatory agencies such as U.S. FDA as an alter-
native test method to implement regulatory guidelines.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study is supported by the intramural research pro-
gram of Medical Counter Measure initiative (MCMi) of Cen-
ter for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH), U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA). We like to thank Dr. DarrellTata for his useful discussions.
The authors have no conflicts of interest or financial ties
to disclose.
The mention of commercial products, their sources, or
their use in connection with material reported herein is not
to be construed as either an actual or implied endorsement
of such products by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), Department of Health and Human Services.
1U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Health Care-
Associated Infections (HAI), 2014, see www.hhs.gov/ash/initiatives/hai/ .
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D. A. Pollock, and D. M. Cardo, Public Health Rep. 122, 160–166 (2007).
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threat-report-2013 .
4Department of Health and Human Services, “Action plan to prevent
healthcare-associated infections,” 2009, pp. 1–116, see http://www.hhs.gov
/ash/initiatives/hai/actionplan/hhs_hai_action_plan_final_06222009.pdf .
5M. Hassan, T. Xin, E. Welle, and I. Ilev, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 84, 053101
(2013).
6K. K. Chittur, Biomaterials 19, 357–369 (1998).
7P. I. Haris and D. Chapman, TIBS 17, 328–333 (1992).
8D. Naumann, D. Helm, and H. Labischinski, Nature (London) 351, 81–82
(1991).
9N. A. Ngo-Thi, C. Kirschner, and D. Naumann, J. Mol. Struct. 661–662 ,
371–380 (2003).
10O. M. Primera-Pedrozo, Y . M. Soto-Feliciano, L. C. Pacheco-Londono, and
S. P. Herna´ndez-Rivera, Sensing Imaging 10, 1–13 (2009).
11B. B. Perston, M. L. Hamilton, B. E. Williamson, P. W. Harland, M. A.
Thomson, and P. J. Melling, Anal. Chem. 279, 1231–1236 (2008).
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phe.gov/Preparedness/mcm/enterprisereview/Pages/default.aspx .
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1.4894105.pdf | Peeling-off of the external kink modes at tokamak plasma edge
L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa
Citation: Physics of Plasmas (1994-present) 21, 082515 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4894105
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894105
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/pop/21/8?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10Peeling-off of the external kink modes at tokamak plasma edge
L. J. Zheng1and M. Furukawa2
1Institute for Fusion Studies, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA
2Graduate School of Engineering, Tottori University, Tottori 680-8552, Japan
(Received 15 April 2014; accepted 5 August 2014; published online 28 August 2014)
It is pointed out that there is a current jump between the edge plasma inside the last closed flux
surface and the scrape-off layer and that the current jump can lead the external kink modes to con-
vert to the tearing modes, due to the current interchange effects [L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa,
Phys. Plasmas 17, 052508 (2010)]. The magnetic reconnection in the presence of tearing modes
subsequently causes the tokamak edge plasma to be peeled off to link to the divertors. In particular,
the peeling or peeling-ballooning modes can become the “peeling-off” modes in this sense. This
phenomenon indicates that the tokamak edge confinement can be worse than the expectation basedon the conventional kink mode picture.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894105 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
The H-mode confinement—an operating mode with
high energy confinement1—has today been adopted as a ref-
erence for next generation tokamaks, especially for ITER.
However, the H-mode confinement is often tied to the dam-
aging edge localized modes (ELMs).1There is a concern that
ELMs can discharge particles and heat into the scrape-off
layer and subsequently to the divertors. The divertor plates
can be potentially damaged by such a discharge. This is par-ticularly a concern for big devices like ITER.
This concern has stimulated active researches in this
field for clarifying the tokamak plasma edge instabilities, inorder to understand the ELMs. The most well-known theo-
ries are the peeling and peeling-ballooning modes.
2,3
However, the peeling or peeling ballooning modes are of
kink type. Without field line reconnection, the plasmas inside
the last closed flux surface actually are not peeled off.
The necessity to consider the tearing mode excitation
and the coupling of the scrape-off-layer current were first
pointed out in Ref. 4. Apparently, to understand the ELMs
one needs to take into consideration the subtle feature oftokamak plasma edge, where the plasma on one side is con-
fined by the closed flux surfaces and, on the other side, the
plasma is linked to the divertors due to the open-field-linefeature in the scrape-off layer. Otherwise, one cannot explain
why there is not any ELM-type of bursting at the internal
transport barrier. The development of tearing modes caneffectively connect the pedestal plasma to the scrape-off
layer. Taking into account this edge feature, Ref. 4proposed
a current-driving-mode theory for ELMs. The magnetohy-drodynamic (MHD) modes at plasma edge can be amplified
due to the nonlinear coupling with scrape-off-layer current.
This coupling can be a positive feedback process and lead tothe ELM bursting. The theory explains many characteristic
features of ELMs as observed in tokamak experiments, such
as a sharp onset and initial fast growth of magnetic perturba-tions even when the underlying equilibrium is only margin-
ally unstable for a MHD mode and also a quick quenching
after the bursting peak. This work also points to the currentdriven modes—tearing type—as the ELM bursting explana-
tion, although the kink type of modes, such as the peeling
ballooning modes, can be a trigger.
In this paper, we further explain how the external kink
modes in tokamaks, such as the peeling ballooning modes,
can become a trigger to the excitation of tearing modes. Wepoint out that there is a current jump between the plasmas
inside the last closed flux surface and in the scrape-off layer.
When there is a plasma perturbation at the edge, the currentson each side of the jump are carried over alternatively in the
opposite direction to form a perturbed current sheet (see
Fig.1). This current sheet can lead to the excitation of tear-
ing modes. This mechanism reflects the extreme case of the
current interchange tearing modes as pointed out in Ref. 6,
with the tokamak edge and scrape-off layer specialties beingtaken into consideration. Note that the drive to the current
interchange tearing modes, as pointed out in Ref. 6,i sp r o -
portional to the current gradient. The current jump betweenthe plasma edge and the scrape-off layer makes the drive at
the edge to be dramatically enhanced. As shown in the analy-
sis later in this paper, the conversion of external kink modesto tearing modes at tokamak edge can therefore happen read-
ily and cause the edge plasma to be peeled off. Note that this
FIG. 1. The coordinate system for analyzing the current interchange effects.
The axis zpoints out of the paper. The perturbed current directions are indi-
cated. The edge plasma locates in the x<0 region, while the scrape-off layer
in the x>0 region. The plasma displacement nis plotted by the dashed
curve with n0¼0 assumed.
1070-664X/2014/21(8)/082515/6/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 21, 082515-1PHYSICS OF PLASMAS 21, 082515 (2014)
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10process may be positively fed back, as pointed out in Ref. 4.
This phenomenon indicates that the tokamak edge confine-ment can be worse than the expectation based on the conven-
tional kink mode picture.
We prove this peeling-off phenomenon by re-deriving
the nonlinear tearing mode equation, which was originally
developed by Rutherford.
7Note that Ref. 7intended to con-
sider the resistivity/current gradient effects. However, it onlytook into consideration the thermal conductivity effects
related to the current gradient, without including the current
convective effect as pointed out in Ref. 6. The current con-
vective effect at the plasma edge can be very significant due
to the jump between the plasma edge and the scrape-off
layer. This motivates us to examine this issue.
This paper is arranged as follows: Following to Sec. I,i n
Sec. II, the Rutherford’s equation will be rederived with the
current jump between the plasma edge and scrape-off layerbeing taken into account. The results will be summarized
and discussed in Sec. III.
II. REDERIVATION OF RUTHERFORD’S EQUATION AT
THE PLASMA EDGE
In this section, we will rederive the Rutherford’s equa-
tion in Ref. 7to include the effects of the current jump
between the plasma edge and scrape-off layer. We first
describe the Ohm’s laws for the edge plasma and the scrape-off layer. For the edge plasma inside the last closed flux sur-
face, Ohm’s law is
j
k¼rEk; (1)
where jis the current density, Erepresents the electric field,
ris the conductivity, with resistivity being g¼1/r, and sub-
script kdenotes the parallel direction. In the scrape-off layer,
the field lines are connected to divertors at the both ends,
indicated by Aand B. The generalized Ohm’s law in the
scrape-off layer was derived in Ref. 8
jk¼rvEk/C0c0:85/C0a ðÞ jSATTB/C0TA
TA; (2)
where
jk¼jSAT^jk;
^jk¼/C0c(
e/0
TAþjþ0:85/C0a ðÞTB
TA/C01/C18/C19
þln1þ^jk
ð1/C0TB=TA ðÞ1=2^jkÞTB=TA2
43
5)
;
jSAT¼1
23=2enC s;
rv¼e2k11Lk
meðB
Adlk
nesei"#/C01
;
c¼^rTA
eLkJSAT;
j¼1
2ln2mi
pme/C18/C19
¼3:89:Here, eis the elementary charge, mis the mass, nis the den-
sity, Tdenotes the temperature, /is the electric potential,
/0¼/B/C0/A,Csis the sound speed, a¼k12/k11,k11andk12
are the Spitzer-Harm coefficients,9seiis the electron-ion col-
lisional time, Lkdenotes the connection length between both
ends AandB,lkis the arc length along magnetic field line,
subscripts eand irepresent, respectively, the electron and
ion quantities, and subscripts AandBdenote quantities at
the ends Aand B, respectively. Note here that the Ohm’s
laws in Eqs. (1)and(2)are given the moving frame. In the
laboratory frame, the electric field Eneeds to be replaced by
Eþv/C2B. Here, we use the bold face to denote vectors, B
denotes the magnetic field, and vis the fluid velocity.
As Ref. 7, we use the slab model in the ( x,y,z) space,
with x¼0 specifying the rational surface and zrepresenting
the longitudinal direction. The coordinate system is shown in
Fig. 1. The flux function wand the stream function uare
introduced to represent the magnetic field Bx¼–@w/@y,
By¼@w/@x,and the velocity vx¼/C0@u=@y;vy¼@u=@x.
Here, the subscripts ( x,y,z) are introduced to denote the cor-
responding projections. We also introduce the displacement
n, which is related to the velocity by @n=@t¼v.
We consider the equilibrium with magnetic shear, in
which the poloidal magnetic field is represented by
By¼B0
yx. Here, prime is used to denote the derivative with
respect to x. The total magnetic flux can be written as7
wðx;y;tÞ¼w0ðxÞþdwðy;tÞ; (3)
where w0ðxÞ¼B0
yx2=2 is the equilibrium value, dwðy;tÞ
¼dw1ðtÞcoskyis the perturbed value, and kis the poloidal
wave number. We use subscript 0 to denote the unper-
turbed quantities and “ d” to tag the perturbed quantities.
Nevertheless, the subscript 0 is dropped as soon as there is
no ambiguity with the total qua ntities. The purpose of this
work is to prove that, if there is a free-boundary kinkmode, it can be converted to the tearing modes due to the
current jump from the plasma region inside the last closed
flux surface to the scrape-off layer. Therefore, we assumethat there is a kink perturbation at the plasma edge as
follows:
n¼n
0þn1cosky: (4)
Here, n0is used to specify the distance between the last
closed flux surface and the rational surface. Note that at the
plasma edge, the magnetic shear is very large, the distance
between the last closed flux surface and the rational surfacec a nb ev e r ys m a l l ,s ot h a to n em a ya s s u m e n
0!0. We also
note that the kink modes have different parities from that of
tearing modes. Although there is finite displacement n/C0n0
at the rational surface, the direct effect of ( n/C0n0)o ndwis
negligible, since dw/C24x(n/C0n0). The effects of the dis-
placement ( n/C0n0) to be considered in this work are the for-
mation of current sheet due to the convective carrying-over
of equilibrium current. In difference from Ref. 7,i nw h i c h
then/C0n0turbulence effects on the tearing modes through
the thermal conduction are considered; in this work, we
consider the convective effect on the formation of current
sheet.082515-2 L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa Phys. Plasmas 21, 082515 (2014)
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10As usual, we use the Ampere’s law and the field diffu-
sion equation to construct the basic set of equations. TheAmpere’s law gives
d2dw
dx2¼l0djz; (5)
where l0is the magnetic constant.
As for the field diffusion equation, we have to consider
separately the edge plasma region ( x/C200) inside the last
closed flux surface and the scrape-off layer ( x>0). We first
consider the edge plasma region ( x/C200). The derivation of
the field diffusion equation is similar to that in Ref. 7. Using
Faraday’s law, one obtains dEz¼@dw/@t. Using this expres-
sion and the velocity representation with du, the curl opera-
tion of Ohm’s law in Eq. (1)yields
@dw
@t/C0@du
@yB0
yx¼dgjzðÞ: (6)
Here, as discussed previously, the v/C2Beffect has been
added in the Ohm’s law Eq. (1). The perturbed quantity
d(gjz) in Eq. (6)contains both the local inductive ( @/@t) and
convective ( v/C1r) contributions due to the presence of the
displacement nin Eq. (4)(see Fig. 1). We exclude the inho-
mogeneity effects of the plasma resistivity both in the edge
plasma region ( g) and in the scrape-off layer ( gv) from our
consideration, since they are smaller than the effects from
the current jump between the edge plasma and the scrape-off
layer. In consistence with this, we also ignore the inhomoge-neity effects of other thermal quantities, such as nandT.I n
the region, where the edge plasma is not taken over by the
scrape-off-layer plasma, we then have
dðgj
zÞ¼gdjz: (7)
Instead, in the region, where the edge plasma is replaced by
the scrape-off-layer plasma, one has to include the convec-tive effects due to the displacement n. This yields
dgj
zðÞ¼gvjzþc0:85/C0a ðÞ gvjSATTB/C0TA
TA/C0gjz0;
¼gvdjz/C0D^E; (8)
where the electric field jump reads
D^E/C17gjzp0/C0gvjzv0þc0:85/C0a ðÞ gvjSATTB/C0TA
TA/C20/C21
:Here, jzp0andjzv0denote the equilibrium current densities,
respectively, in the plasma edge and the scrape-off layer.Using Eqs. (7)and(8), the diffusion equation in the edge
plasma region ( x<0), Eq. (6), can be expressed as
@dw
@t/C0@u
@yB0
yx¼Hn/C0xðÞ gdjzþHx/C0nðÞ gvdjz/C0D^E/C0/C1
;(9)
where H(x) is the Heaviside step function. Similarly, the dif-
fusion equation in the scrape-off layer ( x>0) can be
obtained as
@dw
@t/C0@u
@yB0
yx¼Hx/C0nðÞ gvdjzþHn/C0xðÞ gdjzþD^E/C0/C1
:(10)
The current jump between the edge plasma and scrape-off layer
and the inclusion of the convective effects make the diffusionequations (9) and (10) become different from that in Ref. 7.
To proceed to derive the tearing mode equation, we still
need to consider separately the edge plasma region ( x/C200) and
the scrape-off layer ( x>0). We first treat the edge plasma
region ( x/C200). Dividing by xand averaging over yat a constant
wto eliminate the second term on the left, Eq. (9)becomes
1
l0@2dw
@x2¼@dw=@t
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
þHx/C0nðÞ D^E
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ gþHx/C0nðÞ gv
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+ ; (11)
where h/C1 /C1 /C1i ¼ ð k=2pÞÐ2p=k
0f/C1 /C1 /C1g dy. Here, we have used
Eq.(5)to express djzon the left hand side and noted that
djz(w) is a function of wonly as required by the reduced vor-
ticity equation B/C1rdjz¼0, proved in Ref. 7. Further integra-
tion over xfrom/C01 ! 0 of Eq. (11)yields
@dw
@x/C12/C12/C12/C120
/C01¼/C0l0ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi ffi2B0
ypð0
/C01dw
w/C0dwðÞ1=2
/C2@dw=@t
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
þHx/C0nðÞ D^E
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ gþHx/C0nðÞ gv
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+ :
Multiplying cos kyand averaging over y,this equation is
reduced to
@dw1
@x/C12/C12/C12/C120
/C01
dw1dw1¼/C02l0ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi ffi2B0
yp@dw1
@tð0
/C01dwcosky
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+2
Hn/C0xðÞ gþHx/C0nðÞ gv
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+ /C02l0ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi ffi2B0
ypð0
/C01dwcosky
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
Hx/C0nðÞ D^E
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ gþHx/C0nðÞ gv
w/C0dwðÞ1=2*+ :(12)
Introducing the dimensionless quantities w¼w=dw1;DE¼l0D^E=ðgB0
yÞ;D0
/C0¼@dw1
@xj0
/C01=dw1, and the island width
xT¼2ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
dw1=B0
yq
, one obtains from Eq. (12)082515-3 L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa Phys. Plasmas 21, 082515 (2014)
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10D0
/C0¼l0ffiffiffi
2p
g@xT
@tðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+2
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+ þ2ffiffiffi
2p
xTðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hx/C0nðÞ DE
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+ : (13)
Similarly, in the scrape-off layer ( x>0), one has
D0
þ¼l0ffiffiffi
2p
g@xT
@tðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+2
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+ /C02ffiffiffi
2p
xTðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ DE
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+ ; (14)
where D0
þ¼@dw1
@xjþ1
0=dw1. Combining Eqs. (13)and(14), one finally obtains the tearing mode equation
D0¼2ffiffiffi
2p
l0
g@xT
@tA0/C02ffiffiffi
2p
xTAc; (15)
where D0¼D0
/C0þD0
þand
A0¼0:5ðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+2
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+/C12/C12/C12/C12/C12
x<0þðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+2
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+/C12/C12/C12/C12/C12
x>02
6666643
777775;
A
c¼/C0ðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hx/C0nðÞ DE
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+/C12/C12/C12/C12/C12
x<0þðþ1
/C01dwcosky
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ DE
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+
Hn/C0xðÞ þHx/C0nðÞ gv=gðÞ
w/C0cosky ðÞ1=2*+/C12/C12/C12/C12/C12
x>0:
Equation (15) is the modified Rutherford equation with
the current convective effects being taken into account at the
plasma edge, where there is a current jump. Note that in
Eq.(15),D0can be obtained from the outer solution, A0
specifies the inductive contribution, and Acis the convective
contribution. Letting Ac¼0 (i.e., DE¼0) and g¼gv,
Eq.(15) reduces to the usual Rutherford equation given in
Ref. 7. From Fig. 1, one can see that in the region for
H(x/C0n)¼1 and x<0, one usually has cos ky<0; and in
the region, for H(n–1 )¼1 and x>0, one usually has
cosky>0. Therefore, one usually has Ac>0. This shows
that the convective contribution from the current jump is
generally a driving term for tearing modes.
Using the Ampere’s law, one can get the ordering esti-
mate: DE/C24O ð 1Þ. Noting that the second term on the right
hand side of Eq. (15) is inversely proportional to the island
width xT, the convective driving contribution can be very
large. In the case with the current varying smoothly without
a steep jump, the convective driving term is proportional tothe displacement n
1as shown in Ref. 6. In the current case,the current jump significantly enlarges the convective driv-
ing effects in Eq. (15). Note that the kink mode has a differ-
ent parity from that of the tearing mode. However, the
inclusion of the current convective effects causes the twotypes of modes to become coupled. This makes the kink
mode to be prone to convert to the current interchange tear-
ing modes at the plasma edge.
To show the magnitudes and parameter dependences,
we numerically compute the two parameters A
0andAc.I n
the calculations, we make the transformation t¼cosky,s o
that the integrations over kyare reduced, for example, as
follows:
ð
dkycoskyffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiw/C0coskyp ¼ð
dttffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiw/C0tp ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
1/C0tp ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi1þtp :
The integrations of this type fit exactly the existing mathe-
matical library and we then compute them using the NAG
(Numerical Algorithms Group) library: D01APF. We con-sider the case with n
0!0. Figure 2shows the dependence082515-4 L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa Phys. Plasmas 21, 082515 (2014)
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10ofA0on the resistivity ratio gv/g. The displacement n1is
used as a parameter in this figure, which is normalized by xT.
Figure 3shows the dependence of Acon the electric field
jump DE, with the resistivity ratio gv/gas a parameter.
Figure 4shows the dependence of Acon the normalized dis-
placement n1with the resistivity ratio gv/gand the electric
field jump DEas parameters. The calculations show that the
dominant contributions come from the current inside the
magnetic island.
From Fig. 3, one can see that the bigger the current
jump across the last closed flux surface, the stronger the
island drive ( Ac). We can also see from Fig. 4thatAc!0,
asn1!0. This agrees with the asymptotic behavior of the
parameter Ac. We find that, when n1<1,Acmonotonically
decreases as n1decreases. This is reasonable, since the cur-
rent induced by the kink perturbation is a monotonic functionofn
1in this case. Note that, when n1grows from being less
than unity to slightly greater than unity, the kink-mode-
excited current involves from being solo inside the magneticisland to both inside and outside the island. Numerical
results show that the currents excited outside and inside the
magnetic island have the opposite effects on island drive.This leads to an A
chump at the vicinity of n1/C241 in Fig. 4.Figure 4also shows that, when n1becomes even larger than
unity, i.e., the peak kink perturbation becomes considerablylarger than the island width, the parameter A
cbecomes insen-
sitive with the magnitude of n1. This is because the island
size is mainly determined by the current induced inside theisland and slightly outside the island.
From the parameter scans in Fig. 4, one can see that A
cis
of order unity as n1/H114071, which is of the same order as A0.N o t e
thatn1is normalized by the island width. The condition n1/H114071
tends to be satisfied for the small island width case, as the kink
modes develop. Equation (15) therefore indicates that the
current-convective contributio n (the second term on the right)
can be very big as compared to D0, as the kink mode ( n1)g r o w s .
To be specific, one can estimate the tearing mode growth rate c
from the second term on the right hand side of Eq. (15)
cxT/C24g
l0Ac
A01
xT:
Note that Acis of order unity just as A0, as soon as n1/H114071( s e e
Fig.4). This indicates that the tearing mode growth rate is very
large, especially for a small island width and with the kink
mode having developed ( n1/H114071). As an estimate, we use the
electron Larmor radius as the estimate for xT. Assuming that at
the edge g/C2410/C07Ohm –m;Te¼1k e v ;B¼1T , a n d n1/H114071,
the electron Larmor radius is then of order 10/C04m and, there-
fore, one has that c/C24104kHz. The large tearing mode growth
rate indicates that the perturbations of kink type at the plasma
edge tend to convert to the tearing modes readily, due to thecurrent jump between the edge plasma and the scrape-off layer.
Nevertheless, we should point out that the current results
are based on the resistive MHD theory, just as the
Rutherford’s theory.
7Other small island effects, such as
the finite Larmor radius effect10and the effects induced by
the transport current,11are anticipated to be significant, espe-
cially for the small xTcases. Also, the coupling of the neo-
classical tearing modes12,13has not been taken into account.
These need to be examined in the future.
III. CONCLUSIONS AND DISCUSSION
The release of thermal energy by the kink modes in
tokamaks has been widely studied in this field. In this paper,FIG. 3. The parameter Acversus the electric field jump DE, with the resistiv-
ity ratio gv/gas a parameter. The normalized displacement n1¼1i s
assumed.FIG. 4. The parameter Acversus the normalized displacement n1, with the
resistivity ratio gv/gand the electric field jump DEas parameters.FIG. 2. The parameter A0versus the resistivity ratio gv/gwith the displace-
ment n1as a parameter.082515-5 L. J. Zheng and M. Furukawa Phys. Plasmas 21, 082515 (2014)
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130.113.111.210 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 13:34:10we show that the kink modes can carry over the equilibrium
current and leads to the formation of current sheet at the sin-gular layer. Due to the vast difference between the equilib-
rium currents in the edge plasma and the scrape-off layer,
the current sheet can induce the tearing modes. This is anextreme case of the so-called current interchange tearing
modes at the plasma edge as pointed out in Ref. 6, with the
tokamak edge and scrape-off layer specialties being takeninto consideration. Due to the current jump between the edge
plasma and the scrape-off layer, the driving effects for cur-
rent interchange tearing modes at the plasma edge can bevery big. Practically, any kink perturbations on the plasma
edge tend to induce the tearing modes. The direct conse-
quence of the excitation of current interchange tearing modeat the plasma edge is that the confined plasma inside the
closed flux surfaces can be peeled off to the scrape-off layer
and then to the divertors. As an example, the peeling orpeeling-ballooning modes can become the “peeling-off”
modes in this sense.
What is more, Ref. 5points out that the pumping out of
the confined plasma in the closed flux surfaces to the scrape-
off layer can enhance the scrape-off-layer current, especially
because the plasma edge usually carries the negativecharges, while the divertor sheets are excessive in the posi-
tive charges. The scrape-off-layer current can further drive
the tearing modes and cause the positive feedback process.Therefore, the current work can help to explain further the
edge localized modes in the H-mode confinement.
Note that there is a similarity between the edge localized
modes and the tokamak major disruptions. In the edge local-
ized mode case, the scrape-off layer current is excited; while
in the disruption case, the halo current is induced. Both areexplosive nonlinear processes and involve plasma and wall
interaction. One is in a small scale and the other is in a large
scale. The peeling-off of the plasma confined in the closedflux surfaces to the scrape-off layer or wall due to the current
interchange tearing modes at the plasma edge may also help
to explain the disruption, especially the generation of thehalo current and its feedback.
In passing, we note that the current work has not
included the neoclassical tearing mode effects,
12,13although,
in principle, the current interchange can include theinterchange of the bootstrap current. We also point out that
the current work is based on the resistive MHD theory andother small island effects, such as the finite Larmor radius
effect
10and the effects induced by the transport current,11
have not been included. These will be investigated in the
future.
In conclusion, the possible excitation of current inter-
change tearing modes at the plasma edge due to the currentjump indicates that the tokamak edge confinement can be
worse than the expectation based on the pressure driven (or
kink) instabilities alone.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by U. S. Department of
Energy, Office of Fusion Energy Science: Grant No.
DE-FG02-04ER-54742 and by JSPS KAKENHI Grant No.23760805.
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1.4894003.pdf | In situ transmission electron microscopy of individual carbon
nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structures in Joule heating
Yusuke Masuda, Hideto Yoshida, Seiji Takeda, and Hideo Kohno
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 083107 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4894003
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894003
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69.166.47.144 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 08:31:59In situ transmission electron microscopy of individual carbon
nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structures in Joule heating
Yusuke Masuda,1Hideto Y oshida,2Seiji Takeda,2and Hideo Kohno3,a)
1Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan
2The Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research, Osaka University, Ibaraki, Osaka 567-0047, Japan
3School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Kochi University of Technology, Kami, Kochi 782-8502,
Japan
(Received 12 June 2014; accepted 12 August 2014; published online 25 August 2014)
Collapse of a carbon nanotube results in the formation of a nanoribbon, and a switching of the
collapse direction yields a nanotetrahedron in the middle of a nanoribbon. Here, we report in-situ
transmission electron microscopy observations of the behavior of carbon nanotetrahedron/nanoribbonstructures during Joule heating to reveal their thermal stability. In addition, we propose that the
observed process is related to the formation process of the structure.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894003 ]
Stability of nanomaterials such as nanotubes and nano-
wires under Joule heating is crucial when they are utilized
for electronic devices and wiring; therefore, the behavior of
nanomaterials under Joule heating has been investigated bymeans of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) by many
research groups.
1–4For example, we reported in-situ TEM
observations of Joule heating of nanowires such as Sinanochains
5,6and SiC nanowires.7,8These studies show that
both Si nanochains and SiC nanowires are converted into
carbon-nanotubes by Joule heating. In the conversion of Sinanochains to carbon nanotubes, the carbon source is the sur-
face carbon contamination, and the empty core of the nano-
tube is formed by vaporization of the Si oxide of the chains.In the conversion of SiC nanowires to carbon nanotubes, the
graphitization of SiC nanowires is induced by Si vaporiza-
tion. One of the important points of the transformation byJoule heating lies in the possibility to convert a highly resis-
tive nanostructure (Si nanochain) to an excellent conductor
(carbon nanotube). The relative ease of Joule heating—asimple application of high current by microprobes—makes
the nanostructures transformations a very important candi-
date for nanowiring applications. It is therefore clear thatstructural changes of nanomaterials by Joule heating are an
important topic with yet undiscovered possibilities. In the
final analysis, both the good durability and the structuralchange can be utilized if the behavior is understood well.
We previously reported the formation of carbon nano-
ribbons by flattening of carbon nanotubes, and the formationof nanotetrahedra by switching of the flattening direction
(see Fig. 1).
9The structure consisting of nanotetrahedra
inside a nanoribbon host is interesting since it may modulatethe charge transport properties and could be useful for nano-
devices. In addition, a junction of a nanotetrahedron and a
nanoribbon could be utilized to change the direction of nano-wiring. All these possible applications require knowledge of
the durability of the nanostructures against Joule heating. In
this study, we investigate the structural changes and durabil-ity of the nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structure by means ofin-situ TEM observation. We show that carbon nanotetrahe-
dra have an excellent thermal durability and do not change
their shape up to the temperature at which carbon nanorib-
bons are broken off near the electrode. In addition, weobserved a process in which a carbon nanotetrahedron was
absorbed in the tip of a W probe keeping its shape of tetrahe-
dron. We propose that this could be the reverse process of itsformation, or provides a clue to the understanding of the for-
mation mechanism of the carbon nanotetrahedra.
We fabricated the carbon nanotetrahedron/ribbon struc-
tures by the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method. A Si
(100) substrate was roughened with SiC powder, then a
20 nm thick film of iron was deposited on the substrate at apressure of 1.0 /C210
/C03Pa. The sample was sealed in an evac-
uated silica tube (inner diameter 6 mm, length about 20 cm)
with 0.8 mg of hexadecanoic acid [C 15H31C(¼O)OH] as the
carbon source. The tube was heated to 1000/C14C for 30 min,
followed by cooling down to room temperature. Grown
FIG. 1. TEM image of a carbon nanotetrahedron formed in the middle of a
flattened multiwalled carbon nanotube.a)kohno.hideo@kochi-tech.ac.jp. URL: http://www.scsci.kochi-tech.ac.jp/kohno/ .
0003-6951/2014/105(8)/083107/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 083107-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 083107 (2014)
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69.166.47.144 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 08:31:59nanotetrahedron/ribbon structures were mounted on a Au
wire. We used a commercial piezo-driven micromanipulator
system, Nanofactory TEM-STM holder, to apply voltage and
measure electric current, and the Au wire was set in theholder. The tip of a mobile W electrical probe was located
near a nanotetrahedron structure using the micromanipulator,
so the nanotetrahedron structure was situated between the tipof the W probe and the Au wire. Then a voltage was applied
between the W probe and the Au wire, which increased as a
linear function of time. Individual nanotetrahedron/ribbon
structures were observed during Joule heating on a TEM.
The CCD camera images were recorded at a rate of 2.6frames per second with a resolution of 512 /C2512 pixels.
Figs. 2and 3show an in-situ TEM observation of a
carbon nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structure during Jouleheating. The nanoribbon was about 50 nm in width and a
nanotetrahedron was located about 200 nm apart from the W
probe. From Figs. 2(a) to2(c) as the applied voltage was
increased, we did not observe any marked change in the
structure of the nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon and the W
probe. At the moment of Fig. 2(d), the tip of the W probe
changes its shape presumably due to partial melting; how-
ever, the nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structure remained
intact. The nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon just moved slightlytoward the W probe, possibly owing to enhanced contact
with the molten tip of the W probe. Finally, as a result of
Joule heating, a part of nanoribbon was broken near thecontact to the W probe Fig. 2(e). Nevertheless, the nanotetra-
hedron did not change its shape.
Just before the moment when the nanoribbon structure
broke off, the tip of the W probe melted and noticeably
changed its shape. Therefore, the temperature at which the
nanoribbon structure was broken off was estimated to bearound the melting temperature of tungsten, which is 3695 K
for bulk crystal. However the curvature radius of the tip of
the W probe is of the order of 10
/C08m; therefore, we have to
take account of the size effect which lowers the melting tem-
perature below that of bulk W crystal of 3695 K. The follow-
ing formula10can be used to estimate of the melting
temperature of a nanoparticle:
T¼T01/C04
qsLdrs/C0rlqs
ql/C18/C192=3 ! !
;
in which Tis the melting point of a nanoparticle, T0is the
melting point of the bulk, Lis the latent heat, dis the diame-
ter of a nanoparticle, qsis the density of solid phase of a
nanoparticle, qlis the density of liquid phase of a nanopar-
ticle, rsis the surface tension of solid phase, and rlis the
surface tension of liquid phase. The estimated melting tem-perature for a nanoparticle that has the same radius as that of
the tip of the W probe was 1676 K, using the flowing values
for the parameters: T
0¼3695 K, L¼35 kJ/mol, d¼10 nm,
qs¼19 g/cm3,ql¼18 g/cm3,rs¼3.5 N/m, and rl¼2.5 N/m.
This temperature is the lowest estimation for the tip of the W
probe, since the tip of the W probe is not an isolated nano-particle. Therefore, the actual melting point of the tip of the
W probe is considered to be between 1676 K and 3695 K.
The local temperature of the tip of the W probe when thebreakdown occurred is considered to be higher than this
melting point because the process was very fast and might
not be in equilibrium with other part of the W probe. Thebreakdown of the nanoribbon at the contact suggests that
the Joule heat was produced mainly at the contact due to the
contact resistance, and the temperature of this part of the
FIG. 2. A series of TEM images of a nanotetrahedron/ribbon structure dur-
ing the first Joule heating. The position of the nanotetrahedron is indicated
by the star. The tip of the W probe was attached to the right of the nanorib-bon. The nanoribbon was broken off at the moment between (d) and (e) at
the position indicated by the arrow.
FIG. 3. Movie of Fig. 2(Multimedia view). [URL: http://dx.doi.org/
10.1063/1.4894003.1 ]083107-2 Masuda et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 083107 (2014)
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69.166.47.144 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 08:31:59nanoribbon is higher than at least the melting point of
carbon, 3773 K. The nanotetrahedron was apart from the
contact by about 200 nm; therefore, the temperature aroundthe nanotetrahedron should have been slightly lower than
this temperature. The nanoribbon was about 800 nm in length
between the two electrodes. Given that the contact resistanceof the left contact was very low and the Joule heating was
negligible at the left contact, the simple linear temperature
distribution gives the estimation of the temperature at thenanotetrahedron to be approximately 2900 K, which is the
lowest estimation.
After the first Joule heating, the tip of the W probe was
moved to make a contact to the nanoribbon again near the
nanotetrahedron structure for the second Joule heating as
shown in Fig. 4(a). The second in-situ TEM observation
revealed that the nanotetrahedron structure was absorbed
with keeping its shape to the W probe during Joule heating
as shown in Figs. 4(b)–4(d) . Then, a part of nanoribbon wasalso absorbed in the W probe [Figs. 4(d)–4(f) ]. Finally, the
nanoribbon structure was broken off again [Fig. 4(h)], where
the bias voltage was about 3.2 V and the current was about210lA [Fig. 4(i)]. The movie of the in-situ observation is in
Fig.5.
We speculate that the phenomenon in which the nanote-
trahedron was absorbed in the probe tip might give a clue to
the understanding of the formation process of nanotetrahe-
dron/nanoribbon structures. In our previous paper,
9we pro-
posed a formation mechanism of our nanoribbons and
nanotetrahedra, which we call the origami mechanism; when
a carbon nanotube is expelled from a Fe catalyst nanopar-ticle, its geometry forces the nanotube’s wall to converge,
resulting in the immediate flattening in a superior direction,
FIG. 4. A series of TEM images of a
nanotetrahedron/ribbon structure duringthe second Joule heating. (b)–(d) The
nanotetrahedron (indicated by the
arrows) was absorbed to the W probe,
then the nanoribbon was broken off
between (g) and (h). (i) Current plotted
as a function of time. The values of
applied voltage and measured current:(a) [2.54 V, 108 lA], (b) [2.70 V,
151lA], (c) [2.92 V, 180 lA], (d)
[2.97 V, 185 lA], (e) [3.03 V, 193 lA],
(f) [3.08 V, 199 lA], (g) [3.14 V,
207lA], and (h) [3.19 V, /C240lA].
FIG. 5. Movie of Fig. 4(Multimedia view). [URL: http://dx.doi.org/
10.1063/1.4894003.2 ]
FIG. 6. (a) Before Joule heating of a nanoribbon/nanotube structure and
(b) after Joule heating. The part of ribbon (upper part) in (a) changed to the
tubular form in (b). The values of applied voltage and measured current: (a)[8.97 V, 248.5 nA] and (b) [9.61 V, /C240lA (due to the breakdown of the
contact)].083107-3 Masuda et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 083107 (2014)
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69.166.47.144 On: Tue, 25 Nov 2014 08:31:59and a nanotetrahedron is formed if the flattening direction
changes during the growth. It is also possible that the whole
part of a nanotube is formed first, then it flattens. We think it
is possible to build a hypothesis that the process shown inFigs. 4and5is approximately the reverse process of the for-
mation process, in which the tip of the W probe worked as a
catalyst. If a nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structure can beabsorbed in a metal catalyst keeping its form, it would also
be possible that it is expelled from a metal catalyst forming
its shape immediately. Accordingly, the TEM observation in
Figs. 4and5supports our origami mechanism for the forma-
tion of our nanoribbons and nanotetrahedra.
We also examined a nanoribbon/nanotube structure as
shown in Figs. 6and7. Its wall number was estimated to be
around 27 using its wall thickness. Before the Joule heating,the upper part of the structure was flattened, while the lower
part had a tubular form: the inner wall was visible in the
lower part showing that it was a tube (Fig. 6(a)). During the
Joule heating, the flattened part expanded to take a tubular
form then the whole part in the TEM view became a nano-
tube Fig. 6(b). The change was so fast and within the frame
rate that its details of the transition could not be observed.
The W probe located at the upper part became molten by the
Joule heating; therefore, the temperature must have been ashigh as the melting point of the tip of the W probe. The local
melting point of the W tip shown in Fig. 6is approximately
estimated to be 3500 K using d¼100 nm. The experimental
fact that the nanoribbon/nanotube did not break suggests that
the temperature of the nanoribbon/nanotube was below the
melting point of carbon, 3773 K during the structural change.This result suggests that a nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon
structure would be thermally more stable than a nanotube/
nanoribbon structure. We speculate that structural defectssuch as five-membered, seven-membered, and eight-
membered rings are necessary to form a nanotetrahedron
and they are produced simultaneously with its growth,while such structural defects are not necessary to form a
flattened nanotube. Some defects would be generated at a
nanotube/nanoribbon junction; however, it requires lessdensity of defects than a nanotetrahedron. Therefore, a
nanotetrahedron is very stable once it is formed owing to
the structural defects, while only the adhesion of the inmostwall to itself by van der Waals force needs to be broken to
make a flattened nanotube take a tubular form, making a
simple flattened nanotube not as stable as a nanotetrahe-dron. We note that the current measured in the experiment
of Fig. 6was much lower than that of Fig. 4. We speculate
that this was due to poor contact between the nanoribbonand the W tip in Fig. 6.
Senga et al.
11also reported in-situ TEM observations
of Joule heating of simple fla ttened multi-walled carbon
nanotubes, not nanotetrahedra. When their flattened
MWCNT was Joule-heated, a part of the ribbon expanded
and took a tubular form. Furthermore, the interface of thetubular and the flattened parts moved in accordance with
the intensity of the electric current, namely temperature.
The transition between the tubular and the flattened stateswas reversible and as slow as it could be recorded using a
CCD camera equipped with their TEM. This slow and re-
versible transition between the two states indicates that theenergy barrier between the two states was relatively low
and its height was not sensitive to the transitional structuresince the wall number of their MWCNT was only several
layers, and also that the difference in energy of the tubular
and the flattened states was small with a lower energy forthe flattened state. In contrast, the very fast structural
change observed in the nanotube/nanoribbon structure in
Figs. 6and7suggests that the energy barrier between the
tubular state and the flattened state was relatively high and
the height had strong dependence on its transitional struc-
ture, and also that the tubular state had a much lower energythan the flattened state since our structure had a thicker
wall. It is very likely that once a weak pinning at the nano-
tube/nanoribbon interface is broken, it lowers the energybarrier and the structure falls down immediately to the deep
ground state, namely the tubular form. It is also considered
that the energy barrier was so high for our nanoribbon/nanotetrahedron structures owing to the dense structural
defects that the Joule heating could not make them jump
over the barrier.
In summary, we investigated the behavior of carbon
nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structures during Joule heating
by in-situ TEM. Our nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon structureswere thermally stable and did not transform into a tubular
form up to a temperature at which they were broken off. This
excellent durability implies a certain mechanism of stabiliza-tion of the structure, and promising for application in nanode-
vices and nanowiring. We also proposed a hypothesis that the
process in which a nanotetrahedron/nanoribbon was absorbedin the W probe was the reverse process of its formation.
This work was supported in part by Adaptable and
Seamless Technology Transfer Program through Target-driven R&D, Japan Science and Technology Agency and
JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 25246003. H.K. is grateful
to Y. Ohno and I. Yonenaga for the support by the inter-university cooperative research program of the Institute for
Materials Research, Tohoku University, and to D. J. Arenas
for the critical reading of the manuscript.
FIG. 7. Movie of Fig. 6(Multimedia view). [URL: http://dx.doi.org/
10.1063/1.4894003.3 ]083107-4 Masuda et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 083107 (2014)
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1.4894858.pdf | Atom-probe tomographic study of interfaces of Cu2ZnSnS4 photovoltaic cells
S. Tajima, R. Asahi, D. Isheim, D. N. Seidman, T. Itoh, M. Hasegawa, and K. Ohishi
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 093901 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4894858
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894858
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/9?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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75.102.255.44 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 19:15:40Atom-probe tomographic study of interfaces of Cu 2ZnSnS 4
photovoltaic cells
S. Tajima,1,a)R. Asahi,1D. Isheim,2D. N. Seidman,2T. Itoh,1M. Hasegawa,1and K. Ohishi1
1Toyota Central R&D Labs., Inc., 41-1 Yokomichi, Nagakute, Aichi 480-1192, Japan
2Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3108, USA
(Received 16 June 2014; accepted 26 August 2014; published online 5 September 2014)
The heterophase interfaces between the CdS buffer layer and the Cu 2ZnSnS 4(CZTS) absorption
layers are one of the main factors affecting photovoltaic performance of CZTS cells. We have
studied the compositional distributions at heterophase interfaces in CZTS cells using
three-dimensional atom-probe tomography. The results demonstrate: (a) diffusion of Cd into theCZTS layer; (b) segregation of Zn at the CdS/CZTS interface; and (c) a change of oxygen and
hydrogen concentrations in the CdS layer depending on the heat treatment. Annealing at 573 K
after deposition of CdS improves the photovoltaic properties of CZTS cells probably becauseof the formation of a heterophase epitaxial junction at the CdS/CZTS interface. Conversely,
segregation of Zn at the CdS/CZTS interface after annealing at a higher temperature deteriorates
the photovoltaic properties.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894858 ]
Recently, Cu 2ZnSnS 4(CZTS), a chalcopyrite system, is
one of the candidate materials for new photovoltaic cells.1–5
This is because: (1) it has a high absorption coefficient; (2)
its constituents are nontoxic and abundant in the earth’s
crust; and (3) it has a band-gap energy ( Eg) of 1.4 eV, which
is an ideal value for photovoltaic applications. The reported
efficiency of CZTS cells is, however, below 10%,2–5
demanding further improvements.
In the case of Cu(In,Ga)Se 2(CIGS), for which a thin-
film based solar cell with a high efficiency has been demon-
strated already, an absorber layer (CIGS) is usually coveredby a buffer layer (CdS is generally utilized) forming a p-n
junction at the interface between these layers. Because the
formation of the buffer layer affects greatly the conversionefficiency,
6it is critical to understand and control the hetero-
phase interface between the buffer layer and the absorption
layers as a key route for improving photovoltaic perform-ance. Recently, the interface between the buffer layer and
the CIGS layers has been studied in detail.
7,8For example, it
was suggested that a p-n homojunction was formed as aresult of diffusion of Cd into CIGS, leading to a reduction of
the recombination at the interface.
6,7
In the case of CZTS cells, the CdS buffer layer and the
CdS/CZTS interface are the important factors for improving
the photovoltaic properties of CIGS cells. In contrast to the
CIGS cells, however, the details of the CdS/CZTS interfacehave not been studied. Although CZTS and CIGS are at first
sight similar, the cations are different, namely, Zn and Sn
versus In and Ga, and the anions, S versus Se, which mayresult in significantly different interfaces with the CdS buffer
layer. It is therefore absolutely imperative to study crystallin-
ity, interdiffusion, and segregation at the CdS/CZTS inter-face to achieve a high conversion efficiency in CZTS cells.
While conventional surface analysis tools, Auger elec-
tron spectroscopy (AES) and secondary ionization massspectroscopy (SIMS) with sputte r etching, are often utilizedto study heterophase interfaces, these analyses cannot
resolve the complicated atomic -scale distributions of atoms
in the three-dimensional nm-scale interfacial region.
Scanning transmission electron microscopy and energy
dispersive spectroscopy (STEM-EDS) have nm-scale andeven atomic scale resolution, but they only provide two-
dimensional information in a gi ven cross-section, and they
do not determine directly elemen tary atomic distributions.
In particular, Cu and Zn or Cd and Sn are generally indis-
tinguishable from one another even using STEM high-angle
annular dark-field imaging (STEM-HAADF). These limita-tions of conventional analyses have left the detailed CdS/
CZTS interface inaccessible.
Herein, we present a study of the compositional distribu-
tions at heterophase interfaces in CZTS cells using three-
dimensional atom-probe tomography (3-D APT).
9,10The
3-D APT analyses, thanks to its unique capability to combineatomic scale resolution in three dimensions with quantitative
chemical analyses, are the most suitable tool for this purpose.
We report on direct observations of diffusion of Cd and Znat CdS/CZTS interfaces in CZTS cells, and correlations
between the interfacial structure and composition, and photo-
voltaic efficiency.
We prepared CZTS cells as described earlier.
5Mo elec-
trode layers were deposited on alkali glass substrates utiliz-
ing sputtering. The CZTS absorber layers were formedby sulfurizing the CZTS precursor utilizing H
2S gas. The
overall composition of the CZTS layer was measured by
induction coupled plasma (ICP) spectroscopy. CdS bufferlayers were deposited onto the CZTS layers by a chemical
bath deposition (CBD) method, and then the specimens were
annealed at 473, 573, or 673 K in an N
2atmosphere. Then,
ZnO:Ga (GZO) window layers and Al surface electrodes
were deposited. The microstructure of the CZTS cells
was observed by TEM. The photovoltaic properties weremeasured under a simulated AM 1.5 global spectrum and
1000 W/m
2illumination. The photovoltaic properties [con-
version efficiency ( g), short-circuit current density ( JSC),a)e0954@mosk.tytlabs.co.jp
0003-6951/2014/105(9)/093901/4/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 093901-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 093901 (2014)
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75.102.255.44 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 19:15:40open-circuit voltage ( VOC), and fill factor ( FF)] of the CZTS
cells are given in Table I.
The specimen microtips, which include regions of inter-
est, were lifted out of the bulk specimens and sharpened to a
radius of curvature of less than 50 nm, using a dual-beam
focused ion-beam (FIB) microscope. APT analyses wereperformed using a local-electrode atom-probe tomograph
LEAP 4000XSi (Cameca, Madison, WI).
9Laser-assisted
evaporation of the surface atoms from a microtip wasachieved using an applied voltage of /C242 kV dc and picosec-
ond ultraviolet laser pulses with a wavelength of 355 nm.
During APT analyses, the samples were maintained at 30 K.The base pressure of the ultrahigh-vacuum chamber was
approximately 10
–13Pa during the analyses, and a laser pulse
energy of 25 pJ was employed at a pulse repetition rate of250 kHz to achieve a target evaporation rate of 0.002–0.01
atom pulse
/C01. Three-dimensional reconstructions and data
evaluation were performed using Cameca’s IVAS3.6.6 code.Proximity histogram concentration profile
9,10analyses of the
CdS/CZTS interface are a superior approach for determining
three-dimensional atomic distributions from a non-flat inter-face and it is analytically evaluated from the reconstructed
data set of atomic positions normal to the defined 3-D iso-
concentration surface of a given element.
We note one difficulty for 3-D APT to distinguish
among ions having the same mass-to-charge ratios ( m/n).
9In
the case of CZTS cells, the following ions with the same m/nvalues may be detected: (
32S2þand64Znþ), (32S34Sþand
66Znþ), (116Snþand116Cdþ), and (16O2þand32Sþ). In our
study, the relative contributions to m/n¼64 and 66 from
S2þand Znþ, respectively, were determined from the natural
isotopic abundances. Alternatively, m/n¼116 was omitted
from the analyses because of difficulty of distinguishingbetween
116Snþand116Cdþ, and the respective elemental
compositions were corrected based on the natural isotopic
abundances. For m/n ¼32, we assigned it to be Sþ.
Additional overlaps between complex molecular ions con-
taining32So r34S and64Zn or66Zn lead to underestimating
or overestimating the Zn and S concentrations. The oxygenconcentration is based on the16O peak and could be underes-
timated due to the16O2þand32Sþoverlap mentioned above.
We investigated the relationship between photovoltaic
properties and annealing temperatures after CBD of the CdSbuffer layer
11and the results are summarized in Table I. The
photovoltaic efficiency of the CZTS cells increased with
increasing annealing temperature and had a maximum valueat 573 K and then decreased at 673 K. A similar behavior
was also reported for the CIGS system.
12To understand the
reason for this behavior, we first investigated the microstruc-
ture of the CdS/CZTS interface by TEM. Interestingly, an
epitaxial junction was observed at the CdS/CZTS interfaceafter annealing at 573 K, while it was not observed after
annealing at 473 K, Fig. 1. The crystallographic orientation
relationship between CZTS and CdS was CZTS [100] // CdS[100] or CZTS {010} // CdS {010}. The epitaxial junction at
the CdS/CZTS interface would reduce recombination at this
interface and concomitantly improve the photovoltaic prop-erties. It is thus one of the reasons that annealing at 573 K
improves the photovoltaic properties more than annealing
473 K. Alternatively, the photovoltaic properties of CZTScells decreased rapidly for annealing at 673 K. This decrease
in the photovoltaic properties could be caused by a solid-
state reaction between CdS and CZTS. To clarify this point,we investigated the 3-D atomic scale elemental distributions
at the interface by 3-D APT.
First, we evaluated the CZTS layer by 3-D APT. Figure
2displays 3-D elemental distribution of the intra-granular
CZTS grain having a volume size of about 50 /C2300 nm
3.
The elemental distribution was uniform over the CZTS grainand no secondary phases were detected, and hence the CZTS
layers were homogeneous. Table IIgives the average compo-
sition of the CZTS grain. The composition is approximatelyin agreement with the ICP results. The concentration of Na,
which was assumed to diffuse from the glass substrate, was
less than 40 atomic ppm. Recently, 3-D elemental distribu-tions of a Cu
2ZnSnSe 4(CZTSe) grain by 3-D APT were
reported.13In contrast to CZTS, small variations in the Sn
and Se concentrations in the CZTSe grain were observed,and this variation could have been caused by the formation
of secondary phases.
Next, specimen microtips were targeted near the
CdS/CZTS interface and analyzed by APT. Figure 3displays
proximity histogram concentration profiles of Zn and Cd
with respect to distance from a 10 at. % Cu isoconcentrationsurface, representing the CdS/CZTS interface. The data of
Cu and Sn were omitted because a diffusion of Cu and Sn
into a CZTS layer was not observed. Table IIIindicates the
relationships between the annealing temperature andTABLE I. Photovoltaic properties of CZTS cells after annealing at different
temperatures following CBD-CdS deposition. ( g: conversion efficiency, JSC:
short-circuit current density, VOC: open-circuit voltage, and FF: fill factor.)
Annealing temperature (K) g(%) JSC(mA/cm2)Voc(V) FF(%)
473 6.6 17.5 0.62 61
573 7.0 19.7 0.61 58673 3.1 7.1 0.37 50
FIG. 1. Cross-sectional TEM micro-
graphs and electron diffraction analysis
of the interface between CdS andCZTS for a CZTS cell annealed at
573 K after deposition of CdS.093901-2 Tajima et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 093901 (2014)
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75.102.255.44 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 19:15:40elemental compositions near the CdS/CZTS interface, where
the elemental compositions are evaluated by considering all
possible atomic and molecular ions in the 3-D APT massspectra and also subtracting the background white noise
from the mass spectra. The small concentration of Cd in the
CZTS layer detected for the 473 K annealing sample wasconsidered to be the background count of mass spectrum,
which was confirmed by cross-check measurements using
AES, SIMS, STEM-EDS, and X-ray photoelectron spectros-copy (XPS). Alternatively, the apparent Zn concentration of
about 8 at. % in CdS layer, Fig. 3, was concluded to reflect
overlaps between complex molecular ions containing
32So r
34S and64Zn or66Zn, which could not be corrected for based
on isotopic abundances, and does not mean the presence of
significant amounts of Zn in the CdS layer. The Cd concen-tration, Fig. 3, was less than 50 at. % due to the elimination
of the
116Cdþions whose m/n value overlaps with116Snþ,
see above.
For annealing at 473 K, the elemental distribution reveals
a chemically sharp CdS/CZTS interface. Interdiffusion, such
as diffusion of Cd into a CZTS layer, therefore did not occurat this temperature. Conversely, at 573 K and at 673 K, segre-
gation of Zn occurred at the CdS/CZTS interface. Interfacial
segregation of Zn could lead to the formation of impurityphases, such as ZnS and a solid solution of (Cd,Zn)S at the
CdS/CZTS interface.
14This is because CdS and ZnS can
form a continuous series of solid-solutions, while stable ter-nary compound phases involving Cu-Zn-S or Sn-Zn-S do not
exist. The segregation of Zn increases with increasingannealing temperature. There is an optimum Zn concentration
at the CdS/CZTS interface, as realized by annealing at 573 K,which yields a high photovoltaic efficiency.
There is another intriguing situation at the interface.
Table IIIalso indicates that there is a small concentration of
Cd in the CZTS layer diffusing from the CdS/CZTS interface
when the specimen was annealed at 573 and 673 K. This Cd
may substitute for Zn in CZTS and thus considered to be aconcomitant diffusion with the segregation of Zn occurring
at the CdS/CZTS interface. This is understood by the
so-called kick-out mechanism.
15Maeda et al. reported,
based on first-principles calculations, that coexistence of Cd
at a Cu site and a Cu vacancy can be easily formed in the
CZTS and CdS systems.16This result is inconsistent with
our observations. Alternatively, Nagoya et al . showed that
the dominant acceptor in p-type CZTS is Cu at a Zn site.17
The substitution of Cd at a Zn site in CZTS, if it occurs
preferentially, could cause a decrease in the concentration of
Cu at a Zn site and result in a decrease of the carrier
concentration.
Figure 4displays proximity histogram concentration
profiles of oxygen for an isoconcentration surface of 10 at. %
Cu at the CdS/CZTS interface as measured by 3-D APT.When annealing at 473 K, oxygen and hydroxide exist in the
CdS layer as residual substances of CBD and segregate at
the interface, forming Cd(S,O,OH). Therefore, the formationof Cd(S,O,OH) is also a reason why annealing at 473 K did
not yield a sufficient photovoltaic efficiency. A trace amount
of Cd(S,O,OH) and the resultant interfacial defects couldcontribute to recombination.
18After the 573 K annealing
step, the concentration of oxygen decreased and Cd(S,O,OH)
transformed to CdS. Consequently, the crystallinity of theCdS layers was also improved with the annealing as shown
in Fig. 1. In case of 673 K, segregation of oxygen at the inter-
face was observed, which was caused by the diffusion of aminute amount of residual oxygen from inner CZTS and
CdS layers to the interface.
We attribute this improvement of the photovoltaic prop-
erties by annealing at 573 K mainly to the following effect:
impurity phases such as Cd(S,O,OH) and oxides at the CdS
layers and the interface of CdS/CZTS are eliminated. As a
FIG. 2. Concentration profile of Cu, Zn, Sn, and S atoms along a cylinder in
an APT reconstruction of a CZTS grain. Inset shows 3-D distribution of the
atoms and the analysis cylinder.
TABLE II. Composition of intragranular CZTS grain via ICP and 3-D APT
measurements.
Atomic % 3-D APT 3-D APTaICPa
Cu 24.1 51.2 46.5
Zn 13.9 29.5 29.1Sn 9.1 19.3 24.4S 51.5 … …Na <0.004 … …
O <0.004 … …
aNormalized using Cu þZnþSn¼100%.
FIG. 3. APT proximity histogram concentration profiles of Zn and Cd across
a CdS/CZTS interface, with respect to a 10 at. % Cu isoconcentration surface
(distance: 0 nm), after annealing at 473, 573, and 673 K, respectively. Insetdisplays a 3-D distribution and the 10 at. % Cu isoconcentration surface,
representative of the CdS/CZTS interface.093901-3 Tajima et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 093901 (2014)
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75.102.255.44 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 19:15:40result, an epitaxial junction at the interface of CdS/CZTS
was developed and the JSCincreased by 10% compared to
the value at 473 K because of reduction in carrier recombina-
tion at the interface of the CdS/CZTS. By contrast, the VOC
stayed constant because the compositional modification at
the CdS/CZTS interface was not significant. On the other
hand, in case of 673 K, an excess Zn concentration at the
interface may result in the precipitation of ZnS, which causesa high series resistance in CZTS cells due to the high electric
resistivity of ZnS and a high conduction band offset (CBO)
at the ZnS/CZTS interface.
19Consequently, the photovoltaic
properties of the CZTS cells declined significantly leading to
an optimum annealing temperature, at 573 K in our
experiments.
In summary, 3-D APT measurements have yielded a
detailed picture of the CdS/CZTS interface in a photovoltaic
cell. The results demonstrate diffusion of Cd into the CZTSlayer, segregation of Zn at the CdS/CZTS interface, and a
change of oxygen and hydrogen concentrations in the CdS
layer depending on the annealing temperature. Annealing at573 K, after deposition of CdS, improved the photovoltaic
properties of CZTS cells because of the formation of a heter-
ophase epitaxial junction between a solid-solution of(Cd,Zn)S and CZTS and elimination of Cd(S,O,OH).
Alternatively, by annealing at 673 K, an excess segregation
of Zn leads to the formation of ZnS at the CdS/CZTS inter-face and reduces the photovoltaic properties. Therefore, it is
important to optimize the annealing temperature to improve
the photovoltaic properties of CZTS cells.
1K. Ito and T. Nakazawa, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys., Part 1 27, 2094 (1988).
2H .K a t a g i r i ,K .J i m b o ,S .Y a m a d a ,T .K a m i m u r a ,W .S .M a w ,
T .F u k a n o ,T .I t o ,a n dT .M o t o h i r o , Appl. Phys. Express 1, 041201
(2008).
3B. Shin, O. Gunawan, Y. Zhu, N. A. Bojarczuk, S. J. Chey, and S. Guha,Prog. Photovoltaics 21, 72–76 (2013).
4H. Hiroi, N. Sakai, and H. Sugimoto, in 26th European Photovoltaic Solar
Energy Conference and Exhibition (2011), p. 2448.
5T. Fukano, S. Tajima, and T. Ito, Appl. Phys. Express 6, 062301 (2013).
6P. Reinhard, A. Chirila, P. Bloesch, F. Pianezzi, S. Nishiwaki, S.
Buecheler, and A. N. Tiwari, IEEE J. Photovoltaics 3, 572–580 (2013).
7T. Nakada and A. Kunioka, Appl. Phys. Lett. 74, 2444 (1999).
8K. Hiepko, J. Bastek, R. Schlesiger, G. Schmitz, R. Wuerz, and N. A.
Stolwijk, Appl. Phys. Lett. 99, 234101 (2011).
9B. Gault, M. P. Moody, J. M. Cairney, and S. P. Ringer, Atom Probe
Microscopy , Springer Series in Materials Science Vol. 160 (Springer, New
York, Heidelberg, Dordrecht, London, 2012).
10O. C. Hellman, J. A. Vandenbroucke, J. Rusing, D. Isheim, and D. N.
Seidman, Microsc. Microanal. 6, 437 (2000).
11M. Hasegawa, S. Tajima, T. Ito, and T. Fukano, in PVSEC-22 Technical
Digest (2012), presentation number: 3-O-23.
12S. Kijima and T. Nakada, Appl. Phys. Express 1, 075002 (2008).
13T. Scwarz, O. Cojocaru-Miredin, P. Choi, M. Mousel, A. Redinger, S.
Siebentritt, and D. Raabe, Appl. Phys. Lett. 102, 042101 (2013).
14N. Korozlu, K. Colakoglu, and E. Deligoz, Phys. Status Solidi B 247, 1214
(2010).
15R. W. Balluffi, S. M. Allen, and W. C. Carter, Kinetics of Materials (John
Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey, 2005), p. 168.
16T. Maeda, S. Nakamura, and T. Wada, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys., Part 1 51,
10NC11 (2012).
17A. Nagoya, R. Asahi, R. Wahl, and G. Kresse, Phys. Rev. B 81, 113202
(2010).
18S. Tajima, H. Katagiri, K. Jimbo, N. Sugimoto, and T. Fukano, Appl.
Phys. Express 5, 082302 (2012).
19A. Nagoya, R. Asahi, and G. Kresse, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 23, 404203
(2011).TABLE III. Composition of the position from CdS/CZTS interface with length of 30 nm at various annealing temperatures after CdS deposition.
CdS/CZTS interfaceaCZTS grainb
Annealing temperature (K) Znc(at. %) O (at. %) Cdc(at. %) O (at. %) Na (at. %)
473 10 0.2 0 <0.004 <0.004
573 16 0.1 0.7 <0.004 <0.004
673 22 0.2 1.5 <0.004 <0.004
aCu 10 at. % isosurface was identified as CdS/CZTS interface.
bLocation of 30 nm from CdS/CZTS interface.
cThe value was corrected for the influence of mass spectrum background.
FIG. 4. APT proximity histogram concentration profiles of oxygen across
the CdS/CZTS interface, here represented by a 10 at. % Cu isoconcentra-
tion surface (distance: 0 nm), after annealing at 473, 573, and 673 K,
respectively.093901-4 Tajima et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 093901 (2014)
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75.102.255.44 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 19:15:40 |
1.4896476.pdf | Equilibrium reconstruction based on core magnetic measurement and its applications
on equilibrium transition in Joint-TEXT tokamak
J. Chen, G. Zhuang, X. Jian, Q. Li, Y. Liu, L. Gao, and Z. J. Wang
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 85, 103501 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4896476
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896476
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/85/10?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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132.174.254.155 On: Tue, 23 Dec 2014 12:36:15REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS 85, 103501 (2014)
Equilibrium reconstruction based on core magnetic measurement
and its applications on equilibrium transition in Joint-TEXT tokamak
J. Chen, G. Zhuang,a)X. Jian, Q. Li, Y . Liu, L. Gao, and Z. J. Wang
State Key Laboratory of Advanced Electromagnetic Engineering and Technology, Huazhong University of
Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China
(Received 24 July 2014; accepted 13 September 2014; published online 1 October 2014)
Evaluation and reconstruction of plasma equilibrium, especially to resolve the safety factor profile, is
imperative for advanced tokamak operation and physics study. Based on core magnetic measurement
by the high resolution laser polarimeter-interferometer system (POLARIS), the equilibrium of Joint-
TEXT (J-TEXT) plasma is reconstructed and profiles of safety factor, current density, and electron
density are, therefore, obtained with high accuracy and temporal resolution. The equilibrium recon-
struction procedure determines the equilibrium flux surfaces essentially from the data of POLARIS.Refraction of laser probe beam, a major error source of the reconstruction, has been considered and
corrected, which leads to improvement of accuracy more than 10%. The error of reconstruction has
been systematically assessed with consideration of realistic diagnostic performance and scrape-offlayer region of plasma, and its accuracy has been verified. Fast equilibrium transitions both within a
single sawtooth cycle and during the penetration of resonant magnetic perturbation have been inves-
tigated. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896476 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
In tokamak experiments, information of plasma equilib-
rium, especially on safety factor profile, is extremely im-
portant for physics study, as well as for plasma control and
tokamak operation.1It is well known that the fine determi-
nation of plasma equilibrium mainly depends on the detailed
knowledge of core magnetic field. Laser polarimeter based
on Faraday-Rotation measurement is considered as one ofthe most reliable diagnostics which is capable to offer the
required information.
2Over a few decades in the past, re-
searches on plasma reconstruction using polarimetric datahave been carried out on various machines under different
conditions.
3–7
For tokamaks with non-circular cross-section, the recon-
struction is usually approached directly from Grad-Shafranov
equation, and polarimetric data are served as internal con-straint to yield a best fit of plasma equilibrium.
8,9For toka-
maks with circular cross-section, the equilibrium flux surfaces
of plasma can be well described by circles with shifted cen-ters, in which the trace of probe beam for polarimetric mea-
surement can be geometrically divided into sections and de-
termined, and the local information of plasma can be obtaineddirectly from line-integrated data by inversion. Of course,
other information, for example, pressure profile and periph-
eral magnetic field, is also demanded as the input for theplasma equilibrium reconstruction. Nevertheless, the possibil-
ity to determine equilibrium flux surfaces by mainly using the
line integrated data based on an appropriate modeling is alsoexamined,
10which is significant concerning on the next gen-
eration of tokamak-type reactor that the available information
may be very limited. Along with the line-integrated data from
the laser polarimeter, a numerical algorithm based on a prede-
a)Email: ge-zhuang@hust.edu.cnfined modeling should be developed to retrieve local informa-tion for reconstructing the plasma equilibrium. In general, the
predefined magnetic flux surfaces modeling in plasma equi-librium state will put restriction on performance of an equi-
librium reconstruction procedure. Consequently, the accuracy
of the reconstruction in the process is of prior consideration.
Besides correct modeling of plasma, a reliable reconstruction
procedure should also take all possible effects into account,e.g., refraction of probe beam trace and plasma behavior in
Scrape-Off Layer (SOL) region, which could introduce large
error in some cases.
Motivated to study of plasma equilibrium and Magneto-
Hydro-Dynamics (MHD) instability, a high resolution laser
polarimeter-interferometer system (POLARIS) has been es-tablished on J-TEXT tokamak recently.
11–15An Equilibrium
Reconstruction Procedure (ERP) has been developed to de-
termine the plasma equilibrium and offers profiles of safetyfactor, current density, and electron density. The procedure
determines equilibrium flux surfaces for the J-TEXT plasma
by only using data from POLARIS and peripheral magneticfield measurement. Refraction effect, which is considered as
a major error source, is directly included and corrected in the
model of probe beam trace. The reliability of ERP for physics
study has been systematically examined, and the procedure
has been successfully applied for several studies of fast equi-librium transition.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows: in Sec. II
a brief of J-TEXT POLARIS is given. The principles ofERP and the computing results are presented in Sec. III,
along with consideration and examination of reconstruction
error under various conditions. In Sec. IV, two equilibrium
reconstruction examples, associated with the sawtooth cy-
cle and resonance magnetic perturbation penetration, by im-
plementing the ERP are reported. The paper is ended by asummary.
0034-6748/2014/85(10)/103501/9/$30.00 © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 85, 103501-1
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132.174.254.155 On: Tue, 23 Dec 2014 12:36:15103501-2 Chen et al. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 103501 (2014)
II. DIAGNOSTIC SETUP
J-TEXT POLARIS is based on three-wave technique,16
in which three laser beams in 432 μm with slight
frequency shifts ( ∼1 MHz) are used for detection. Two of the
laser beams propagating through plasma as probe beams arecounter circular-polarized and collinear, offering information
of Faraday angle, while the third beam is served as local os-
cillator to yield phase of line-integrated density.
J-TEXT POLARIS is featured by its high resolution. In
the system the probe beam is expanded using parabolic mir-
rors to cover the whole poloidal cross section of plasma (a=25.5 cm). The expanded probe beams propagate through
the plasma vertically and are received by a multi-chord mixer
array (currently 17 chords with 3 cm chord spacing), offer-ing simultaneous measurements of Faraday angle ( α), and
line-integrated density ( ϕ) profiles along the major radius of
machine. This feature makes it feasible to determine equilib-
rium flux surfaces reliably only with POLARIS data, as will
be shown. Furthermore, the temporal resolution of the sys-tem, determined by the frequency shifts among the three laser
beams, could reach 1–10 μs typically while the phase reso-
lution of the system is ∼1m r a d( ∼0.05
◦). The fast time re-
sponse and high phase resolution enable J-TEXT POLARIS
to catch detailed changes of plasma equilibrium.
III. EQUILIBRIUM RECONSTRUCTION
A. Principles
The modeling of equilibrium flux surfaces is of impor-
tance for a plasma equilibrium reconstruction procedure. In
principle, the equilibrium of plasma in tokamak is governedby Grad-Shafranov equation. By assuming a J-TEXT plasma
having large aspect ratio, low beta and circular cross section,
the equilibrium flux surfaces can be geometrically consid-ered as circles with shifted centers, as describing by following
equations in (R, Z) coordinates:
4
[R−R0−/Delta1(r)]2+Z2=r2, (1)
where r is the radius of the flux surfaces, R0is the center of
last closed flux surface (LCFS), /Delta1(r) is the displacement func-
tion of the centers of flux surfaces. In this way, the geometryof equilibrium flux surfaces is fully determined by /Delta1(r), R
0,
and a radius of LCFS. The latter two terms can be obtained
from peripheral magnetic field measurement, and determina-tion of /Delta1(r) is therefore the key issue in the reconstruction.
It has been shown that a polynomial function of r is a good
approximation to /Delta1(r),
3so in ERP /Delta1(r) is depicted by
/Delta1(r)=/summationdisplay i=k
i=1ci(1−(r/a)2i),i=1...k, (2)
where ciare coefficients to be determined. Normally, k =2o r
3 is accurate enough for J-TEXT case. With this model, the
equilibrium reconstruction is equivalent to search the best fitof/Delta1(r).
On the other hand, refractive effect of the probe beam
propagating through a non-uniform plasma would also have
a strong impact on the line-integrated measurement since the
beam trace would be bent. Thus, the realistic trace of probe
FIG. 1. Model of equilibrium flux surfaces and probe beam trace for
J-TEXT.
beam for J-TEXT POLARIS has to be taken into account.
With knowledge of initial condition of beam propagation,traces of probe beam can be fully determined based on the
principle of geometrical ray traces,
17
d
dl(N(R,Z)/arrowrighttophalfl)=∇ N(R,Z), (3)
where l and/arrowrighttophalfl are the path length and unit vector of probe
beams, N (R, Z) is the refractive index, which can be con-
sidered as a scalar here and determined by electron density
profile. Based on Eq. (3), refraction of probe beam trace can
be characterized once electron density profile is given.
A scheme of the modeling of equilibrium flux surfaces
and probe beam trace is depicted in Figure 1.
As being shown in Figure 1, the equilibrium flux sur-
faces can be divided into n circles with radius ri,i=1 ...
n. When n is large enough, poloidal magnetic flux ψand
electron density necan be approximated as constants in the
region between neighbor circles. The expanded probe beamof POLARIS can be considered as a series of m parallel
probe beams with impact parameters R
j,j=1 ... m , p a s s -
ing through the poloidal plasma cross-section. The intersec-tion between one probe beam and the poloidal circles divides
the passing path of the beam into a sum of line segments with
different lengths. Defining l
ijas the segment length of the ith
beam within the region between (j −1)th and jth circles (lij
=0i ft h e ith beam does not pass through the jth circle), Fara-
day angle αand phase of line-integrated density ϕcan be ex-
pressed as follows:
αi=cpol./integraldisplay
Bl(R,Z)ne(R,Z)dl
≈cpol./summationdisplay j=n
j=1ne(rj)ψ/prime(rj)·gij, (4)
where gij=lij
Rij(∂r
∂R/arrowrighttophalfeZ−∂r
∂Z/arrowrighttophalfeR)|r=rj·/arrowrighttophalflij,
ϕi=cint./integraldisplay
ne(R,Z)dl≈cint./summationdisplay j=n
j=1ne(rj)lij, (5)
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FIG. 2. Flow diagram of the equilibrium reconstruction procedure.
in which cpol.and cint.are constants, Blis magnetic field along
beam direction, gijis defined as geometric factor,/arrowrighttophalfeZand/arrowrighttophalfeR
are the unit vectors of (R, Z) coordinates. Above equations
can be further written in matrix way:
gm×n(nen×1·ψ/prime
n×1)=αm×1, (6)
lm×nnen×1=ϕm×1. (7)
When m >n, Eqs. (6)and(7)present an over-determined
problem. For a given equilibrium flux surfaces and probebeam trace, g
m×nand lm×ncan be calculated, then the least
square solutions of Eqs. (6)and(7)can be resolved to give a
b e s tfi to fne(r) and ψ/prime(r), while their residues are defined as
δα=/bardblαm×1−gm×n(nen×1·ψ/prime
n×1)/bardbl2
(8)
δϕ=/bardblϕm×1−lm×nnen×1/bardbl2
describing the fidelity of given equilibrium flux surfaces and
probe beam trace to the line-integrated data. The residues
should be as small as possible, ideally zero, which implythat equilibrium flux surfaces and probe beam traces perfectly
match the line-integrated data.
Based on above-mentioned principles, the diagram of the
flow of ERP can be drawn out, as illustrated in Figure 2.
First, geometry of equilibrium flux surfaces is initialized by
assigned values of c
i. Then probe beam trace is obtained by
an iteration loop: (a) initializes a straight beam trace with-
out consideration of refraction; (b) calculates lm×nand solves
Eq.(7)to obtain the electron density profile under tempo-
rary conditions; (c) utilizes the electron density profile and
computes Eq. (3)to obtain a new probe beam trace; and (d)
updates the initial beam trace by the new values and iteratessteps (a)–(c) until the beam trace is converged. (In ERP, the
iteration is stopped when difference between the new beam
trace to the initial one is less than 0.1 mm.) Once the probe
beam trace is determined, residues δ
αandδϕcan be resolved.
The total deviation of current equilibrium flux surfaces isdefined as
χ2=ωαδα
εα+ωϕδϕ
εϕ, (9)
where εis the error of measurement, ωis weight factor and
its subscripts αandϕdenote the Faraday angle and phase of
line-integrated density, respectively. (The weight factors are
determined according to the importance of the residues and
according measurement error. Normally, ωαis larger than ωϕ
because profile of Faraday angle presents more information
of core plasma, especially position of magnetic axis.) By op-
timizing ciand repeating above steps to achieve a minimum
value of χ2, equilibrium flux surfaces that match the exper-
imental data best can be obtained. Consequently, best fits ofn
e(r) and ψ/prime(r) are resolved from Eqs. (6)and(7), from which
safety factor and toroidal current density can be calculated.3
Ideally, the accuracy of ERP is only determined by mea-
surement error, as long as the modeling is accurate enough
and the computation error is negligible. However, there are
still some other items would affect the accuracy of ERP. First,to express the line-integral data into a matrix form, n should
be large enough, normally n =30 in ERP. Therefore, m is
larger than the actual chord number of POLARIS. Before thereconstruction, a fitting process is required to offer α
m×1and
ϕm×1used in Eqs. (6)and(7)based on the raw experimental
data, respectively. Although the spatial coverage and resolu-tion of POLARIS guarantees the fitting process can be car-
ried out properly, this is still a potential error source in the
reconstruction. The second item is the evaluation of bound-
ary conditions precisely. Practically, the electron density and
magnetic field in SOL region is not zero, which will intro-duce additional error on phase of line-integrated density ϕand
Faraday angle α. It is very difficult to estimate the contribu-
tion related to the SOL region because plasma behavior in thisregion is usually highly asymmetric and the measurement of
this region is very limited. As a result, additional phase con-
tribution from SOL is not subtracted in the ERP. This is sup-ported by the fact that the additional phase on αis normally
below or close to the measurement error and could be ignored.
For this reason, the error coming from finite beam size, whichis smaller than the phase contribution from SOL, is also ig-
nored. Third, Eq. (6)is mathematically unstable for the core
plasma, so that ψ
/prime(r) is forced to smooth across the region of
magnetic axis to ensure it matches the condition ψ/prime(0)=0.
Impact of these effects will be considered and examined in
Sec. III B .
B. Assessment of errors
Three validation tests are done to assess the errors in ERP.
The first and second tests mainly examine the accuracy of themodel for equilibrium flux surfaces and probe beam trace sep-
arately, while the third test assesses total error of ERP with
consideration of actual POLARIS performance and plasmaqualities in SOL region.
To perform these tests properly, an equilibrium simu-
lation code directly based on Grad-Shafranov equation is
used to generate the target plasma. The typical parameters of
J-TEXT plasma are used for the simulation (if not specifically
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FIG. 3. Test of the model of equilibrium flux surfaces. Simulated profiles (solid line) and reconstructed profiles (circles) are plotted in Figures 3(a)–3(d), while
their relative errors are given in Figures 3(e)–3(h).
mentioned): plasma current Ip=180 kA, toroidal field B0
=2 T, center safety factor q0=0.85, edge safety factor qa
=3.6 and ne(r)=(ne0−nea)(1−(r/a)2)+nea, where the
center electron density ne0=6×1019m−3and boundary
electron density nea=3×1018m−3or nea=0, depending
on the test purpose. The simulated plasma is used as inputs ofJ-TEXT POLARIS synthesizer to generate Faraday angle data
αand phase of line-integrated density data ϕ. Depending on
the purpose of test, beam refraction, real diagnostic perfor-mance and plasma properties in SOL region can be added
into the synthesizer. Profiles of relative reconstructed errors,
ε
/Delta1,εq,εj, andεne, are used to characterize the performance
of reconstruction, defined as the relative difference of the re-
constructed profiles to the simulated profiles if without spec-
ification. Under some circumstances the maximum and meanvalues of these error profiles are used to characterize the max-
imum and mean errors for simplicity. Since the errors due
to the relatively small absolute amplitudes of profiles in the
plasma periphery would be incredible large, the maximum
and mean relative error are calculated within the center regionof plasma: −0.6<r/a<0.6.
In the first case, the Faraday angle and phase of line inte-
grated density are synthesized without including real diagnos-tic performance and plasma in SOL region, while refraction of
the beam trace is also not considered in both synthesizer and
ERP. The test results are given in Figure 3. The simulated pro-
files of /Delta1(r), safety factor, current density, and electron den-
sity are plotted in Figures 3(a)–3(d) by red solid lines while
the reconstructed results are shown in the corresponded fig-ures by blue circles. The relative errors of them are shown
in Figures 3(e)–3(h). The results of reconstruction agree with
simulated profiles very well, in which the maximum errorsfor all profiles are less than 2% while mean errors are less
than 1%. In general these errors could be considered as in-
trinsic numerical error of ERP, which is mainly introduced bythe modeling of plasma equilibrium. The test results convince
that model of equilibrium flux surfaces used in ERP is reliable
and accurate enough for application on J-TEXT.
In the second case, the Faraday angle and phase of line-
integrated density are synthesized with consideration of re-
fraction to test the probe beam trace model, in which the realdiagnostic performance and plasma characteristics in SOL re-
gion are not included. With the synthesized data, plasma equi-
librium can be reconstructed, as shown by the green circle linein Figures 4(a)–4(d), and the relative errors for each inversed
result are also plotted in Figures 4(e)–4(h) using green cir-
cle line. It is shown that the errors are much closed to the
results of first case. For comparison, reconstruction without
considering refraction is performed by disabling the iterationof beam trace in ERP, and corresponding reconstruction re-
sults and relative errors are shown in the same figures using
blue dashed lines. As shown by the results, when refraction isnot considered, all reconstructed profiles are affected and rel-
ative errors are increased to more than 20%. To systematically
assessing the model, ERP runs under different density levelswith and without refraction effect, and the results are given in
Figure 5. It is clear that without consideration of refraction,
the errors of all reconstructed profiles are largely affected and
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FIG. 4. Test of the model of probe beam trace. Simulated profiles (solid line), reconstructed profiles with (solid line with circles), and without consi deration
of refraction (dashed line) are plotted in Figures 4(a)–4(d), while corresponding relative errors of reconstruction with (solid line with circles) and without
consideration of refraction (dashed line) are given in Figures 4(e)–4(h).
increased approximately proportional to the level of electron
density. For most cases the maximum relative errors can reach>10%. When refraction is considered, the errors are dramati-
cally decreased to ∼3% or lower for all cases. Tests with dif-
ferent shapes of density profile show similar results. The rela-tive errors are normally larger than 10% without consideringrefraction, and reduced to ∼3% when refraction is corrected.
These results confirm that the model of realistic probe beamtrace is of importance to improve the accuracy of the ERP.
The last case concerns on the assessment of reconstruc-
tion errors with all effects included. Here, the plasma withinthe SOL region is modeled with uniform electron density
FIG. 5. Test of the model of probe beam trace under different levels of electron density. The averaged errors of /Delta1(r) (stars), safety factor (circles), current density
(squares), and electron density (diamonds) with (dashed line), and without considering refraction (solid line) are plotted in Figure 5(a), while the maximum errors
of that are plotted in Figure 5(b).
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FIG. 6. Assessment of error of reconstruction. Simulated profiles (solid line) and errors (shadow) are plotted in Figures 6(a)–6(d), while the relative errors are
given in Figures 6(e)–6(h).
3×1018m−3with∼3 cm thick according to Langmuir probe
measurements, and with poloidal magnetic field consistent
with distribution of current density. Faraday angle and phase
of line-integrated density, with respect to the realistic spa-
tial coverage and resolution of diagnostic, are generated. The
measurement errors, referring to the actual diagnostic perfor-mances, are taken as ε
α=0.05◦,εϕ=1◦,εIp=5k A , εBt
=0.01 T, εx=5 mm, and εa=5 mm, corresponded to er-
rors of Faraday angle, phase of line-integrated density, totalplasma current, toroidal field, position of LCFS, and plasma
minor radius, respectively, and are taken into account by
adding equivalent random noises to the generated data. TheERP runs 50 times and thus the errors can be evaluated statis-
tically. Hereafter, the mean value ε
mean and stand deviation δε
of the errors in the 50 times can be calculated and total error
of reconstruction is assumed as εmean+2δε, i.e., sum of mean
value and the 95% confidence region of the errors. The test
results are shown in Figure 6. The simulated profiles of /Delta1(r),
safety factor, current density, and electron density are plotted
in Figures 6(a)–6(d) by red solid lines while the errors of re-
construction are shown by the green shadow in Figures 6(e)–
6(h). It is seen that for all profiles the errors of reconstruc-
tion are small comparing to the true values; for all profiles the
maximum relative errors are around 10% while mean relative
errors are around 5% except the boundary region, which is
acceptable for most of physics studies.
As a summary, results of the validation tests are listed in
Table I, along with the conditions of tests. These tests con-firm the feasibility and accuracy of ERP as a tool for experi-
mental research of plasma equilibrium, and offer a reference
of reconstruction error under current J-TEXT conditions. It
is helpful to discuss the impact of reduced chord number to
the accuracy of reconstruction, which is probably the case for
future reactor. It is no doubt that reduction of chord numberwill lead to larger error when reproduces the whole αandϕ
profiles, but it is relievable by carefully choosing chord posi-
tions to measure the characteristic spatial points, such as zero-crossing point and turning points of αprofile, to maximize
available information. For J-TEXT, it is shown that cases with
chord number down to 10 can provide similar performance ascase no. 3 shown in Table I, by optimizing chord positions.
Similar result has also been reported elsewhere.
7
TABLE I. Summary of maximum and mean errors of reconstruction under
given conditions.
Test case no. 1 2 3
Cond. Refraction \√√
Interpolation \\√
SOL effect \\√
Instrum. error \\√
|ε/Delta1(r)|max,|ε/Delta1(r)|mean<2%,<1% 2%, 1% 5%, 3%
|εq(r)|max,|εq(r)|mean<2%,<1% 2%, 1% 11%, 4%
|εj(r)|max,|εj(r)|mean<1%,<1% 2%, 1% 11%, 6%
|εne(r)|max,|εne(r)|mean<1%,<1% 1%, 1% 3%, 1%
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IV. STUDIES OF PLASMA EQUILIBRIUM TRANSITION
A. Sawtooth
Sawtooth is a Magneto-Hydro-Dynamic instability in
core plasma, which could be usually observed by soft-X ray
emission18and electron cyclotron emission.19The existence
of sawtooth instability is considered associated with the value
of center safety factor q0; it is widely agreed sawtooth appears
when q0<1 so that this fact could be used as a judgment of
the accuracy of inversion method.3–5
Figure 7shows a typical result of J-TEXT sawtooth dis-
charge. Total plasma current, line-integrated density, and soft-
X ray signal are given in Figures 7(a)–7(c), respectively. Evo-
lution of q0,j0, and ne0reconstructed from ERP are shown
in Figures 7(d)–7(f), while the evolution of profiles of safety
factor, current density, and electron density are shown in Fig-
ures 7(g)–7(i). The total plasma current reached the plateau at
∼0.06 s, and the sawtooth activity gradually appeared around
∼0.08 s, as shown on soft-X emission. It is evidenced that the
safety factor profile became hollowed in this process, whilethe plasma current profile and electron density profile peaked
up. The value of center safety factor q
0decreased to less than
1a f t e r ∼0.076 s, agreed with the soft-X emission results, and
finally stabilized at the value of ∼0.85. The value of center
safety factor remained below 1 during all the sawtooth cy-
cles and did not follow the prediction by the full connection
model.20It is worthy to mention that the J-TEXT POLARIS is ca-
pable to observe sawtooth instability on both Faraday angle
and phase of line-integrated density. To investigate equilib-rium changes during a single sawtooth cycle by ERP, 30 peri-
ods of sawtooth under similar plasma conditions are extracted
and averaged to smooth out noises of measurement and per-turbation of m =1/n=1 mode, yielding accurate perturba-
tion of Faraday angle and phase of line-integrated density dur-
ing one sawtooth period. Using the averaged sawtooth data,
evolution of safety factor profile, current density profile, and
electron density profile can be reconstructed with lower er-rors. For clarity, instead of plotting the equilibrium profiles,
the relative changes of profiles of safety factor, current den-
sity, and electron density are presented in Figures 8(a)–8(c)
individually. τ
stis the normalized sawtooth period, and crash
of sawtooth happened at τst=0. It is shown that the electron
density profile was hollowed at the crash moment, which indi-cated a fast loss of confinement in the core region of plasma.
In addition, there was also a quick negative change on cur-
rent density profile right at the crash, accompanied with acorresponded increase of safety factor profile. The decrease
of center current density was ∼0.1 MA/m
2, about 4% to the
equilibrium current density, and correspondingly center safetyfactor increased for ∼0.07, which was still below 1. During
the ramp-up phase, the current density and electron density
profiles peaked up, while safety factor profile also changed
consistently.
FIG. 7. Results of typical J-TEXT sawtooth discharge. Total plasma current, line-integrated density, and soft-X ray signal are given in Figures 7(a)–7(c),
respectively. The reconstructed q0,j0,a n dne0are shown in Figures 7(d)–7(f), while the evolution of profiles of safety factor, current density, and electron
density are shown in Figures 7(g)–7(i).
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FIG. 8. Equilibrium reconstruction of a single sawtooth period. Temporal
evolutions of safety factor, current density, and electron density profiles areshown in Figures 8(a)–8(c) in sequence.B. Resonant magnetic perturbation penetration
External applied resonant magnetic perturbation (RMP)
is now considered as a useful tool to control varied instabili-
ties in tokamak. However, the nature behind the influence of
RMP on plasma would be complicated, and still needed moreinvestigations, for example, the understanding of RMP pen-
etration. It is found the RMP could excite tearing instability
in tearing-free plasma when its amplitude is strong enough.
21
For a static RMP, the excited mode is also stationary in lab-oratory frame. This process always accompany with largedegrade of confinement and may lead to disruption. Since
the phase stays stationary, routine diagnostics, especially the
boundary magnetic measurement, for the tearing mode detec-tion is ineffective; it is normally characterized by the increas-
ing radial magnetic field measured by saddle coils outside the
vacuum vessel. With the capability to determine the plasmaequilibrium and J-TEXT DRMP coils,
12,22study of the im-
pact of RMP penetration on plasma equilibrium in details be-
comes possible.
A typical discharge of RMP penetration is presented in
Figure 9. Total plasma current, line-integrated density, soft-
X ray signal, Br(n=1) signal, and Mirnov signal are given
in Figures 9(a)–9(e), respectively. The reconstructed q0,j0,
and ne0obtained from ERP are shown in Figures 9(f)–9(h),
along with evolution of the profiles of safety factor, current
FIG. 9. Equilibrium reconstruction of penetration of RMP. Total plasma current, line-integrated density, soft-X ray signal, Br(n=1) signal, and Mirnov signal
are given in Figures 9(a)–9(e), respectively. Reconstructed q0,j0,a n dne0are shown in Figures 9(f)–9(h), along with the evolution of safety factor, current
density, and electron density profiles in Figures 9(i)–9(k). The RMP current is shown by red dotted line in Figure 9(a).
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density, and electron density in Figures 9(i)–9(k).T h eR M P
was applied at 0.3 s and reached its plateau at ∼0.35 s, shown
by red dotted line in Figure 9(a). The penetration began at
∼0.35 s, as seen from the Brsignal. At the meantime the
sawtooth activity disappeared and confinement was degraded
quickly as seen by soft-X emission. Since the mode waslocked, no apparent magnetic perturbation could be observed
on Mirnov signal.
As shown by the reconstructed results, from 0.3 s to
0.35 s the center safety factor was less than 1, agreed with
the sawtooth on soft-X emission. When penetration started,strong perturbation could be seen on both safety factor and
current density profile; however, unlike the drop on soft-X
emission or fast increase on B
r(n=1) started at 0.35 s,
the significant changes on the center safety factor and cen-
ter current density occurred at ∼0.36 s or later. At 0.40 s the
Br(n=1) reached a constant level, ∼20 ms later the center
safety factor and center current density reached another equi-
librium state. This time scale is close to the resistive time.
On the other hand, in the viewing of current density and elec-tron density profiles, the electron density profile began de-
graded gradually, consistent with soft-X emission and B
r, and
later on became much flatten; but the current density pro-file tended to peak up when the penetration occurred. Such
peaking-up profile lasted for about 20 ms and then dropped.
From these results it is clear that the growth of island directly
degraded the confinement by enhanced particle transport and
modified the current redistribution. It took almost 60 ms (from0.36 s to 0.42 s) for the current density (and safety factor)
and electron density profiles to reach a new equilibrium state,
the whole transition involves particle transport and currentdissipation.
V. SUMMARY
Based on core magnetic measurement of high resolution
POLARIS, plasma equilibrium on J-TEXT tokamak, includ-
ing profiles of safety factor, current density, and electron den-sity has been reconstructed with high accuracy and temporal
resolution. The equilibrium flux surfaces of J-TEXT plasma
are modeled and accurately determined by the ERP. Refrac-tion of probe beam trace is modeled and corrected based on
principle of geometrical ray tracing, which improves the ac-
curacy of reconstruction for more than 10%. The error of re-construction has been systematically assessed with consider-
ation of diagnostics performances and SOL region of plasma,
and it is shown that the maximum error of reconstruction inthe center region for profiles of safety factor, current den-
sity, and electron density is around 10% while the mean er-
ror is around 5%. Using ERP, evolutions of plasma equilib-rium during sawtooth discharge and penetration of RMP have
been studied. The center safety factor q
0varies from above
1 to below 1 when sawtooth appears and keeps below 1 dur-ing all the sawtooth cycles, consistent with former observa-
tion on other tokamaks. Additionally, the changes of profiles
of safety factor, current density, and electron density duringone single sawtooth period are also resolved. For the case of
RMP penetration, when penetration begins, electron density
profile decreases and flattens simultaneously, while profiles
of current density and safety factor become flat with a delay
approximately equal to the resistive time, accompanied withtransition of q
0from below 1 to above 1.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank Dr. D. Brower, Dr. W.
X. Ding, and Dr. K. Gentle for their helpful discussions.
This work is supported by the ITER Project Funds of Peo-ple’s Republic of China: Contract No. 2009GB107003, and
partly supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
of China (Grant No. 11105056) and the JSPS-NRF-NSFC A3Foresight Program in the field of Plasma Physics (NSFC No.
11261140328).
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1.4897710.pdf | The first principle study of Ni 2 ScGa and Ni 2 TiGa
Mustafa Özduran, Kemal Turgut, Nihat Arikan, Ahmet İyigör, and Abdullah Candan
Citation: AIP Conference Proceedings 1618, 178 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897710
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897710
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/proceeding/aipcp/1618?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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b Yüksek Lisans Ö ÷rencisi, K Õrúehir-TÜRK øYE
cAhi Evran Üniversitesi E ÷itim Fakültesi ølkö÷retim Bölümü, K Õrúehir-TÜRK øYE
dAhi Evran Üniversitesi Merkezi Ara útÕrma Laboratuvar Õ, KÕrúehir-TÜRK øYE
Abstract. We computed the electronic structure, elastic moduli, vibrational properties, and Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa alloys
in the cubic L2 1 structure. The obtained equilibrium lattice constants of these alloys are in good agreement with available
data. In cubic systems, there are three independent elastic constants, namely C 11, C 12 and C 44. We calculated elastic
constants in L2 1 structure for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa using the energy-strain method. The electronic band structure, total
and partial density of states for these alloys were investigated within density functional theory using the plane-wave pseudopotential method implemented in Quantum-Espresso program package. From band structure, total and projected
density of states, we observed metallic characters of these compounds. The electronic calculation indicate that the
predominant contributions of the density of states at Fermi level come from the Ni 3d states and Sc 3d states for Ni
2TiGa,
Ni 3d states and Sc 3d states for Ni 2ScGa. The computed density of states at Fermi energy are 2.22 states/eV Cell for
Ni2TiGa, 0.76 states/eV Cell for Ni 2ScGa. The vibrational properties were obtained using a linear response in the
framework at the density functional perturbation theory. For the alloys, the results show that the L2 1 phase is unstable
since the phonon calculations have imagine modes.
Keywords: Band structure, Elastic moduli, DFT, Ductility
PACS: 71.20.-b, 62.20.de, 71.15.Mb, 62.20.fk
INTRODUCTION
The Heusler compounds have attracted scientific and technological interest in the spintronics areas [1]. A large
number of the Heusler alloys of X 2YZ stoichiometric composition, where X and Y are generally transition elements
and Z is a main group metal, are known to exhibit half-metallic ferromagnetic behavior. These materials are good
candidates for devices based on spin injection such as the huge tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) and giant
magnetoresistance (GMR) in magnetoelectronic devices. They can also be used as perfect spin filters and spin-
injection devices as an alternative to ferromagnetic 3d metals. Their L2 1 cubic structure belonging to space group
225: Fm-3m consists of four interpenetrating face-centered-cubic (fcc) lattices, in which X atoms occupy the A
(0,0,0) and C (1/2,1/2,1/2) sites, Y atoms the B (1/4,1/4,1/4) site and Z occupies the D (3/4,3/4,3/4) site in Wyckoff
coordinates. The lattice constants of Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds were calculated using LMTO-ASA code [2].
Zayak et al. [3] calculated structural, electronic and dynamical by using ab initio calculation of Ni 2TiGa. Their
results show phonon anomalies for L2 1 phase Ni 2TiGa. The results of an investigation of the paramagnetic Ni 2TiGa
are reported using stoichiometric annealed and quenched from 1000 0C by Kreissl et al. [4]. Magnetic measurements
of this compound were made using a SQUID magnetometer in controlled field up to 5.5 T and temperature between
2 and 350 0K. The present article aims at investigating the ground-state properties such as lattice constants, bulk
modulus, elastic constants, and band structure properties of both materials by density-functional theory (DFT).
COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS
The calculations were carried out using a plane wave pseudopotential scheme within density functional theory
(DFT) as implemented in the Quantum-ESPRESSO package [5]. The electronic exchange-correlation potential was
calculated by the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) using the scheme of Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE)
[6]. The wave functions were expanded in a plane-wave basis set with a kinetic energy cut-off of 40 Ry. Brillouin-
zone integrations were performed using a 10x10x10 k-points mesh. Integration up to the Fermi surface was
performed using the smearing technique [7] with smearing parameter r = 0.02 Ry. Elastic constants were obtained
International Conference of Computational Methods in Sciences and Engineering 2014 (ICCMSE 2014)
AIP Conf. Proc. 1618, 178-181 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897710
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1255-2/$30.00
178
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132.174.255.116 On: Fri, 14 Aug 2015 12:43:11by calculating the total energy as a function of volume-conserving strains that break the cubic symmetry. Bulk
modulus B, C44, and shear modulus ܥᇱ= (C11-C12)/2 were calculated from hydrostatic pressure e = (į, į, į, 0, 0, 0),
tri-axial shear strain e = (0, 0, 0, į, į, į) and volume-conserving orthorhombic strain e = (į, į, (1+į)-2-1, 0, 0, 0),
respectively [8]. Hence, B was obtained from
'ா
ൌଽ
ଶܤGଶ (1)
where V is the volume of unstrained lattice cell, and ǻE is the energy variation as a result of an applied strain with
vector e = (e1, e2, e3, e4, e5, e6). ܥᇱ was found from
'ா
ൌ ܥᇱGଶ (2)
The two expressions above yield C11= (3B + 4ܥᇱ)/3, C12= (3B - 2 ܥᇱ)/3, and C44 is given by
'ா
ൌଷଶܥସସGଶ (3)
We calculated 21 sets of 'ா
by varying į from -0.02 to 0.02 in steps of 0.002. Then, we fitted these data to a
parabola, and the elastic constants were obtained from quadratic coefficients.
In general, hardness is known to be a material parameter that indicates resistance to elastic or plastic
deformation, this parameter is the bulk modulus B or the shear modulus G. The shear modulus G of a cubic structure
is given by:
ܩൌభభିభమାଷరర
ହ (4)
The anisotropy factor A is given by:
ܣൌଶరర
ሺభభିభమሻ (5)
As A approaches unity the crystal becomes isotropic. We also list some auxiliary quantities which are often
quoted in the literature. The young’s modulus for an isotropic solid is related to B and G by the formula:
ܧൌଽீ
ଷାீ (6)
Poisson’s ratio is also of interest
ߪൌଵ
ଷቀͳെா
ଷቁ (7)
RESULTS
The energy values obtained were fitted to Murnaghan equation of state [9] in order to determine the lattice
constant a, the bulk modulus B at zero pressure. The computed structural parameters of Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa
compounds are listed in Table 1, compared with the available results [2-4]. The present computed lattice constants
for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa are in good agreement with the early calculations. The elastic properties of a cubic single-
crystal are completely defined by three independents elastic constants, namely C11, C12 and C44. The obtained values
of C11, C12, C44 and C’ for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds are presented in Table 1. For properties of ductility and
brittleness for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds, the ratio of bulk modulus to shear modulus, B/G, was calculated.
This ratio can be considered empirical criterion of the extent of the fracture range in the materials [10]. If the ratio of
B/G is higher 1.75, then the material behaves in a ductile manner. If it is less than 1.75, then the material
demonstrates brittleness. The B/G values are 2.515 and 2.128 for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds, respectively.
Hence, these materials indicate a ductile nature. The electronic band structures of Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds
obtained using the plane wave pseudopotential method along the higher symmetry directions are shown in Figure 1.
The band profiles of Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds are quite similar to each other. There is no band gap at the
Fermi level for both compounds, thus, Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds exhibit a metallic behavior. The main
contribution of Fermi level of Ni2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds come from Ni 3d and Ti 3d states for Ni 2TiGa, and
Ni 3d and Sc 3d states for Ni 2ScGa, respectively. From the computed total and partial DOS, it can be seen that there
is one sharp peak above the Fermi level of both materials. These peaks are almost centered 1.78 eV for Ni 2TiGa and
2.73 eV for Ni 2ScGa, which are mainly dominated by the Ti 3d states for Ni 2TiGa and Sc 3d states for Ni 2ScGa.
Under the Fermi level there are dispersive bands for two materials. These bands of two materials are mainly the
contribution of Ni 3d states.
179
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132.174.255.116 On: Fri, 14 Aug 2015 12:43:11TABLE 1. Calculated lattice constants (in Å), bulk modulus, pressure derivative of the bulk modulus and second order elastic
constants (all in GPa) for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa in the L2 1 structure.
a(A) B c' C 11 C12 C44 G B/G E V
Ni2TiGa This work 5,897 163,1 24,4995 197,594 148,595 92,920 65,552 2,515 173,650 0,324
VASP [3] 5.8895
LMTO-ASA [2] 5.889
Ni2ScGa This work 6,050 132 35,139 182,074 111,795 82,441 63,520 2,128 164,762 0,296
LMTO-ASA [2] 6.041
FIGURE 1. The electronic band structure for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds along several lines of high symmetry in the
Brillouin zone.
FIGURE 2. Calculated partial and total DOS for Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa in the L2 1 phase.
CONCLUSION
In this article, structural, electronic and elastic properties of Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds were investigated
using the ab initio pseudopotential method within GGA of DFT. The calculated equilibrium lattice constants of
Ni2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds are in fairly good agreement with previous results. The electronic calculations
predict that Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds have metallic character for the L1 2 structure. The elastic constants of
Ni2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds were calculated. Ni 2TiGa and Ni 2ScGa compounds indicate the ductile manner. Γ KX Γ LX W L−12−8−404Energy (eV)Ni2TiGa (L2 )1
EF
Γ KX Γ L X WL−10−505Enerji (eV)Ni2ScGa (L2 1)
EF
−12 −8 −4 0 4Energy (eV)−9−6−30369DOS (States/eV CELL)Total
Ni 4s
Ni 3d
Ti 4s
Ti 3d
Ga 4s
Ga 3d
Ga 4p
−10 −5 0 5
Energy (eV)−9−6−30369DOS (States/eV CELL)Total
Ni 4s
Ni 3d
Sc 4s
Sc 3d
Ga 4s
Ga 3d
Ga 4p
180
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132.174.255.116 On: Fri, 14 Aug 2015 12:43:11ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the Ahi Evran University Research Project Unit under Project No. PYO-
FEN.4010.14.001.
REFERENCES
1. A. Fert, Reviews of Modern Physics 80, 1517-1530 (2008).
2. M. Gilleßen, "Maßgeschneidertes und Analytik-Ersatz: über die quantenchemischen Untersuchungen einiger ternärer
intermetallischer Verbindungen", Ph.D. Thesis, Aachen University, 2009.
3. A.T. Zayak, P. Entel, M.K. Rabe, W.A. Adeagbo and M. Acet, Phys. Rev. B 72, 054113, 1-9 (2005).
4. M. Kreissl, K-U Neumann, T. stephens and K.R.A Ziebeck, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 15, 3831-3839 (2003).
5. Giannozzi P, Baroni S, Bonini N, Calandra M, Car R, Cavazzoni C, et al. J Phys Condens Matter 21, 395502-? (2009).
6. P. Perdew, K. Burke, M. Ernzerhof, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 3865-3868 (1996).
7. M. Methfessel, A.T. Paxton, Phys. Rev. B 40, 3616-3621 (1989).
8. S.Q. Wang, H.Q. Ye, Phys. Stat. Sol. b 240, 45-54 (2003).
9. F.D. Murnaghan, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 30, 244-247 (1944).
10. S.F. Pugh, Philos. Mag. 45, 823-843 (1954).
181
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132.174.255.116 On: Fri, 14 Aug 2015 12:43:11 |
1.4899207.pdf | The impact of disorder on charge transport in three dimensional quantum dot resonant
tunneling structures
B. Puthen-Veettil, R. Patterson, D. König, G. Conibeer, and M. A. Green
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 116, 163707 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4899207
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4899207
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/116/16?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27The impact of disorder on charge transport in three dimensional quantum
dot resonant tunneling structures
B. Puthen-Veettil,a)R. Patterson, D. K €onig, G. Conibeer, and M. A. Green
Australian Centre for Advanced Photovoltaics, UNSW, Sydney 2052, Australia
(Received 15 January 2014; accepted 12 October 2014; published online 30 October 2014)
Efficient iso-entropic energy filtering of electronic waves can be realized through nanostructures
with three dimensional confinement, such as quantum dot resonant tunneling structures. Large-areadeployment of such structures is useful for energy selective contacts but such configuration is sus-
ceptible to structural disorders. In this work, the transport properties of quantum-dot-based wide-
area resonant tunneling structures, subject to realistic disorder mechanisms, are studied. Positionalvariations of the quantum dots are shown to reduce the resonant transmission peaks while size var-
iations in the device are shown to reduce as well as broaden the peaks. Increased quantum dot size
distribution also results in a peak shift to lower energy which is attributed to large dots dominatingtransmission. A decrease in barrier thickness reduces the relative peak height while the overall
transmission increases dramatically due to lower “series resistance.” While any shift away from
ideality can be intuitively expected to reduce the resonance peak, quantification allows betterunderstanding of the tolerances required for fabricating structures based on resonant tunneling phe-
nomena.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4899207 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
Resonant tunneling (RT) structures—and double barrier
structures (DBS) in particular1—have attracted significant
attention for their use in quantum cascade lasers,2,3single
electron transistors,4and next-generation photovoltaics.5–7
This is perhaps largely due to the ability of techniques such
as molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) to fabricate layers in a va-riety of materials with precisely controllable thicknesses on
the order of a monolayer. Quantum well (QW) RT structures
allow electron confinement and tunneling transport in thegrowth direction, while the allowed energy and momenta of
electronic states are continuous in the lateral directions.
Electrons and/or holes at the resonant energy that are nor-mally incident on the plane of the contact will be transmitted
effectively. Obliquely incident electrons and holes may be
transmitted even if their total energy falls outside the desiredenergy range, though with a decreased probability.
8This
limits the energy and momentum filtering offered by QW
structures. By contrast, in quantum dot (QD) DBSs, effectivefiltering occurs irrespective of the direction of the electron/
hole momentum, making it a superior energy filter to a QW
DBS. The increased confinement energy of QDs over QWsalleviates some fabrication constraints for the same level of
confinement as compared to QWs.
For a large area application, such as contacts for an
advanced photovoltaic cell, RT structures involving QDs can
be made by the solid phase crystallization of sub-oxides.
9
Ideally, this fabrication technique produces spherical quan-
tum dots of uniform size situated in the center of the sub-
oxide layer. Our prior modeling work10has focused on such
ideal structures. However, non-idealities in dot shape, sizeuniformity, dot position and effective barrier thickness areinherent in solid phase crystallization techniques.
9,11–13
These aspects cannot be ignored in simulations if a realistic
picture of device performance is to be obtained. A stabilizedmethod is needed for modeling complex three-dimensional
(3D) nanostructures.
Some of the popular methods based on non-equilibrium
Green’s function,
14–16density matrix,17and Wigner distribu-
tion function18can efficiently describe transport through sin-
gle QDs or perfectly periodic QDs but becomescomputationally prohibitively in modelling large area struc-
tures with disorders. Effective formalisms in the framework
of Finite Difference method
19and Kronig-Penny like meth-
ods20,21on envelop functions have been reported for a per-
fectly periodic QDs in orthorhombic geometry. Generalised
3D scatter matrix method is an efficient tool for analysingspherical QDs that are not perfectly periodic. In this work, the
impact of disorder in position, size and barrier thickness in
spherical QD RT structures are investigated numerically usinga stabilized multi-mode scattering matrix technique. Initial
implementations of similar methods used previously by
Gomez et al.
22and B €oer23function adequately in quantum
well structures that can be modeled in one dimension but tend
to become unstable in higher dimensions. While any shift
away from ideality can be intuitively expected to reduceresonances, quantifying this is essential for better understand-
ing of the tolerances required to fabricate working devices.
II. MODEL AND METHOD
In this section, a three-dimensional model for analyzing
a QD DBS is described. The scattering matrix modeldescribed in Ref. 24is extended to three dimensions with
position-dependent effective mass. The instabilities inherent
to the conventional scattering matrix (CSM) method inhigher dimensions are overcome by using a stabilized multi-
mode scattering matrix method (SMSM method).
a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
b.puthen-veettil@unsw.edu.au
0021-8979/2014/116(16)/163707/7/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 116, 163707-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27A. Scattering matrix formation
Assuming a parabolic band near the [100] valley, the
three-dimensional Schr €odinger equation may be discretized
in space into P,M,andNpoints in x,y,andz(growth) direc-
tions, respectively. Discretization and scatter matrix forma-tion are explained in detail in the Appendix.
The DBS under consideration has scatter-free contact
regions on the left and right and a nanostructure region inthe middle, where most of the electronic scattering occurs.
The contact materials are assumed to be either degenerately
doped semiconductors or metallic contacts. Electrons areassumed to be incident from the left contact. A fraction of
t h ee l e c t r o n i cw a v ei sr e fl e c t e da n dt h er e m a i n i n gf r a c t i o n
is transmitted in the elastic RT process. The free electronwave traveling from left to right at the left contact is con-
s i d e r e dt oh a v e UandVmodes in xandydirections, respec-
tively. A sample size of area 256 nm
2that contains at most
25 QDs was considered for sim ulation. Periodic boundary
conditions (PBCs) in xandydirections and open boundary
conditions (OBCs) in the zdirection were assumed for this
sample.
Transfer matrices can be formulated on the left and right
contact region of the structure as
U1
U2/C20/C21
¼X211X212
10/C20/C21
U2
U3/C20/C21
; (1)
UN/C02
UN/C01/C20/C21
¼XN/C0111XN/C0112
10/C20/C21
UN/C01
UN/C20/C21
; (2)
where Uiis the multimode wavefunction of the ith slab in
thex-yplane and Xis the Hamiltonian.
B. Multi-mode wavefunction method
The wavefunction at each slab has U(V) modes in the
x(y) direction. The wavefunction at point ( p,m,n) in mode
(u,v) can be written as shown below.
Wp;m;nu;v¼1ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
UVp ei2pup
Pei2pvm
Meikzu;vDzn; (3)
where kzu;vis the wave vector of the mode ( u,v) in the z
direction. For the left region where the material structure is
assumed to be uniform, the effective mass does not changewith position (see Eqs. (A1)–(A3)). Thus, an expression for
the wave vector can be obtained as
k
u;v¼1
Dzcos/C01/C261
2Gz/C20
/C0Yxyz/C0Gx2
/C2cos2pu
P/C18/C19
/C0Gy2 cos2pv
M/C18/C19/C21/C27
: (4)
The wavefunction in mode ( u,v) on the left contact region
consists of the incident wave in mode ( u,v) and the reflected
wave in mode ( u,v) from the scattering region. The reflected
wave consists of the components of scattered waves from all
modes to mode ( u,v), as shown in Figure 1.
The total wavefunction on the left of the scattering
region isUzlef t¼XU;V
u¼1;v¼1ðh^Wu;vðku;v
zÞj^Iu;vþh^Wu;vðku;v
/C0zÞjjru;viÞ;(5)
where ^Iu;vis a column matrix of ones with dimension UV/C21,
ku;vzrepresents the wave vector of the wave traveling in the
þzdirection in mode ( u,v)a n d ku;v/C0zrepresents the wave
vector of the wave traveling in the – zdirection. jru;viis a ma-
trix whose elements consist of the sum of probabilities of each
mode to be reflected back to mode ( u,v). All unphysical solu-
tions (those corresponding to an imaginary ku;v) are neglected.
Similarly, the wavefunction in mode ( u,v) on the right
contact region consists of the transmitted wave in mode(u,v) from the scattering region. This consists of scattered
waves from all modes into mode ( u,v), as shown in Figure 2.
The total wavefunction to the right of the scattering
region is
U
zright ¼XU;V
u¼1;v¼1hWu;vðku;v
zÞjjtu;vi; (6)
where jtu;viis a matrix whose elements consist of the sum of
probabilities of each mode to be transmitted to mode ( u,v).
ku;vzrepresents the wave vector of the wave traveling in the z
direction in mode ( u,v) towards the right contact.
Using (1),(2),(5), and (6), a system of equations can be
written for all the x-yslabs together in the structure as
½T/C138/C2jUi¼jKi; (7)
where the matrices are as given below:
FIG. 1. The incident and reflected waves in mode ( u,v) on the left contact
region of the DBS. The reflected wave in mode ( u,v) consists of back-
scattered waves from all modes to mode ( u,v).ru;v!u0;v0stands for the proba-
bility of the wave traveling to the right in mode ( u,v) to be scattered back in
mode ( u0,v0).
FIG. 2. The transmitted waves in mode ( u,v) on the right contact region of
the DBS. The transmitted wave in mode ( u,v) consists of the unscattered
wave in mode ( u,v) and scattered waves from all modes to mode ( u,v)i n
the same direction of propagation. tu;v!u0;v0stands for the probability of the
wave traveling to the right in mode ( u,v) to be scattered to mode ( u0,v0)i n
the same direction.163707-2 Puthen-Veettil et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27T½/C138¼1/C0ðhW/C01jhW/C02j/C01Þ 00 0 ::: 00
/C01 X211X21200 0 0
0 /C01 X311X3120 :: 0
::: :: :: :::
::: :: :::
00 /C01XN/C0111XN/C0112
00 0 0 ::: 01 /C0hWN/C01jhWNj/C012
66666666666643
7777777777775:
jUi¼U
1
U2
U3
:::
:::
UN/C01
UN2
6666666666643
777777777775
jKi¼hW
1jj^Ii/C0hW/C01jhW/C02j/C01hW2jj^Ii
0
00
:::
:::
02
66666666666643
7777777777775
These matrices can be efficiently stored in sparse format using
standard library routines. The memory requirement of this
method is comparable to the conventional transfer matrix meth-
ods. The matrix ½T/C138observed for a sample structure of dimen-
sions P¼50,M¼50 and N¼50 has a sparseness of 99.92%.
Solving the system of equations (7)is straightforward
using standard library routines. Once jUiis found, the trans-
mission coefficient and conduction G(Ref. 25) are calcu-
lated as
jti¼hW
Nj/C01UN; (8)
G¼2e2
2p/C22hTracejtiTCjti/C16/C17
; (9)
where jtiTCis the transpose conjugate of jti.
The SMSM method is as efficient as the CSM method
since the total number of multiplication steps needed to find
the matrix jtiis the same. Most importantly, the instability in-
herent to the CSM at higher dimensions were overcome using
the SMSM method. A comparison is made between error
from the CSM method26and the SMSM method for a two-
dimensional (2D) problem in Figure 3. The step size in the z
direction, az, is fixed at 0.2 nm. Once the transmission coeffi-
cient ( T) and reflection coefficient ( R) are calculated, the error
is calculated as j1/C0T/C0Rj. The conventional method works
well in one-dimensional (1D) models27as well as 2D models
with low yresolution (large step size in the ydirection).However, as the step size in the ydirection ( ay) becomes com-
parable to that in the zdirection, the error in finding the solu-
tion using the conventional model dramatically increases and
the model itself becomes unstable. In contrast, the SMSM
method is stable for all resolutions. The maximum error valuein the new method is less than 1 /C210
/C013in all cases.
C. Models of disorder
The model derived above can be used to model the disor-
ders of QDs in a DBS. QDs grown by sputter-anneal methods9
are unlikely to have a narrow position and size distribution.1
This is due to the inherent randomness associated with thenucleation process by which these QDs are formed during the
annealing step. These disorders also will depend on the stoi-
chiometry of the sub-oxide as well as the effectiveness of thedielectric as a diffusion barrier. The deviations from periodic-
ity can be detrimental to the conductivity and selectivity of
the RT structures. These deviations may arise in the periodic-ity of the QDs in the structure (position anomaly), the size of
the QDs from the expected diameter (size anomaly) or the
thickness variation of the dielectric layer.
Disorder is modeled by perturbing parameters such as
QD position and size away from their mean values pseudo-
FIG. 3. A comparison between the CSM method and the SMSM method
developed in this work. azis taken to be 0.2 nm. Three different ay step sizes
were considered: 10 az,2az, and az. As the resolution in the ydirection
approaches that in the zdirection, the conventional method becomes unsta-
ble. The error is calculated as j1/C0T/C0Rjwhere Tis the transmission coeffi-
cient and Ris the reflection coefficient.163707-3 Puthen-Veettil et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27randomly with weighting factors given by a wrapped normal
distribution. A periodically repeating array of randomly-
distributed QDs was considered for the disorder simulations.
Care was taken to eliminate situations where the QD transla-tion or size deviation resulted in the merging of two or more
QDs together or with the contacts. Simulation was run S
number of times and tunneling coefficients corresponding toeach random normal distribution event were calculated. The
smoothed average of the S tunneling coefficients was taken.
A high value of S is preferred to represent a realistic disor-der. In this work, a smoothed average of S ¼1000 simulation
runs was taken for which a relative error of 0.72% was esti-
mated for a maximum deviation ¼1 nm. As the maximum
deviation increases, the relative error of computation for the
same S value will also increase. However, considerable devi-
ation in the transmission coefficients could be seen even forsmall deviations. For this work, the maximum deviation was
limited to 1 nm in order to save on computational resources.
A schematic illustration of the position and size disorder isdepicted in Figure 4.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The resonant tunneling features of various QD-based
SiO 2/Si/SiO 2DBS were analyzed. The thickness of SiO 2barriers in all cases was 1 nm, and spherical Si QDs of diame-ters 3, 2.4, and 2 nm were considered. The barrier thickness
and the mean diameters of the QDs were chosen arbitrarily. In
the first simulation, the impact of lateral size variation ofperiodically-arranged QDs in the DBS on resonant peak ener-
gies was analyzed. Simulation runs were performed for three
different QD diameters in the ydirection—3, 2.4 and 2 nm—
keeping the diameter in the xandzdirection constant at 2 nm,
resulting in oblong QDs. As shown in Figure 5, it was observed
that as the QDs were elongated in the ydirection, the resonance
was red-shifted due to the lowering of confinement energy. For
this reason, a peak occurred at 1.5 eV for the QD with 3 nm lat-
eral diameter, showing that the (3, 2, 1) wavefunction mode isof lower energy than the (2, 2, 2) mode. These well-understood
quantum mechanical properties are d e s c r i b e di nd e t a i li nt h el i t -
erature.
27,28The lateral effects are also seen from Figure 6,
where the probability densities of electronic waves through a
DBS made of QWs and QDs are compared. For QWs, no lat-
eral scattering is apparent. In the case of QD DBS, waves arescattered laterally as well, cr eating waves with 3D modulation.
Position disorder was evaluated on a DBS with 3-nm-
diameter Si QDs in a 5-nm-thick SiO
2matrix. The QDs
were centered at the midpoint between the two barriers.
FIG. 4. An illustration of size and position disorder in a single layer Si/SiO 2
QD resonant tunneling structure.
FIG. 5. RT features in Si QDs in a double barrier structure for varying lat-
eral dimension. Diameter in xandzdirections was fixed at 2 nm. Three dif-
ferent diameters in the ydirections—2, 2.4, and 3 nm—were considered. As
the QDs were elongated in the y direction, the resonant energies decreased.
FIG. 6. Probability density of electronwaves through a double barrier struc-
ture made of (a) a 4 nm QW (b) 4 nm
diameter QDs for an electron energy
that is 10 meV above the barrier height.The white circles indicate the positions
of the QDs.163707-4 Puthen-Veettil et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27The third resonant peak was analyzed by a smoothed aver-
age of 1000 simulation runs with different maximum
deviations from the mean position values of a normally-distributed position parameter. Figure 7(a) shows the con-
ductance in the units of 2 e
2/hfor different values of maxi-
mum deviation. For zero deviation—a perfectly orderedarray of QDs—the peak energy is found to be 1.072 eV.
As the maximum deviation was increased from 0 nm to
0.5 nm, the peak position of the average response droppedby 27.5%; with 1-nm maximum deviation, it dropped by
another 27%. However, in all three maximum deviation
values, the mean position of the peak remained the sameat 1.072 eV. The fixed size of the QDs in all cases yields
the same confined energy levels with no red-shifting. Since
the deviation in position did not induce a breakdown ofeither tunneling barrier, the energy selectivity of the DBS
decreases only as a result of disorder in position.
The same structural model discussed above was used
for simulating the size disorders. The center points of all
QDs were kept exactly in the middle of the dielectric ma-
trix. Assuming a wrapped norma l distribution for size devi-
ations, the average distribution was found from 1000
simulation runs. The maximum deviation in size was
assumed to be 0, 0.5, and 1 nm. Zero deviation representedan orderly array of QDs; the corresponding peak energy
was 1.072 eV as in the previous case. Figure 7(b) shows the
conductance in units of 2 e
2/has the smoothed average of
the outcome of 1000 simulation runs with the different
deviation values.
As shown in Figure 7(b), the maximum deviation
increased from 0 nm to 0.5 nm and the peak position of the
average conduction red-shifted by 50.2%. From 0.5 nm to
1 nm, it red-shifted another 16.6%. In addition to the drop inconduction, as the extent of the disorder increased, the width
of the resonant peak also increased. Since QDs with different
sizes have different resonant energies, the average value ofthe response increased the width of the resonant peak, reduc-
ing the energy selectivity of the structure. The peaks showed
a shift towards lower energy with increasing size deviations.This red shift is attributed to larger QDs dominating the
transmission through the structure as a result of the smaller
barrier thicknesses. Compared to disorder in position, sizedisorder has a greater negative impact on the conductance
and the selectivity of DBSs. The precise size control of the
QDs deserved prime importance for achieving a DBS withgood selectivity in energy. This is challenging experimen-
tally and has been a subject of substantial effort.
11
To evaluate the impact of the thickness of the barriers
on the tunneling coefficient, the thickness of the SiO 2bar-
riers was varied between 0.4 nm and 1.6 nm. The second
FIG. 7. (a) Reductions in transmission for QD DBSs with position disorder
are shown. Maximum deviations of the QDs from the midpoint of the DBS
were 0 nm, 0.5 nm, and 1 nm. The QD positions were varied pseudo-randomly, with deviations weighted by a normal distribution. (b) Clear peak
broadening and a slight red shift of the transmission are observed for the QD-
DBS subjected to disorder in QD size. The size parameter was varied pseudo-
randomly within maximum deviation limits of 0 nm, 0.5 nm, and 1 nm,
weighted by a normal distribution. The mean QD diameter is 3 nm. All ener-
gies are calculated with respect to the conduction band edge of silicon.
FIG. 8. Orders-of-magnitude reductions in the transmission coefficient areobserved for a 2-nm diameter Si QD/SiO
2DBS with barrier thickness chang-
ing from 1.6 nm to 0.4 nm. Substantial broadening of the peak and selectivity
loss occurs for barrier thicknesses below 1 nm. A small red shift is again
apparent for small barrier thicknesses. Energies are scaled relative to the
conduction band edge of silicon.163707-5 Puthen-Veettil et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27resonant peak of periodically-arranged spherical Si QDs
of 2 nm diameter was analyzed. The simulation results are
shown in Figure 8, demonstrating an improvement of
four orders of magnitude when the barrier thicknesschanged from 1.6 nm to 1 nm. It again rose by four
orders of magnitude when the thickness was reduced to
0.4 nm, with a slight red-shift in the position of the peak.This is due to the increased leakage through the thin bar-
riers which brings down the confined energy. While very
thin barriers increase the t unneling current, they also
decrease the energy selectivity of a RT structure based
on a QD array.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
In this work, a numerically stable multi-mode three-
dimensional scattering mat rix method was employed to
analyze several types of dis order in QD-based resonant
tunneling structures. As the maximum deviationincreased from 0 nm to 1 nm, the transmission peak was
shown to drop by 55% for position disorder and 70% in
the case of size disorder. It was found that the size disor-der impacts the performanc e of these structures more
than other types of disorder, leading to broadened tunnel-
ing peaks and a decrease in the peak conductance value.A suitable fabrication met hod for RT structures must
show better control of nanostructure dimensions and
positions than that which is presently demonstrated bysolid-phase crystallization, as deviations in the order of a
few nanometers can have a subs tantial impact on the per-
formance of these structures.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This Program has been supported by the Australian
Government through the Australian Renewable Energy
Agency (ARENA). The Australian Government, throughARENA, is supporting Australian research and development
in solar photovoltaic and solar thermal technologies to help
solar power become cost competitive with other energysources. The views expressed herein are not necessarily the
views of the Australian Government, and the Australian
Government does not accept responsibility for anyinformation or advice contained herein.
APPENDIX: DEVIATIONS
1. Discretization of the Schr €odinger equation
Assuming a parabolic band near the [100] valley, the
one-electron Schr €odinger equation in a three-dimensional
Cartesian coordinate system takes the form as shown in (A1)
below.
/C0/C22h2
2@
@x1
m/C3xðÞ@WxðÞ
@x/C18/C19
þ@
@y1
m/C3yðÞ@WyðÞ
@y !
þ@
@z1
m/C3zðÞ@WzðÞ
@z/C18/C198
>>>><
>>>>:9
>>>>=
>>>>;
þUx ;y;z ðÞ Wx;y;z ðÞ ¼EWx;y;z ðÞ : (A1)
Here, m
/C3ðrÞis the position-dependent effective mass. WðrÞis
the wavefunction at r,Uis the potential energy of the band
above the conduction band, and Eis the total energy of the
electron. Tunneling effective masses were used for electrons
in all materials.23
The structure (defined by Uðx;y;zÞand m/C3ðx;y;zÞ)i s
discretized in real space as shown in Fig. 9.
Discretizing (A1) with P,MandNpoints in the x,yand
zdirections respectively,
WpWpþ1;m;nþGpWp/C01;m;nþWmWp;mþ1;nþGmWp;m/C01;n
þWnWp;m;nþ1þGnWp;m;n/C01þYp;m;nðEÞWp;m;n¼0; (A2)
where
Wp¼Fp
m/C3pþ1;m;n/C0Fp
m/C3p;m;nþGp/C18/C19
;Wm¼Fm
m/C3p;mþ1;n/C0Fm
m/C3p;m;nþGm/C18/C19
;Wn¼Fn
m/C3p;m;nþ1/C0Fn
m/C3p;m;nþGn/C18/C19
;
Yp;m;nEðÞ¼Fp
m/C3p;m;n/C0Fp
m/C3pþ1;m;nþFm
m/C3p;m;n
/C0Fm
m/C3p;mþ1;nþFn
m/C3p;m;n/C0Fn
m/C3p;m;nþ1
/C02Gp/C02Gm/C02GnþUp;m;n/C0E0
BBBBB@1
CCCCCA8
>>>>>>>>>><
>>>>>>>>>>:
FIG. 9. A schematic representation of the discretization of the structure in to
P, M and N points in the x, y and z directions, respectively. The inset shows
a schematic representation of the discretized wavefunction in real space.163707-6 Puthen-Veettil et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 163707 (2014)
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137.30.242.61 On: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 00:19:27Fp¼/C0/C22h2
2Dx2;Fm¼/C0/C22h2
2Dy2;
Fn¼/C0/C22h2
2Dz2;Gp¼/C0/C22h2
2m/C3p;m;nDx2;
Gm¼/C0/C22h2
2m/C3p;m;nDy2;Gn¼/C0/C22h2
2m/C3p;m;nDz2:
The wavefunction at the zpoint ( n/C01) can be written as a
function of the wavefunction at nand that at ( nþ1) as
shown below
Wp;m;n/C01¼/C01
GnYp;m;nEðÞWp;m;nþWmWp;mþ1;n
þGmWp;m/C01;nþWpWpþ1;m;n
þGpWp/C01;m;n0
B@1
CA
þ/C0Wn
GnWp;m;nþ1 ðÞ : (A3)
2. Scattering matrix formation
For any slab in the x-yplane, the wavefunction is repre-
sented as Uz; it consists of modes as shown in the equation
below:
Uz¼Xu¼U;v¼V
u¼1;v¼1h^Wzu;vj; (A4)
where UandVare the mode numbers in the xandydirec-
tions and ^Wzu;vis the wave function in mode ( u,v) in the zth
x-yslab. The maximum number of modes in the xand y
directions are PandM, respectively. For all z, each element
of^Wzu;vconsists of Pnumber of yfingers, as shown in the
following equation.
Wzu;v¼W11uv
W12uv
:::
W1Muv2
666643
77775y
finger :1
W21uv
W22uv
:::
W2Muv2
666643
77775y
finger :2
:::
::::::
:::2
666643
77775y
fingers
WP1uv
WP2uv
:::
WPMuv2
666643
77775y
finger :P2
66666666666666666666666666666666666643
7777777777777777777777777777777777775
z:: (A5)
Using (A3) and (A4), the matrices Xz11andXz12were
formed, so that the equation below holds true for any z.
Uz/C01¼Xz11UzþXz12Uzþ1: (A6)Xz11andXz12are 7 diagonal matrices of size PM/C2PM.
(A6) can be written in a transfer matrix form as
Uz/C01
Uz/C20/C21
¼Xz11Xz12
10/C20/C21
Uz
Uzþ1/C20/C21
: (A7)
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1.4898648.pdf | Hierarchical cobalt-formate framework series with (41263)(4966) n (n = 1–3)
topologies exhibiting slow dielectric relaxation and weak ferromagnetism
Ran Shang, Sa Chen, Ke-Li Hu, Ze-Chun Jiang, Bing-Wu Wang, Mohamedally Kurmoo, Zhe-Ming Wang, and
Song Gao
Citation: APL Materials 2, 124104 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4898648
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4898648
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/aplmater/2/12?ver=pdfcov
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Hierarchical cobalt-formate framework series with
(412·63)(49·66)n(n=1–3) topologies exhibiting slow
dielectric relaxation and weak ferromagnetism
Ran Shang,1Sa Chen,1Ke-Li Hu,1Ze-Chun Jiang,1Bing-Wu Wang,1
Mohamedally Kurmoo,2Zhe-Ming Wang,1,aand Song Gao1,a
1Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Rare Earth
Materials Chemistry and Applications, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering,
Peking University, Beijing 100871, People’s Republic of China
2Institut de Chimie de Strasbourg, CNRS-UMR 7177, Université de Strasbourg, 4 rue Blaise
Pascal, 67000 Strasbourg Cedex, France
(Received 16 September 2014; accepted 7 October 2014; published online 24 October 2014)
The employment of linear di-, tri-, and tetra-ammoniums has generated a hierarchy
in the binodal (412·63)(49·66)ntopologies with n=1, 2, and 3, respectively, for
the cobalt formate frameworks with increasing length of the cavities to match the
ammoniums. This indicates the length-directing e ffect of the polyammoniums. The
dynamic movements of polyammoniums between favored sites or orientations within
the cavities lead to slow dielectric relaxations. All materials are spin-canted antiferro-
magnets in low temperatures and show reduced spontaneous magnetizations from di-
and tri-, to tetra-ammoniums, because of the increased number of unique Co ions or
the antiferromagnetically coupled sublattices. C2014 Author(s). All article content,
except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Unported License. [http: //dx.doi.org /10.1063 /1.4898648]
The last two decades have witnessed major developments in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)
through very active and intense studies.1–7Such materials, classified as the “middle” in Cheetham
and Rao quote “There is plenty of room in the middle,”2have showed a very wide spectra of struc-
tures, properties, functionalities, and possible applications. Despite the continued great interest in
their chemical aspects,1–3MOFs have been exploited for the abundance in their physical properties
and critical phenomena or phase transitions.4Magnetism has been a long and extensive research
subject for MOFs,5but dielectric (DE) and ferro- /antiferro-electricities (FE /AFE) of MOFs have
attracted even greater attention recently.6MOFs showing synergy through the coexistence of mag-
netic and electric orderings have emerged as a field of MOF-multiferroics.7However, the examples
are still few. The recent research on ammonium metal formate frameworks (AMFFs, mainly for 3 d
metals or Mg, TM) has revealed not only the diversity in framework structures but more impor-
tantly, promising magnetic and /or electric properties, phase transitions, and others.8The framework
structures could be easily controlled, or templated, by the shape, size, and charge of the ammo-
niums. For mono-ammoniums (AH+), the small ones9–14(e.g., NH 4+) led to the chiral frameworks
of[AH ][TM (HCOO )3]with (49·66) topology. The larger sized ones15–18(e.g., (CH 3)2NH 2+) re-
sulted in many metal-formate perovskites, with (412·63) topology. AMFF analogous to the niccolite
(NiAs) could be obtained by using di-ammoniums, as [dmenH 2][TM (HCOO )3]2series19(dmenTM ,
dmenH 22+=CH 3NH 2(CH 2)2NH 2CH 3) and [bnH 2][Mg (HCOO )3]2(bnMg , bnH 22+=H3N(CH 2)4-
NH 3),10or mono-ammonium in [(CH 3)2NH 2][FeIIIMII(HCOO )6](dmaFeM ),20and the framework
topology is binodal (412·63)(49·66). Lanthanide21,22and uranyl23AMFFs have also been reported to
show more complicated structures and framework topologies. The physics of AMFFs are found abun-
dant, thanks to the combination of ammonium, metal ion, and the formate bridge, which provide the
aElectronic addresses: zmw@pku.edu.cn and gaosong@pku.edu.cn
2166-532X/2014/2(12)/124104/8 2, 124104-1 ©Author(s) 2014
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Downloaded to IP: 141.212.109.170 On: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 18:17:53124104-2 Shang et al. APL Mater. 2, 124104 (2014)
magnetic coupling, the H-bonding (HB) systems, and the order-disorder alteration of the ammonium
components for creating various properties.8For example, coexistence or synergy of magnetic and
electric orderings, large dielectric anomalies and relaxor behaviors, negative thermal expansion, and
so on, have all been documented in several [AH ][TM (HCOO )3]series,9–18especially in the perov-
skites. Some of them even have high phase transition temperatures comparable to the ferroelectric
oxides.10,11,14Magnetic /dielectric relaxation and temperature /pressure-induced structural transitions
have been observed in several lanthanide AMFFs.21,22The niccolite dmaFeFe displayed para- to
antiferro-electric transition of unusual structural alternations and Néel N-Type ferrimagnetism.20It
is noted that the order-disorder alternations of ammoniums and the triggered phase transitions are
closely relevant to these properties, and could occur in many AMFFs, with di fferent patterns of the
dynamics, such as vibration, flipping, or rotational motion of ammoniums, depending on the symme-
try requirements and weak interactions between the ammoniums and the host frameworks, and the
subtle balance of energies within the detailed structures.8
The development has been expanded to polyammoniums,8,24and we reported here three compo-
unds, [bnH 2][Co(HCOO )3]2(bnCo ),[dptaH 3][Co(HCOO )3]3(dptaCo ), and [tptaH 4][Co(HCOO )3]4
(tptaCo ) (dptaH 33+=H3N(CH 2)3NH 2(CH 2)3NH 3, and tptaH 44+=H3N(CH 2)3NH 2(CH 2)3NH 2(CH 2)3-
NH 3)having increasing length of the ammonium but retaining the width and most importantly, the
flexibility. They form a family of hierarchical frameworks possessing the binodal (412·63)(49·66)n
topologies of order n=1, 2, and 3. The length of the polyammonium defines the order of the topology
and thus the cavities in which they are located. The loose fitting of the flexible polyammonium within
the cavity space provides dynamical motion between di fferent sites or orientations, thus, results in
slow dielectric relaxations. They are also spin-canted antiferromagnets (AF) or weak ferromagnets
(WF), with the Néel temperatures ( TN’s) around 10 K, and the reduced spontaneous magnetizations
from bnCo anddptaCo totptaCo .
The crystals of the three compounds were prepared by the convenient solution methods and
using commercial chemicals, as described before for other AMFFs,8in satisfactory yields. Anal.,
bnCo , calcd for C 10H20N2O12Co2: C, 25.12; H, 4.22; N, 5.86%; found: C, 25.04; H, 4.23; N, 5.75%;
dptaCo , anal. calcd for C 15H29N3O18Co3: C, 25.16; H, 4.08; N, 5.87%; found: C, 25.42; H, 4.24; N,
5.78%; tptaCo , anal. calcd for C 21H42N4O24Co4: C, 26.05; H, 4.26; N, 5.79%; found: C, 26.16; H,
4.13; N, 5.80%.
The single crystal X-ray di ffraction data for bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo at room temperature
were collected on a Nonius KappaCCD di ffractometer using graphite monochromated Mo K αradi-
ation (λ=0.71073 Å). The structures were solved by direct method and refined by full-matrix
least-squares on F2using program.25Crystallographic data are briefly listed in Table I, the
full details and the selected molecular geometries are in Tables S1 and S2 of the supplementary
material.26
The temperature-dependent alternative current (ac) dielectric permittivity measurements were
performed against the capacitors prepared from powdered samples10,14on a TH2828 Precision
TABLE I. The brief crystallographic data for bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo at room temperature.
Compound (CCDC number) bnCo (1024916) dptaCo (1024917) tptaCo (1024918)
Formula C 10H20Co2N2O12 C15H29Co3N3O18 C21H40Co4N4O24
Fw 478.14 716.20 968.29
Crystal system Trigonal Trigonal Trigonal
Space group P31c R 3c P 31c
a=b(Å) 8.5322(2) 8.4069(2) 8.3617(1)
c(Å) 13.3228(3) 61.921(3) 28.3983(5)
α=β,γ(deg) 90, 120 90, 120 90, 120
V(Å3) 839.94(3) 3790.0(2) 1719.52(4)
Z,DC(g cm−3) 2, 1.891 6, 1.883 2, 1.870
Total, uniq. and obs.[I ≥2σ(I)] refls. 15334, 649, 554 13053, 969, 518 25884, 1329, 873
R1, wR2[I≥2σ(I)] 0.0238, 0.0668 0.0300, 0.0710 0.0260, 0.0705
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inductance-capacitance-resistance meter under dried N 2flow. Magnetic measurements were per-
formed on a Quantum Design MPMS XL5 SQUID system using polycrystalline samples tightly
packed. Diamagnetic corrections were estimated using Pascal constants27(−197×10−6,−309
×10−6, and−401×10−6cm3mol−1forbnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , respectively) and background
correction for sample holders. The experimental details of element analyses, powder X-ray di ffrac-
tion (PXRD), FTIR spectra, UV-Vis reflectance spectra, and thermal analyses are given in the
supplementary material.26
The experimental PXRD patterns for the bulk samples and the pressed pellets of the three com-
pounds match well the simulated ones based on the crystal structures (Fig. S1, see supplementary
material26), confirming the phase purity and no pressure-induced structural phase transitions.21The
three IR spectra (Fig. S2(a) and Table S3, see supplementary material26) are quite similar, with char-
acteristic bands for polyammonium and HCOO−groups, indicating the similarity of the structures
with similar components.28Three bands, 15 600 cm−1(sh), 19 300 cm−1(s), and 20 900 cm−1(sh) in
the UV-Vis spectra (Fig. S2(b), see supplementary material26), correspond to the three transitions of
4T1g(F)→4A2g(F),4T1g(F)→4T2g(F), and4T1g(C)→4T1g(V), respectively, typical for the octahedral
CoO 6moiety,29and similar to other reported Co-AMFFs.9,18The three materials were thermally
stable up to ca. 200◦C, then the departure of polyammonium formates occurred and was closely
followed by the subsequent pyrolysis (Fig. S3(a), see supplementary material26). The di fferential
scanning calorimetry (DSC) trace of bnCo revealed a reversible phase transition around −30◦C, but
fordptaCo andtptaCo , no anomalies were observed (Fig. S3(b), see supplementary material26).
The three structures are closely related to one another. They are all trigonal, space group
P31cforbnCo andtptaCo ,R3cfordptaCo with similar a/bdimensions but di fferent caxes
(Table I; Table S1, see supplementary material26). They all possess binodal 3D metal-formate
frameworks containing two kinds of Co nodes, octahedral (412·63) and trigonal prismatic (49·66),
connected by anti-anti formate ligands (Fig. 1). The (412·63) node has appeared in perovskites of
[AH ][M(HCOO )3]for larger AH =NH 2NH+
3, CH 3NH+
3, (CH 3)2NH+
2, and so on,15–18and the (49·66)
one in the chiral phases of [AH ][M(HCOO )3]for small AH =NH+
4, HONH+
3, and NH 2NH+
3.9–14
InbnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , the ratios of the two nodes, (412·63) to (49·66), are 1:1, 1:2,
and 1:3, respectively, or the three metal-formate frameworks have topologies of (412·63)(49·66)n
with n=1, 2, and 3 (Fig. 1, top). Such topologies for MOFs are still very rare and the hierarchy
is unique. In fact, the topology of bnCo forn=1,(412·63)(49·66), was observed in dmenTM
series,19the first MOF analogous to the mineral niccolite, then followed in dmaFeM20andbnMg .10
We are unaware of any MOF with topologies of (412·63)(49·66)nforn=2 and 3. These frame-
works can also be considered as (4, 4) waved sheets linked along the normal direction, and in the
sheet the same kind of nodes occupied the diagonal positions of the square grids to form arrays of
(49·66) or (412·63) nodes. For bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , there are one, two, and three arrays
of (49·66) nodes between two arrays of (412·63) nodes, respectively, within the sheet, and the
(412·63) node links only (49·66) nodes. The octahedral CoO 6moieties in the three structures have
Co–O distances: 2.086(2)–2.108(2) Å, cis- O–Co–O angles 85.46(5)◦–94.54(5)◦, and trans - ones
174.26(5)◦–180◦, and the Co···Co distances via the formato bridge are 5.927–6.015 Å (Table S2,
see supplementary material26).
The frameworks possess longer and longer shaped cavities for accommodating longer and longer
polyammoniums (Fig. 1, middle and bottom; Fig. S4, see supplementary material26). For bnCo , the
cavity is formed by two one-corner-missing cubanes twinned together by sharing the three opening
corners. In dptaCo , the two one-corner-missing cubanes are connected via their six opening corners.
Finally, in tptaCo , three additional (49·66) nodes link the openings of the two one-corner-missing
cubanes. Therefore, from bnCo totptaCo , they show that the longer the ammoniums, the longer
the cavity directed, and the accompanied addition of (49·66) nodes into the framework. The cations,
[bnH2+
2],[dptaH3+
3], and [tptaH4+
4]in the cavities are all trigonally disordered at room temperature.
Most of the CH 2groups neighboring NH 2or NH 3groups locate on 3-fold axes, and other CH 2and
ammonium groups are in three symmetry-related positions, except that the middle NH 2of[dptaH3+
3]
is still on the 3-fold axis, with a disk-like thermal ellipsoid (Fig. S4, see supplementary material26).
The framework cavity of dptaCo looks staggered for the two half parts on both sides of the verti-
cally central plane, but those in bnCo andtptaCo are symmetric. Consequently, the middle NH 2of
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FIG. 1. The structures of bnCo (a),dptaCo (b), and tptaCo (c). For each column, the top is the topological view of the
Co-formate framework, with spheres being metal atoms and bonds the anti-anti HCOO bridges, and one cavity highlighted
in red; the middle and the bottom are the side and top views of the cavity with the disordered polyammmonium in space-filling
model. Color scheme: green, (412·63)nodes; violet blue, (49·66)nodes; red, O; dark gray /white, C; cyan, N; white, H.
[dptaH3+
3]has di fferent dynamics from the terminal NH 3, and possesses smaller motion amplitude
and looser binding. However, for [bnH2+
2]and [tptaH4+
4]cations, all ammoniums have same or similar
dynamics and motion amplitudes. These are relevant to the dielectric properties. The NH 2and NH 3
groups of the cations form HBs to the oxygen atoms of anionic frameworks (N ···O contacts =2.88–
3.25 Å, but 3.42 Å for the middle NH 2of[dptaH3+
3]indptaCo , Table S2, see supplementary mate-
rial26) similar to that in the [(CH 3)2NH 2][TM (HCOO )3]anddmenTM series.15–19
The Co AMFF series with di fferent ammonium components now has more than 10 members.
[NH 4][Co(HCOO )3],[HONH 3][Co(HCOO )3], and [NH 2NH 3][Co(HCOO )3]possessing the chiral
(49·66) topology;9–14[CH 3NH 3][Co(HCOO )3], [(CH 3)2NH 2][Co(HCOO )3], [CH 3CH 2NH 3]
[Co(HCOO )3],[C(NH 2)3][Co(HCOO )3], and [(CH 2)3NH 2][Co(HCOO )3]belong to the perovskite of
(412·63) topology;15–18dmenCo19andbnCo have niccolite topology of (412·63)(49·66), and dp-
taCo andtptaCo showing novel topologies of (412·63)(49·66)nforn=2 and 3. Running through
this series, it is very clear that the structural evolution of AMFFs depends on the ammoniums, and
the present three compounds clearly demonstrate the length-directing e ffect of the polyammoniums.
This series, showing (412·63)m(49·66)n(m=0, 1; n=0, 1, 2, and 3) topologies, is one of the rare
occasions that a 3D perovskite-related network can accommodate a progression in cation lengths by
progressive change of framework structure.
The temperature-dependence of the complex electric permittivity ( ε′andε′′) for the three mate-
rials is shown in Figs. 2(a)–2(c) ( bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , respectively) and the characteristic
data in Table S4 of supplementary material.26They all feature strong dielectric dispersion. At a repre-
sentative frequency ( f) of 50 kHz, the ε′values were 32.2, 17.6, and 27.1 for bnCo ,dptaCo , and
tptaCo , respectively. On cooling, ε′ofbnCo decreased continuously, first slowly to 280 K and then
quickly, with 270 K as the fastest descending point ( Tm). Below 250 K, the decrease became slow
again until a constant ε′value below 200 K. For lower /higher f’s, the traces shift to lower /higher
temperatures but retain the same features, and the Tm’s ranged from 220 K to 315 K for 500 Hz to
1 MHz. The ε′traces of dptaCo andtptaCo show similar behaviors, and the descending are slower
or flatter. The Tmranges, from 500 Hz to 1 MHz, are 180–240 K ( dptaCo ) and 180–250 K ( tptaCo ).
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FIG. 2. Temperature-dependent traces of the dielectric permittivities for bnCo (a),dptaCo (b), and tptaCo (c), and the
Arrhenius plots for the dielectric relaxations (d).
Below 150 K, the ε′values under all f’s seemingly converged to 5.0, 6.0, and 6.5 for bnCo ,dptaCo ,
andtptaCo , respectively. The ε′′traces clearly display strong f-dependence. For bnCo andtptaCo ,
the plots show single peaks corresponding to the fall in the ε′traces, and the temperatures of the peak
positions ( TP) are close to the Tm’s of theε′traces, due to the Kramers-Krönig relations.30The fvs
TPdata could be fitted by the Arrhenius law of τ=τ0×exp (Ea/kBT)(τ=(2πf)−1), resulting in the
pre-exponential factor τ0=3.0×10−16s and the activation energy Ea/kB=6.3×103K∼0.54 eV for
bnCo , andτ0=1.7×10−16s and Ea/kB=5.1×103K∼0.44 eV for tptaCo , respectively (Fig. 2(d)).
FordptaCo , the broad peaks in the ε′′traces are composed of two peaks merged together, one in
lower temperature (LT) and one in higher temperature (HT), or there are two dielectrics relaxa-
tions. By fitting the peak regions using a double-peak model, the individual TPdata could be derived.
Then the two sets of fvsTPdata could be fitted by the Arrhenius law, leading to the parameters
τ0=1.6×10−14s and Ea/kB=3.7×103K∼0.32 eV for the LT relaxation, and τ0=1.4×10−15s
andEa/kB=4.9×103K∼0.43 eV for HT one. These parameters of the dielectric relaxations are
rational for dielectrics30and comparable to other AMFFs.10,14
At room temperature, the flexible polyammoniums are all trigonally disordered in the framework
cavities. As observed in several reported AMFFs, such as dmenTM ,19bnMg ,10andtmenEr ,21these
disorders are related to the motion of the polyammoniums, i.e., the rotating, twisting, or flipping of the
constituent parts between several preferred sites or orientations. Such motions induce the dipoles or
polarizations and their fluctuations within the lattices, thus, contribute the dielectric responses, high
ε′but lowε′′in HT region.30It is expected that on cooling, the contraction of the frameworks and
the increased HB interactions will slow or damp the movements and finally freeze them.9,10,12,14,21,22
The damped movements resulted in the decrease /increase inε′/ε′′and the strong dielectric disper-
sion. The activation energies are 0.32–0.54 eV , or 31–52 kJ mol−1, seemingly rational for the alterna-
tion of several N–H ···O HBs and C–H···O interactions required for the movements.10,14However,
the dielectric data and behavior of bnCo are quite di fferent from those of bnMg10though they are
isostructural at HT, indicating the di fferent characters in lattice dynamics, disorder-order transition
pattern, and phase transition. The two dielectric relaxations of dptaCo corroborate with the two
different dynamics of the middle NH 2and the terminal NH 3, as revealed by structural analysis. The
former contributes the LT relaxation with the smaller Ea/kB=0.32 eV , and the latter corresponds to
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the HT relaxation, with the slightly higher Ea/kB=0.43 eV , as those of bnCo andtptaCo . On further
cooling, the final freezing of the motions of the polyammoniums led to the low dielectric responses
in LT region. Such relaxation mechanism as observed here adds to the multitudes and complexities
provided by the family of AMFFs which requires further specialized studies to reveal the true state of
arts in these novel materials. The phase transition of bnCo has been confirmed by DSC anomalies,
but whether the phase transitions occurred for dptaCo andtptaCo need further investigation. The
materials will be of interest for MOF-multiferroics7because they have shown magnetic orderings, as
below.
The three compounds are all 3D spin-canted AFs showing WF in LT region but with interesting
differences (Table S4, see supplementary material26). The plots of the temperature-dependent static
susceptibilities of the three materials, measured under a field of 100 Oe, are shown in Fig. 3(a).
Above 15 K, the three χTvsTplots are nearly overlapped. The χTvalues per mole Co are 3.21
(bnCo ), 3.16 ( dptaCo ), and 3.21 ( tptaCo ) cm3K mol−1at 300 K, typical for the Co2+ions.31,32
Upon cooling, the χTvalues decreased gradually. The HT susceptibilities obey the Curie-Weiss law
(Fig. S5(a), see supplementary material26) with Curie constants ( C) and Weiss temperatures ( Θ) in
cm3K mol−1/K: 3.85 /−60.5, 3.75 /−54.4, and 3.90 /−63.9 for bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , respec-
tively. Assuming S=3/2, for Co2+, these Cconstants led to the Landé g-factors of 2.83–2.88, and
the large negative Θvalues indicate AF exchange within the materials, though the values include
the effect of spin-orbit coupling of octahedral Co2+ion, showing an e ffective S=1/2 at LT from a
S=3/2 at HT due to the depopulation of the higher energy Kramers doublets ( ±3/2 and±5/2), be-
ing equivalent to a Θof ca.−20 K.32When further cooled, the decreased χTvalues reach at minima
around 10 K, then rise to maxima and after that they go down to 2 K. The minima are similar for the
FIG. 3. Magnetism of the three compounds: (a) plots of χTvsTunder 100 Oe field, and inset, the ZFC /FC plots under
10 Oe field; (b) isothermal magnetization plots at 2 K, and inset, the zoomed part of the hysteresis loops in low fields.
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three compounds but the maxima χTvalues are quite di fferent, and for tptaCo , it is small. Under
10 kOe field, the maxima were all suppressed (Fig. S5(b), see supplementary material26). All these
observations indicate the occurrence of 3D long-range ordering (LRO) of spin-canted AF within the
materials in LT.
The materials were further characterized in LT region by measurements of zero-field-cooled
(ZFC) and field-cooled (FC) magnetizations under 10 Oe field (Fig. 3(a), inset), isothermal magne-
tizations at 2 K (Fig. 3(b)), and ac susceptibilities at 10, 100, and 1000 Hz (Figs. S5(c) and S5(d),
see supplementary material,26ac data at 10 Hz only). The small spontaneous magnetizations and
irreversibility observed in ZFC /FC plots clearly indicated the 3D LRO of spin-canted AF, and the
TN’s were 9.9 K ( bnCo ), 12.5 K ( dptaCo ), and 10.9 K ( tptaCo ), by the negative peak positions in the
dFC/dT (Fig. S5(b), inset, see supplementary material26). These are typical for Co-AMFFs.8,13,18,19
The second peak at 11.0 K in the dFC/dT plot of dptaCo is probably due to a spin-reorientation.8,19
The FC magnetizations below TN(Table S4, see supplementary material26) show bnCo>dptaCo
≫tptaCo . This should be due to the increased number of unique Co ions or the AF-coupled sub-
lattices from bnCo totptaCo , resulting in the occurrence of hidden spin-canting.33The isothermal
magnetizations at 2.0 K (Fig. 3(b)) all display hysteresis, with the coercive fields ( HC’s), being 0.97,
1.5, and 0.39 kOe for bnCo ,dptaCo , and tptaCo , respectively, and small remnant magnetizations
(RM’s) of 0.033 ( bnCo ), 0.017 ( dptaCo ), and 0.0035 ( tptaCo ) Nβ. The magnetizations around 0.5
Nβat the highest applied field of 50 kOe, are significantly lower than the expected 2.2 N βassuming
S=1/2 andg=4.3.32The spin-flop transition (AF-SP) occurred above ca .20 kOe. In the ac suscep-
tibilities at 10 Hz, bnCo shows peaks at 9.9 K in both χ′andχ′′components, and the responses are
strong. dptaCo exhibits double peaks (12.5 K and 11.3 K), but the responses are significantly weak.
FortptaCo , there is only a broad cusp around 12 K in the very weak χ′response, and χ′′component
noisy. The peak positions and the strengths of the χ′andχ′′are in agreement with the ZFC /FC data.
Nof-dependences were observed. These results confirm the spin canting AF LRO in the three mate-
rials whose structures, with the non-centrosymmetric bridges of anti-anti HCOO linking anisotropic
Co2+ions, satisfy the requirement for the antisymmetric interaction.34Finally, the couplings ( J/kB)
between Co2+ions via the anti-anti formato bridge, estimated from J/kB=3Θ/[2zS (S+1)],33are
−4.0 (bnCo ),−3.6 (dptaCo ), and−4.3 K ( tptaCo ), similar to those of Co-AMFFs with anti-anti
HCOO linkages reported before.8,11,13,14,18,19
In conclusion, the results of varying the length of linear polyammonium cations demonstrate
the progressive structure-directing e ffect in the formation of binodal (412·63)(49·66)n(n=1, 2,
and 3) topologies in Co AMFFs. This progressive development is a rare observation in the field
of transition-metal perovskites chemistry. Due to the misfit of the polyammoniums in the spaces
available that allow for their distortions and motions between crystallographically and energetically
degenerate locations, a series of dielectric anomalies are observed as a function of temperature.
These vary with the number of degrees of freedom in the motion of the polyammoniums. However,
they all freeze at low temperature for the weak ferromagnetic ordering to set in at ca. 10 K. Thus,
possible structural order-disorder is observed at high temperature while at low temperature 3D
magnetic order is present. The present results add to the range of other properties already shown
for AMFFs, which have proved very beneficial in the development of multifunctional MOF mate-
rials. Further studies of these materials will certainly enhance our academic understanding of the
multitude of properties as well as the subtle synergy of the coexisting properties.
This work was supported by the NSFC (Grant Nos. 21171010, 21290170, and 21290171) and
the National Basic Research Program of China (Grant No. 2013CB933401). M. K. is funded by the
CNRS (France).
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1.4876222.pdf | Magnetic transitions and electrical transport in Bi-doped lanthanum strontium manganites
A. M. Ahmed, H. F. Mohamed, and Martin Šoka
Citation: Low Temperature Physics 40, 418 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4876222
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4876222
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On: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 11:26:31LOW-TEMPERATURE MAGNETISM
Magnetic transitions and electrical transport in Bi-doped lanthanum strontium
manganites
A. M. Ahmed and H. F . Mohameda)
Physics Department, Faculty of Science, Sohag University, Sohag 82524, Egypt
Martin /C20Soka
Slovak University of Technology, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology Ilkovic ˆova
33, Bratislava 81219, Slovak Republic
(Submitted September 2, 2013)
Fiz. Nizk. Temp. 40, 539–544 (May 2014)
The temperature dependence of the electrical resistivity q, thermoelectric power Sand the magnetic
susceptibility vof La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3(x¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 at. %) manganites were
investigated. La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3crystallizes in a single phase rhombohedral structure with para-
sitic phase inclusions. With increasing Bi concentration, a systematic decrease in the ferromagnetic
transition temperature ( Tc), the metal-semiconducting transition temperature ( Tms1) and also the
values of activation energies EqandESfrom q(T) and S(T) were observed. On the other hand, in
the high-temperature ( T>Tms) paramagnetic semiconductor regime, the adiabatic small polaron
hopping model fit well, thereby indicating that polaron hopping might be responsible for the con-
duction mechanism. In addition, the thermoelectric power data at low temperatures were analyzedby considering both the magnon and the phonon drag concept, while the high-temperature data
were confirmed a small polaron hopping conduction mechanism.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4876222 ]
1. Introduction
Perovskite-type oxide LAMO (LaAMnO 3, where A is a
divalent alkaline earth metal ion such as Sr2þor Ca2þ)
exhibits colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) with a magnetic
resistance ratio of more than 100%.1–4In particular, CMR
appears near the point of transition from the antiferromag-netic insulator phase to the ferromagnetic metallic phase,
and it is closely associated with Mn in the LAMO specimen
having a large spin polarization based on strong Hund’s rulecoupling.
5In this case, the electrical conduction characteris-
tics depend on whether a conduction electron enters an elec-
tron orbit in terms of the Jahn /C0Teller (JT) strain which
accompanies the symmetry of the crystal structure.6It is
known that by doping the bismuth to the system LAMO, the
electrical resistivity and magneto-optical effect change,7but
the details are not clear. In order to reveal the mechanism of
magneto-transport, Righi et al.8have investigated the
Bi-doping effects on the structural, transport and magneticproperties of La
0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3, and have found that the
dopant Bi cause structure change and decreases the Tms.
However, interpretation of the temperature dependence ofthe thermoelectric power (TEP) S(T) for transition metal ox-
ide is rarely reported
9–11due to the complexity of elucidating
theS(T) apart from the diffusion TEP or temperature-
independent TEP.
As we know, there are many different properties in
La1–xCaxMnO 3and La 1–xSrxMnO 3, such as metal-insulator
transition temperature at optimal doping and the critical dop-
ing concentration for the presence of ferromagnetism.12,13
So, we have investigated systematically the Bi-doping effect
on the magnetic and electrical properties in La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3with the expectation that it will provide new insight
and interesting physics.
2. Experimental
All samples reported in the present study were synthesized
by a standard solid-state reaction procedure. Stoichiometric
compositions of La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3(x¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15
at. %) were prepared by mixing equimolar amounts of La 2O3,
Bi2O3,S r O ,a n dM n C O 3, respectively (all having greater than
99.99% purity). The powders of these oxides and the carbonate
were mixed and were finely ground in an electric grinder for 30min. After grinding, the powders were pressed into pellets with
a pressure of 2 ton/cm
2and calcined at 1173 K for 8 h followed
by cooling to room temperature, they were reground and again
pressed into pellets with a pressure of 7 ton/cm2and subse-
quently calcined at 1373 K for 6 h.14Samples were checked by
x-ray powder diffraction analysis indicating the presence of a
unique phase with perovskite-type structure. Resistivity meas-
urements were performed in a commercial variable tempera-ture liquid nitrogen cryostat. The resistivity was measured as a
function of temperature using the standard four-probe method
and air-drying conducting silver paste as in previousworks.
14,15The thermoelectric power measurements were car-
ried using the sample two-heater method with copper electro-
des see Refs. 15–17. The magnetic susceptibility measurement
was performed, from room temperature to 700 K, using the
Kappa Bridge KLY-2 with operating frequency 920 Hz.
3. Results and discussion
The x-ray diffraction patterns of the La 0.7–xBixSr0.3
MnO 3(x¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 at. %) show that the
1063-777X/2014/40(5)/5/$32.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 418LOW TEMPERATURE PHYSICS VOLUME 40, NUMBER 5 MAY 2014
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On: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 11:26:31systematic substitution of La by Bi does not produce relevant
effect on them. In general, all the peaks for samples satisfy theLa–Sr–Mn–O phase. In addition, some weak impurity peaks
from SrMnO, BiSrMnO, and Bi
2O3phases were found.14The
crystal structure for the compositions La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO y
was found to be rhombohedral structure.18–20Lattice parame-
ters and cell volume were calculated and tabulated in Table 1.
As seen in Table 1the lattice parameter aand unit-cell
volume slight increase with increasing Bi concentration,
while parameter cslight decreases with x. This almost per-
fect match can be explained considering the similar dimen-sion of the two cations La
3þ(ionic radius r¼1.032 A ˚) and
Bi3þ(ionic radius r¼1.030 A ˚).21
Figure 1shows the variation of resistivity with tempera-
ture for La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3. Obviously, the resistivity
increases with Bi doping. We expect that when the Bi con-
tent increases not only the La-content decreases but also thecharge carrier density
22which leads to a reduction of the
double exchange which is proportional to bandwidth.
Therefore, the La/Bi configuration plays a prominent role incontrolling the resistivity. Consistently, the figure shows that
the transition temperature ( T
ms1) for La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3
decreases with increasing Bi content. These compounds
have a distinct metallic phase below the transition tempera-
ture ( Tms1) and above this temperature they become semi-
conducting (S). In addition both the change in carrier
concentration and Tms/Tcwith Bi content can be interpreted
as arising from the rather covalent character of the Bi–Obonds (which are shorter than the La–O due to the covalent
character of the former). That, in turn, contributes to the
localization of the oxygen electrons coupling the Mn
3þ/4þ
ions, and could explain the increase of the antiferromagnetic
interactions and the decrease of the metallic character for theBi-substituted compounds, ending up with the totally AF and
insulating Bi–Sr–MnO 3.
The resistivities data above Tms1(PM–S region) are ana-
lyzed in view of small polaron hopping (SPH) are generallyused where the transition temperatures of our composites are
high temperature. The data are fitted well with the SPH
model of Mott
23viz.,
q=T¼qaexp Eq=kBT/C0/C1; (1)
where Eqis the energy equal to WD/2þWH; for T>Tms1
(where WHis the polaron hopping energy and WDis the dis-
order energy). Eqandqacalculated and tabulated in Table 2
Indeed, as a result of the fit, the adiabatic SPH model is used
in the present investigation. As in Table 2both Eqandqa
decrease with increasing Bi content. This behavior is
explained by considering that increasing xcauses charge
delocalization (due to decrease of small polaron coupling con-
stant or el–ph interaction constant) in the system and therebythe energy required to liberate a free carrier is reduced.
To discuss the nature of the conduction mechanism
below T
ms1(FM–M region), the resistivity data are fitted
with three empirical equations derived by different previous
work:24–26
q¼q0þq2T2; (2)
q¼q0þq2:5T2:5; (3)
q¼q0þq2T2þq4:5T4:5; (4)
where q0represents the resistivity due to grain boundary
effects. q2T2in term in Eqs. (2)and(4)indicates the resistiv-
ity due to electron–electron scattering process and is gener-
ally dominant up to 100 K. On the other hand, the term
q2.5T2.5represents the resistivity due to electron–magnon
scattering process in ferromagnetic phase. Finally, the term
q4.5T4.5indicates the resistivity due to electron–magnon scat-
tering process in ferromagnetic region, which may be likelyto arise due to spin-wave scattering process.
Our data of the metallic (ferromagnetic) part of the
temperature-dependent resistivity ( q) curve (below T
ms) fits
well with Eq. (4)(R2>99.9%). Indicating the importance of
grain/domain boundary effects and electron–magnon scatter-
ing processes in the conduction of our composites. As inTable 3the values of q
0>q2>q4.5, this means that both
grain boundaries and electron–electron scattering process
play a role besides an electron–magnon scattering process inconduction mechanism. The last term q
4.5is also found toTABLE 1. The lattice parameters and cell volume (V)with concentration of
the La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3.
Bi content, at. %
Parameter 0.05 0.10 0.15
a,A˚ 6.043 6.050 6.052
c,A˚ 7.760 7.760 7.748
V,A˚3245.41 245.98 245.76
FIG. 1. ln qversus temperature for La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3.TABLE 2. The variation of Eq(meV), qa(X/C1cm), ES(meV), Band WH
(meV) with concentration for T>Tms.
Bi content, at. %
Parameter 0.05 0.10 0.15
qa 6.35 6.33 6.31
Eq 77.50 76.60 76.24
ES 11.90 9.40 7.50
B 0.035 0.022 0.022
WH 65.40 67.50 68.74Low Temp. Phys. 40(5), May 2014 Ahmed, Mohamed, and /C20Soka 419
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On: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 11:26:31decrease with increasing Bi content; the observed behavior
may be due to partial alignment of the spins which results inlowering their fluctuations.
27
The temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility
(v) were measured with a magnetic field of 300 A/m. Figure
2shows the v–T curves for La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3samples ( x
¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 at. %), demonstrating the presence of
clear FM transitions, while the value of magnetic susceptibil-ity decreases with increasing the doping of Bi for these sam-
ples. This phenomenon can be interpreted as the increased
bending of the Mn–O–Mn bond with decreasing averageA-site ionic radius hr
Aidue to the partial substitution of
smaller Bi3þions for a bit larger La3þions. This substitution
causes the narrowing of the bandwidth and the decreasing ofthe mobility of e
gelectron resulting in the weakness of DE
interaction magnetism28(this confirm the q(T) data). Based
on these results, ferro- to paramagnetic transition tempera-tures ( T
C) were determined from the inflection point of
dv/dT. It is clear from the values of Tvalues are also follow-
ing the same trend as those of Tms.
Figure 3shows the dependence of Seebeck coefficient
(S) on the temperature. The TEP of these samples, depicted
in Fig. 3, is positive at low temperatures, suggesting hole
conduction, but becomes negative at high temperatures ( T>
300 K). The transition from metallic to semiconducting
behavior ( Tms2) is clearly seen in the figure. Below the Tms2,
the value of Sincreases with increasing Bi doping, above the
transition this is also true except for x¼0.15 at. %. In addi-
tion, above the transition Sdecreases rapidly. When the re-
sistivity is thermally activated, the thermopower may also be
expected to show semiconducting-like behavior. The signchange in Sat high temperatures confirms that the coexis-
tence of two types of carriers. The negative Sat high temper-
ature is attributed to the electrons which are excited from thevalence band (VB) into the conduction band (CB). Because
of the higher mobility of electrons within the CB, Sis nega-
tive. At low temperatures, the electrons in the VB band are
excited into the impurity band which generates hole-like car-
riers, which is responsible for a positive S.
29The magnitude
ofSincreases with increasing Bi-doping except in the case
ofx¼0.15 above Tms2, and the observed behavior due to the
fact that for every ion of Bi doping, double the hole centers,which are localized and causes narrowing of e
gband, this
have been confirmed by v(T) and q(T) measurements.
As in many previous work30,31that phonon drag ( Sg)
and magnon drag ( Sm) contributions to the diffusion ( Sd)i n
the low-temperature region. In the low-temperature FM–M
region, a magnon drag effect is produced due to the presenceof electron–magnon scattering, while the phonon drag is due
to electron–phonon scattering. In general, we can analyzed
S–Trelation as (note that n
ph/C24T3,nmag/C24T3/2),
S¼S0þS3=2T3=2þS4T4; (5)
where S0is a constant and accounts the low-temperature var-
iation of thermo-power. The second term S3/2T3/2is attrib-
uted to the magnon scattering process, while the origin of
the last term S4T4is related to the spin-wave fluctuations in
the FM–M region.30We fitted our data using Eq. (5)and we
found that it fit well only for a short range of low tempera-
ture. Therefore, we refit our data using the modified Eq. (6),
which modified by adding two more terms, phonon drag and
diffusion drag and the resulting equation is given by31
S¼S0þS1TþS3=2T3=2þS3T3þS4T4; (6)
where the term S1TandS3T3represent to the diffusion and
the phonon drag contribution to the TEP, respectively. The
lines in Fig. 4, indicate that Eq. (6)is in good agreement
with the experimental results of magnon contribution fromTABLE 3. The resistivity data, fitted with empirical Eqs. (2)–(4), due to different scattering process.
Sample code q¼¼ q0þq2T2q¼q0þq2.5T2.5q¼q0þq2T2þq4.5T4.5q0,X/C1cm q2,1 0/C05X/C1cm/K2q4.5,1 0/C011X/C1cm/K4.5
0.05 0.9801 0.9602 0.9977 5.8214 6.6775 1.3144
0.10 0.9921 0.9876 0.9921 7.2756 5.7660 0.05250.15 0.9690 0.9466 0.9950 9.4549 7.9799 2.1155
FIG. 2. Temperature dependences of susceptibility for samples La 0.7– x
BixSr 0.3MnO 3.FIG. 3. Temperature dependences of thermoelectric power for La 0.7–x
BixSr0.3MnO 3.420 Low Temp. Phys. 40(5), May 2014 Ahmed, Mohamed, and /C20Soka
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On: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 11:26:3183 up to 313, 273, and 263 K high of samples with Bi content
x¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 at. %, respectively. But for the con-
tribution of phonon is in good agreement with experimental
results from 163 to 273, 103 to 253, and 113 to 263 K ofsamples with x¼0.05, 0.10, and 0.15 at. %, respectively
(Fig. 4(b)). It follows the linear dependence of T
3through a
broad temperature regime and becomes zero at T¼0K .
This behavior reflects that the phonon drag effect disappears
because the lattice is frozen at T¼0 K. Here, it deviates
from the T3-dependence below 100 K. The magnon drag
component shows T3/2-behavior in several regimes, espe-
cially below 173 K. This indicates that the dominant contri-
bution of TEP in low temperature due to magnon drageffect.
The charge carriers in the semiconductor region are not
it inerrant and the transport properties are governed by ther-mally activated carriers because the effect of JT distortions
in manganites results in strong electron–phonon coupling
and hence the formation of polarons. Therefore, the thermo-electric power data of the present samples in semiconductor
regime are fitted to Mott’s polaron hopping equation,
S¼6k
B=eDES=kBTþB ðÞ ; (7)
where kBis the Boltzmann constant, eis the electronic
charge, ESis the activation energy obtained from thermo-
electric power data, and Bis a constant. In Eq. (7),B<1
implies the applicability of small polaron hopping model,
whereas B<2 indicates the large polaron hopping. From theslope and the intercept of Sversus 1 /Tcurves (Fig. 5), we
obtain the values of activation energy ESand the constant B
(Table 2). The estimated values of Bindicated B<1 for
three samples. Therefore, the small polaron hopping conduc-tion mechanism is also strongly supported by the high tem-
perature ( T>T
ms) TEP data. From conductivity data also we
have approved of the possibility of the formation of smallpolaron hopping conduction mechanism. Using the activa-
tion energy values from q(T) plots E
qand those from S(T)
plots ES, the polaron hopping energy values of all the sam-
ples have been calculated using the relation, WH¼Eq-ES,
and are given in Table 2. The Eqvalues are found to be
higher than those of ES. Such a large difference in the activa-
tion energy is confirm also the applicability of the SPH
model in the semiconducting region.30
FIG. 4. Variations of phonon drag component with T3(a) and magnon drag
component with T3/2(b). The red lines represent the deviation of linear fit to
experimental curve.
FIG. 5. Variations of Svs 1/Tfor samples La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3. The red
lines represent the best fit to SPH model.Low Temp. Phys. 40(5), May 2014 Ahmed, Mohamed, and /C20Soka 421
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On: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 11:26:31The Curie temperature TCand the metal-semiconducting
transition temperatures Tms1andTms2were deduced from the
derivatives of the magnetic susceptibility curves q(T) and
S(T), respectively. The evolution of Tms1ofq(T) and Tms2of
S(T) and TCare shown in Fig. 6. This figure shows the phase
diagram of rhombohedral structure La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3
(x¼0.05, 0.10, 0.15 at. %) system, where the FM /C0M phase
underlie Tms1(red line), the FM /C0S phase lie between Tms1
(red line) and TC(black line), finally, PM–S phase lie above
TC(black line).
One interesting feature concerns the value of both Tms1
(q(T)) and Tms2(S(T)) which is often smaller than the corre-
sponding value of TC(about 40 K). These transition tempera-
tures decrease as xincreases, as expected. Therefore, we can
predict the composition which should lead to the maximum
magneto-resistance at the room temperature32which is more
suitable for applications.
4. Conclusion
In conclusion, temperature-dependent (360–80 K) elec-
trical conductivity and thermopower measurements of the
Bi-doped La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3(x¼0.05, 0.10, 0.15 at. %)
system have revealed metal-semiconducting transitions. In
other side, the magnetic properties have showed FM–PM
transition between 310 and 334 K. The high-temperatureconductivity data can be successfully fitted with the small
polaron-hopping conduction theory like that of usual oxide
semiconductors.
The data of Seebeck coefficient supports the small-
polaron hopping transport mechanism. Also, the large differ-
ence between E
qandESprovides evidence of small polaron
transport mechanism in the high-temperature PM region.
The metallic state below Tmshas been considered in
terms of the electron–magnon or electron–phonon scatteringprocess depending on the ambient temperature. From the
high difference between the values of T
msandTC, we predict
the maximum magnetoresistance is at room temperature.
The authors would like to thank Professor Dr. Marcel
Miglierini and Dr. Marius Pavlovic for they help insusceptibility measurements in Slovak University of
Technology, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and
Information Technology.
a)Email: fikry_99@yahoo.com
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This article was published in English in the original Russian journal.
Reproduced here with stylistic changes by AIP Publishing.FIG. 6. The phase diagram of rhombohedral structure La 0.7–xBixSr0.3MnO 3
(x¼0.05, 0.10, 0.15 at. %) system.422 Low Temp. Phys. 40(5), May 2014 Ahmed, Mohamed, and /C20Soka
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1.4874848.pdf | A sessile drop setup for the time-resolved synchrotron study of solid-liquid
interactions: Application to intermetallic formation in 55%Al-Zn alloys
N. Bernier, G. B. M. Vaughan, D. De Bruyn, H. Vitoux, M. De Craene, H. Gleyzolle, B. Gorges, J. Scheers, and
S. Claessens
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 104, 171608 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4874848
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4874848
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/104/17?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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216.165.95.79 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 01:33:16A sessile drop setup for the time-resolved synchrotron study of solid-liquid
interactions: Application to intermetallic formation in 55%Al-Zn alloys
N. Bernier,1,a)G. B. M. Vaughan,2D. De Bruyn,1H. Vitoux,2M. De Craene,1H. Gleyzolle,2
B. Gorges,2J. Scheers,1and S. Claessens1
1OCAS N.V., ArcelorMittal Global R&D Gent, Pres. J.F. Kennedylaan 3, 9060 Zelzate, Belgium
2European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, BP 220, 38043 Grenoble Cedex, France
(Received 23 March 2014; accepted 23 April 2014; published online 1 May 2014)
We introduce a dedicated setup for measuring by synchrotron diffraction in-situ crystallographic
and chemical information at the solid–liquid interface. This setup mostly consists of a double-
heating furnace composed of a resistive heating for the solid surface and an inductive heating toproduce a liquid droplet. The available high energy and high flux beams allow the rapid reaction
kinetics to be investigated with very good time resolution down to 1 ms. An application of this
setup is illustrated for the growth mechanisms of intermetallic phases during the hot-dipping ofsteel in a 55%Al-Zn bath. Results show that the three g-Al
5Fe2,h-Al 13Fe4, and a-Al 8Fe2Si phases
grow at different times and rates during the dipping process, whereas the face-centered cubic AlFe 3
phase is not formed. VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4874848 ]
The understanding of reactions that take place in the
interfacial region between a solid substrate and a liquidphase is critical for many applications such as hot-dip coat-
ing, welding, intermetallic matrix composites, or liquid
metal corrosion. In particular, the growth kinetics and mech-anisms of intermetallic phases are of particular interest due
to their significant effect on mechanical, adhesive, or corro-
sion properties of various materials such as hot-dip coatedsteels or solder joints.
1–3However, in the case of the Fe-Al
system, for instance, the growth kinetics and mechanisms of
the intermetallic phases, as well as the solidification phe-nomena are still a controversial topic,
4–6mainly due to a
lack of in-situ investigations for solid/liquid interactions.
The technical challenges in joining metallic coated steelswith Al sheets,
7especially due to the formation of brittle
intermetallic phases, clearly shows the need for a better
understanding of the growth mechanisms of the intermetallicphases.
The reported studies of the interfacial region between a
steel substrate and a solidified Al-based metal are mostlybased on post-mortem characterizations of intermetallics for
samples subjected to immersion tests and in some cases to
diffusion treatments.
8Therefore, much effort has been
devoted toward in-depth characterization of the interfacial
region morphology, such as, e.g., the interface profile
between steel and the first intermetallic phase, or the thick-ness of the different interface layers as a function of reaction
time. However, these analyses have not led to a unified
theory regarding the intermetallic formation, since diffusionlaws alone cannot account for all the experimental results.
In-situ X-ray investigations provide valuable information,
but such studies have been restricted to the formation ofintermetallic phases during coated steel heating
9or to the
imaging of solidification processes.10Therefore, the in-situ
investigation of crystalline products between solid steel andmolten metal during growth and solidification processes
becomes an inevitable step toward a greater understanding ofthese phenomena. In the present work, a sessile drop experi-
mental setup is used for the in-situ identification using syn-
chrotron X-ray diffraction of the intermetallics formedbetween solid steel and molten 55%Al-Zn metal during
growth processes. This composition corresponds to the so-
called Galvalume
11coating deposited by hot-dipping typi-
cally used to improve the corrosion resistance at high tem-
peratures, the abrasion resistance, and the thermal and light
reflectivity of steels.
Fig. 1shows the experimental setup used at the ID11
beamline at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
(ESRF). The experiment is designed to reach the followingobjectives: (i) to follow the evolution of diffraction patterns
at the interface between the drop and the steel, (ii) to ensure
the complete absence of oxidized compounds at the surfaceof the drop and substrate, (iii) to control the temperature of
the system. For that purpose, this setup, which was devel-
oped by the sample environment group on the ESRF ID 11beamline, consists of a combined resistance and induction
furnace (Fig. 1(a)) that allows the Galvalume drop and the
steel substrate to be independently heated under controlledatmosphere. This furnace is equipped with induction heating
coils surrounding the tip of a stainless tube containing at the
tip a 3 mm long solidified Galvalume rod. This rod has beenextracted from a bath whose chemical composition is
approximately 55% Al, 43.1% Zn, 1.5% Si, and 0.4% Fe
(wt. %). Si is added to prevent the very strong exothermicreaction between the Al-Zn bath and the sheet steel. A pol-
ished high-purity electrolytic iron plate placed on a resistive
heating assembly is mounted under this tube. The selectiveoxidation of the substrate is controlled through the use of the
electrolytic steel which prevents to a large extent the buildup
of, e.g., silicon oxide. The temperature of both heating ele-ments is controlled by two K-type thermocouples. Thin
Kapton windows are fixed in the furnace walls to allow inci-
dent and scattered X-rays to pass through the furnace with
a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
n.bernier@yahoo.fr
0003-6951/2014/104(17)/171608/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 104, 171608-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 104, 171608 (2014)
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216.165.95.79 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 01:33:16negligible absorption or contribution to the background. The
other elements of the setup can be visualized in Fig. 1(b),
including the beam tube and the 2D fast readout low noise
(FReLoN) detector. The primary optics, a double bent Laue-
Laue monochromator, and a compound refractive lens trans-focator are used to produce an approximately 65.31 keV
5/C250lm
2monochromatic beam.
A 10% H 2/C090% Ar atmosphere was used in the furnace
to prevent the formation of an oxide on the steel surface.
Although H 2might have some effect on the interface reac-
tions, this atmosphere is also fairly representative of most ofthe hot-dipping industrial lines, in which the annealing pro-
cess is usually done in a protective atmosphere of nitrogen
and hydrogen. Prior to each experiment, the furnace chamberwas flushed with both the 10% H
2/C090% Ar atmosphere and
a turbomolecular pump three times for 5 min each. The steel
substrate was then subjected to the following annealing cycleto simulate the hot-dipping process: heating up to 800
/C14Ca t
8/C14C/min, then soaking for 5 min and finally cooling down to
600/C14Ca t8/C14C/min. The tip of the stainless tube was then
heated by the inductive coils up to the melting point of
Galvalume ( /C24600/C14C).
Fig. 2shows a series of photos of the inside of the fur-
nace during the annealing of the tube. Interestingly, Ebrill
et al.12demonstrated that an oxidation of the steel substrate
necessarily leads to a non-wetting Galvalume droplet. Indeed,the latter author showed that contact angles of h/C2420
/C14were
measured on clean substrates and increased to h>90/C14for
oxidized substrates. Therefore, the equilibrium contact angleof/C2430
/C14shown in Fig. 2(c) proves that there is no or negligi-
ble oxidation of the substrate in the present experiments. In
addition, measurements are performed using grazing inci-dence so as to only detect the intermetallic layer. The use of a
high flux, high energy micro focused beam, and a fast readout
detector allows diffraction patterns to be recorded every10–20 ms in order to follow the high reaction kinetics
involved in the intermetallic phase formation.
13The diffrac-
tion patterns were calibrated using a CeO 2powder.
Fig. 3shows a series of diffraction patterns acquired
over time, with the time “t” referring to the last acquisition
before the droplet contacts the steel substrate. At this time, aweak Fe signal is detected because the beam is positioned
slightly above the steel surface to be more sensitive to theintermetallic layer formation. Moreover, the typical large
grain size of the annealed electrolytic steel leads to very few
diffraction spots. As seen from Fig. 3(b), the Fe diffraction
peaks are almost completely suppressed after 35 ms, whereas
a few rings can already been observed in the diffraction pat-
tern. These results illustrate the high kinetics of the nuclea-tion and growth phenomena of intermetallic phases. For a
clear identification of individual phases, the two-dimensional
diffraction patterns are integrated along the azimuthal angleinto intensity profiles as a function of the Bragg angle, as
shown in Fig. 4. All the diffraction peaks can be indexed
using the three following intermetallic phases: the base-
FIG. 1. Photo of (a) the inside of the combined resistance and induction furnace, (b) the set-up for in-situ observation. (1) Tube containing 55%Al-Zn at the
tip, (2) induction coil, (3) steel substrate, (4) resistance heating, (5) K-type thermocouples, (6) Kapton window, (7) beam tube, (8) furnace gas inl et, (9) vacuum
valve, (10) induction power supply, and (11) 2D camera.
FIG. 2. Photos of the inside of the furnace (a) before, (b) during, (c) afterheating the 55%Al-Zn tip in the tube.171608-2 Bernier et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 104, 171608 (2014)
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216.165.95.79 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 01:33:16centered orthorhombic Al 5Fe2, the base-centered monoclinic
Al13Fe4, and the hexagonal Al 8Fe2Si phases, also known as
theg,h, and aphases, respectively. The JCPDS file numbers
are given in the legend of Fig. 4. Note that the face-centered
cubic AlFe 3phase does not appear in the diffraction spectra.
Interestingly, the intensities of diffraction peaks taken overtime are significantly different for each intermetallic phase:
(i) as for the hphase, the diffracted intensity is very intense
as soon as the droplet contacts the steel, but this intensitydecreases after around 700 ms (see, e.g., ( /C0402) and (221)peaks), (ii) as for the gphase, the diffraction peaks appear
soon after those from the hphase, and they do not vary much
over time (see, e.g., (002) and (331) peaks), (iii) as for the a
phase, the diffraction peaks start appearing after approxi-
mately 700 ms, except for the (330) peak, and show the high-
est intensity after 50 s.
After performing the in-situ synchrotron experiments, a
transmission electron microscope (TEM) analysis of the
post-mortem sample has been carried out in order to bothconfirm and localize the presence of the above mentioned
intermetallic phases. Fig. 5(a) shows a TEM image of the
cross-section of the interface layer prepared by focused ionbeam (FIB) milling. The TEM and FIB instruments used in
the present work are a JEOL JEM 2200FS-CS and a JEOL-
SEIKO SMI 3050 Triple Beam, respectively. Electron dif-fraction (ED) patterns have been acquired along the thick-
ness of the transition layer and subsequently indexed using
theg,h, and aphases. Again, the face-centered cubic AlFe
3
is not observed in the post-mortem sample. The indexation
of ED patterns, given in Figs. 5(b)–5(d), shows that the g
andaphases are, respectively, composed of an elongated
and prismatic coarse-grain structure; they are, respectively,
located on top of the steel surface and below the Al-Zn coat-
ing. In contrast, the hphase exhibits an elongated fine-grain
structure which extends over several microns from the gtoa
phases.
The synchrotron and TEM results show that the first
phase to be formed is the h-Al 13Fe4as it shows the highest
intensity after 35 ms. The gphase most likely starts growing
as soon as this hphase is formed. This confirms the high
FIG. 3. Measured 2D diffraction patterns acquired at different times. The time “t” refers to the last diffraction pattern acquisition before the drop touches the
steel surface.
FIG. 4. Integrated diffraction patterns from the 2D camera shown in Fig. 3,
together with the main diffraction peaks of the g(Al5Fe2),h(Al 13Fe4), and a
(Al8Fe2Si) phases; the JCPDS files are 29-0043, 29-0042, and 41-0894,
respectively.171608-3 Bernier et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 104, 171608 (2014)
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216.165.95.79 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 01:33:16kinetics involved in the growth of the intermetallic
phases.13–15In addition, these results are in agreement with
Durandet et al.15who reported that the first intermetallic
phase to form is the hphase while the growth of subsequent
intermetallics, such as the gphase, is based on the diffusion
and build-up of Fe atoms at the substrate- hphase interface.
As seen from Fig. 4, the intensities of the diffraction peaks
corresponding to the gphase show a maximum for a dipping
time of /C24700 ms. Therefore, the local equilibrium at the
substrate–intermetallic layer interface is most likely reached
after 700 ms, and no subsequent intermetallic phase at thesteel interface is formed. The present study also confirms
that the local equilibrium between the hphase and the coat-
ing generates the growth of the aphase, as shown in Fig. 5.
Fig. 4shows that this phase becomes clearly visible in the
diffraction patterns after 700 ms, although the strong (330)
peak can be observed as soon as the droplet contacts the sub-strate, meaning that a small amount is formed immediately.
This suggests that the nucleation of the prismatic agrains
may be favored along preferential crystallographic direc-tions. The reason for this direction-dependent growth is
unknown. Finally, note that the diffracted intensities of the a
phase significantly increase from 700 ms to 50 s. However,this continuous agrowth may result from the low cooling
rate of the droplet with respect to the industrial production,
providing in turn a constant source of Al by thermaldiffusion.
In summary, a setup has been developed for the in-situ
synchrotron analysis of solid-liquid interactions. The ID 11beamline at the ESRF was fully appropriate for such experi-
ments, since it meets the main technical requirements, such
as an X-ray microbeam, to be precisely focused on the solid-liquid interface, high-energy x-rays to pass through the liquid
drop, high flux beams with very good time resolutions down
to 1 ms to investigate the high reaction kinetics, and thepossibility to work with different types of sample environ-
ment. This setup has been used to understand the growthmechanisms of intermetallic phases during the hot-dipping
of steel in a Galvalume bath. The results show that the inter-
metallic phases start growing within 35 ms time, first withthe development of the hphase. The growth of the gphase is
then controlled by the diffusion and build-up of Fe atoms at
the substrate- hphase interface up to a dipping time of
/C24700 ms for which the local equilibrium is reached. In addi-
tion, the preferential growth of agrains on top of the hphase
along a particular direction is also illustrated. Future experi-ments should be conducted both to investigate the latter
result and to improve the current setup by, e.g., dividing the
experiment into two parts after the drop touches the sub-strate: (i) drop and substrate held at high temperature to sim-
ulate the reaction time and (ii) a high cooling rate system to
simulate the solidification process. These experiments willprovide more insight into the solidification mechanisms of
the overlay coating, which may explain in the case of the
Galvalume coating the occurrence of different spanglesizes
16as a function of the process parameters.
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216.165.95.79 On: Sun, 07 Dec 2014 01:33:16 |
1.4893606.pdf | An efficient light trapping scheme based on textured conductive photonic crystal back
reflector for performance improvement of amorphous silicon solar cells
Peizhuan Chen, Guofu Hou, QiHua Fan, Qian Huang, Jing Zhao, Jianjun Zhang, Jian Ni, Xiaodan Zhang, and
Ying Zhao
Citation: Applied Physics Letters 105, 073506 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4893606
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4893606
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/105/7?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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130.64.11.153 On: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 11:50:05An efficient light trapping scheme based on textured conductive photonic
crystal back reflector for performance improvement of amorphous siliconsolar cells
Peizhuan Chen,1Guofu Hou,1,a)QiHua Fan,2Qian Huang,1Jing Zhao,1Jianjun Zhang,1,b)
Jian Ni,1Xiaodan Zhang,1and Ying Zhao1
1Tianjin Key Laboratory of Photoelectronic Thin-Film Devices and Technique, Institute of Photoelectronics,
Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, People’s Republic of China
2Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, South Dakota State University,
Brookings, South Dakota 57007, USA
(Received 24 June 2014; accepted 9 August 2014; published online 20 August 2014)
An efficient light trapping scheme named as textured conductive photonic crystal (TCPC) has been
proposed and then applied as a back-reflector (BR) in n-i-p hydrogenated amorphous silicon
(a-Si:H) solar cell. This TCPC BR combined a flat one-dimensional photonic crystal and a ran-
domly textured surface of chemically etched ZnO:Al. Total efficiency enhancement was obtainedthanks to the sufficient conductivity, high reflectivity and strong light scattering of the TCPC BR.
Unwanted intrinsic losses of surface plasmon modes are avoided. An initial efficiency of 9.66% for
a-Si:H solar cell was obtained with short-circuit current density of 14.74 mA/cm
2, fill factor of
70.3%, and open-circuit voltage of 0.932 V. VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4893606 ]
One of the foremost challenges in designing thin film sil-
icon solar cells (TFSC) is devising an efficient light-trappingscheme due to the short optical path length imposed by the
thin absorber thickness.
1,2Forn-i-p solar cells, the strategy
relies on the deposition of a thin ITO front contact which actsas an antireflection layer, and a randomly textured
Aluminum-doped Zinc Oxide (AZO)/Ag back-reflector (BR)
which is commonly used to reflect and scatter light within theabsorption layer.
3,4It is well known that a larger texture pro-
vides superior light trapping.5However, there is a trade off
between the suitable texture for the light scattering and theloss in the AZO/Ag BR, which originates from plasmon
absorption on the rough surface of metallic layer.
6,7In addi-
tion, cost reduction achieved by efficiency enhancement forusing AZO/Ag BR is counterweighed mostly for the expen-
sive raw material silver.
An alternative, highly promising approach is to use a
dielectric one-dimensional (1D) photonic crystal (PC) to
enhance total internal reflection at the back surface, which is
a multilayer structure in which two different films with highrefractive index contrast are periodically stacked.
8,9A combi-
nation of transparent conductive oxide (TCO) layer and 1D-
PC can simultaneously serve as the back electrical contactand the BR in a TFSC, while avoiding unwanted intrinsic
losses from surface plasmon modes. Besides high reflectivity
and conductivity, another necessary issue for highly efficientBR is strong scattering of the incoming light back into the
absorption layer. In order to introduce scattering into 1D-PC
with TCO, some groups have adopted two-dimensional gra-tings on the TCO layer
10or even on the 1D-PC.11Although
simulation results show a significant improvement of opticalabsorption with respect to the flat one, so far no experimental
results have been reported. Actually, the steep valleys of thegratings would inevitably induce defects within the active
layer and deteriorate the device performance.
12Some other
groups suggest depositing 1D-PC on textured substrate (ran-dom
13or periodic grating14). However, it is uneasy to copy
the waviness of the substrate texture profile from one period
to another period due to the non-conformal growth during thedeposition process.
4,15Thus, the periodic symmetry of 1D-
PC would be destroyed, leading to a reduction of reflectivity
and an offset of reflection region.
Here we developed a BR that can improve the perform-
ance of the n-i-p TFSC via a Texture Conductive Photonic
Crystal (TCPC). 1D-PC was first deposited on a flat glass,followed by a thick AZO film (800 nm) with a lower sheet re-
sistance ( R
sq)o f5X/sq. We called this structure Conductive
Photonic Crystal (CPC). If the CPC was chemically etched in0.5% HCl acid to introduce a crater-like textured surface,
then it can be called TCPC with a slight increase of R
sqto
10X/sq. The 1D-PC structure is alternatively stacked with
155 nm SiO x(nffi1.5 at k¼650 nm) on top and 25 nm a-Si:H
(nffi4a tk¼650 nm) at the bottom in five periods. Figure 1
shows the schematic diagram of the TCPC-based n-i-p a-Si:H
TFSC. Note that the 1D-PC structure is dielectric, and the
back electric current transports laterally in the AZO layer
until to be collected at the electrode.
Focus was put on n-i-p a-Si:H TFSC with structure of
BR/n-a-Si:H (15 nm)/i-a-Si:H (300 nm)/p-nc-Si:H (15 nm)/
ITO (70 nm) as a convenient prototype. All of the p,i, and n
layers as well as 1D-PC were deposited in a multi-chamber
RF-PECVD system. The AZO film was deposited using radio
frequency magnetron sputtering system with a sintered ce-ramic ZnO target with 2 wt. % Al
2O3. For comparison study,
the sputtered AZO (100 nm)/textured Ag BR deposited on the
stainless steel by the same sputtering system were fabricated,a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
gfhou@nankai.edu.cn. Tel.: þ86-022-23508663.
b)Electronic mail: jjzhang@nankai.edu.cn
0003-6951/2014/105(7)/073506/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 105, 073506-1APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 105, 073506 (2014)
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130.64.11.153 On: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 11:50:05where the texture was controlled by changing the substrate
temperature and film thickness.
Surface morphology of BRs was characterized using
scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force mi-croscopy (AFM). A UV-vis-near-infrared (NIR) spectropho-
tometer (Carry 5000) was used to measure the total and
direct reflection spectra in the range of 300–1000 nm for op-tical analysis. Current-density versus voltage ( J-V) character-
istics and spectral response were measured with a Wacom
solar simulator (WXS-156 S-L2, AM1.5GMM) and a quan-tum efficiency ( QE) system (QEX10, PV Measurement),
respectively.
In the a-Si:H TFSC with an intrinsic layer thickness of
300 nm, the BR will not start to work until the wavelength of
the incoming light is above 550 nm, since light with
k<550 nm can be efficiently absorbed by the intrinsic layer
even during one single optical pass.
1It is well known that the
upper absorption wavelength limit for a-Si:H locates around
750–800 nm due to its wide bandgap of over 1.6 eV.1So the
light trapping spectral range needed for a-Si:H TFSC or
highly reflective range needed for 1D-PC should at least
cover the wavelength range of 550–800 nm. We have identi-fied before that light will couple into the top three periods of
1D-PC within the photonic bandgap (PBG). Little change can
be observed for the reflection in the PBG area if the periodnumber higher than five.
16An average reflectivity of 98% in
the above light trapping range can be achieved for our 1D-PC
with only five periods, which is superior to Ag film of 93.4%.The reason we adopted SiO
xas the top layer and a-Si:H as
the bottom layer was that the total internal reflection will be
easier to take place at the AZO/SiO x(refractive index of
nAZO>nSiOx) interface than the AZO/a-Si:H ( nAZO<na-Si:H)
interface, especially when light is obliquely incident.
In order to reduce parasitic absorption, a thin TCO film
inserting between 1D-PC and active layers was always
adopted as back electric contact in previous simulation
work.10But care should be taken, a high conductivity TCO
layer is specially needed for the TCPC or CPC-based cell in
order not to affect the cell fill factor ( FF), since the electric
current transports laterally in the TCO layer as shown inFig.1. Thereby a trade off might arise since the Rsqof AZO
decreases with the increase of layer thickness.1To quantify
the influence of the AZO thickness on the short-circuit cur-
rent density ( Jsc), we used finite difference time domain
algorithm to calculate the quantum efficiency QE(k) of the
solar cell at first. The Jscvalue can be obtained by integrating
theQEcurves with AM1.5 solar spectrum (taken from
ASTM G173–0317). Here we studied the CPC based a-Si:H
TFSC instead, as it is uneasy to identify the thickness of a
rough surface AZO layer in a TCPC. We assumed that all
electron-hole pairs contribute to the photocurrent. Figure 2
illustrates the Jscvalues as a function of AZO thickness for
the five periods of CPC based a-Si:H TFSC. The fluctuant
morphology of the curve is mainly caused by the interference
effect of the AZO layer. The Jscvalue for a-Si:H TFSC with
a flat AZO (100 nm)/ flat Ag (100 nm) BR was also plotted
as a reference. It is clear to see that the CPC-based solar cell
offers a higher Jscthan the AZO/Ag-based of 13.01 mA/cm2.
And no significant deterioration of Jsccan be observed by
increasing the AZO thickness to 1 lm, which is thick enough
to form the textured surface by post chemical etching. Forp-i-n TFSC, typical R
sqvalues of /C2410X/sq (relative thick-
ness of 400 nm in our lab) prove the high quality of AZO
film used as front electric contact1(electric current transports
laterally too). This value is more sufficient for CPC and
TCPC-based cells due to the higher mobility of electron than
hole. In a word, a relative thicker AZO film would be benefi-cial for CPC-based solar cells from both electrical and opti-
cal (could be etched to provide scattering) point of view.
The thickness of AZO film adopted in our CPC is
800 nm with R
sqof 5X/sq. TCPC was formed after 40 s post
etching in 0.5% HCl acid with a slight increase of Rsqto
10X/sq due to the decrease of film thickness. Figure 3shows
the cross-sectional SEM images of CPC and TCPC BRs,
respectively. It is clear to see that five periods of flat 1D-PC
was deposited and the surface morphology was changedfrom flat to texture by chemical etching of CPC. Note that it
is difficult to distinguish a-Si:H and SiO
xin the SEM images
due to the close nature of these two materials. It has beenshown that light trapping can be enhanced by using a tex-
tured surface with relatively large features that produce a
FIG. 1. Schematic diagram of n-i-p a-Si:H TFSC based on TCPC BR.
FIG. 2. Short-circuit current density ( Jsc) values as a function of AZO thick-
ness for five periods of CPC based a-Si:H TFSC. The value for the cell onflat AZO (100 nm)/Ag (100 nm) BR was plotted also for reference (dash
line).073506-2 Chen et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 073506 (2014)
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130.64.11.153 On: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 11:50:05high haze factor.5A RMS value of 126 nm was obtained for
our TCPC with a crater-like surface, as can be seen from the
AFM images of Fig. 4(a). In traditional n-i-p TFSC, a BR
with textured Ag and thin AZO layer (100–150 nm) has beenfound to give the best cell performance by United Solar
before.
3,18It is noteworthy that a highly textured Ag inter-
face could cause a significant plasmonic loss and some otherparasitic loss in narrow angle valleys, thus to counteract the
gain from enhanced scattering. Yan et al. achieved a J
scover
30 mA/cm2in hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon solar
cells based on an optimized textured AZO/Ag BR with a
RMS–40 nm and lateral feature size /C24500 nm.18The RMS
value (39 nm) and lateral feature size of the reference tex-tured AZO/Ag BR used in this letter is similar to the one in
above literature, as illustrated in Fig. 4(b). With respect to
AZO/Ag, a more moderate surface morphology can beobserved for TCPC, which might offer a favorable physical
property for the growth of TFSC.
19
Figure 5shows the optical performance of TCPC, flat
1D-PC, CPC, and textured AZO/Ag, where (a) is the total re-
flectance (TR) and transmittance (TT), and (b) is the haze fac-
tor. Several interference fringes can be observed byincorporating a thick AZO film into 1D-PC (CPC), resulting
in a reduction of average TR from 98% to 92.4% in the wave-
length range of 550–800 nm. However, the interferencefringes disappear after chemical etching due to the diffuse
reflection caused by the rough surface. An average TR of
90.4% can be obtained for TCPC, which is superior to AZO/Ag of 85.8%. Note that nearly no transmission can be
observed in the wavelength range of 550–800 nm whether a
chemical etching process is applied or not. As mentionedbefore that light will couple into the top three periods of 1D-
PC.
16So the reduced TR from CPC to TCPC is mainly
afforded by the increase free carrier absorption of AZO1and
enhanced bulk absorption of 1D-PC, since the rough interface
would lead to angled incidence which elongate the optical
path length in the AZO layer and 1D-PC. Actually, the TRwould even be reinforced at the device level, because it will
be easier to form total internal reflection at the reduced index
matching of the rough a-Si:H/AZO interface. An averagehaze factor of 80.6% in the light trapping range (550–800 nm)
can be obtained for TCPC, corresponding to a relative
enhancement of 69% with respect to the AZO/Ag (47.8%).
To further study the influence of electrical and optical
properties of BRs on solar cell performance, the above-
mentioned CPC, TCPC, and AZO/Ag BRs were used assubstrates into n-i-p a-Si:H solar cells. Figure 6shows J-V
characteristics and external quantum efficiency (EQE) curves
of a-Si:H solar cells. The J-Vcharacteristic parameters of
these solar cells are inserted in Fig. 6(a). The J
scvalues were
calculated by integrating the measured EQE curves with
the AM1.5 solar spectrum. Both the TCPC-based and
FIG. 3. Cross-sectional SEM images of (a) CPC and (b) TCPC.
FIG. 4. AFM images of (a) TCPC and (b) textured AZO/Ag.073506-3 Chen et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 073506 (2014)
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130.64.11.153 On: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 11:50:05AZO/Ag-based cells suffer a slight decrease of open-circuit
voltage ( Voc), since the introduced textured interface tend to
decrease the shunt resistance.20Compared to the highly con-
ductive AZO/Ag-based and the flat CPC-based cells, no sig-nificant deterioration of FFcan be observed for the TCPC-
based cell. This indicates that the TCPC BR not only can
serve as a sufficient back electric contact but also can providea moderate textured surface, which is beneficial to reduce
the cell defect densities. It is clear that the EQE values can
be significantly improved in the wavelength range of550–800 nm by introducing textured morphology. Significant
interference fringes are observed in the flat CPC-based cell in
above wavelength range, signaling substantial directlyreflected light. With the increase of RMS value to 39 nm
(AZO/Ag), the interference fringes are reduced, indicating a
reduction of direct reflection. Further increase the RMS valueto 126 nm (TCPC) results in a smooth and an enhanced EQE
curve, pointing to strong scattering of the incoming light and
less BR parasitic absorption. The calculated J
scincreases
from 12.13 mA/cm2for the CPC-based cell to 14.74 mA/cm2
for the one with TCPC-based, with a relative increase of21.5%. The initial efficiency ( Eff.) increases from 8.24% to
9.66%, corresponding to a relative enhancement of 17.2%.
Also, with respect to AZO/Ag-based cell ( J
sc: 14.02 mA/cm,2
Eff.: 9.2%), an enhancement of 5% for both Jscand efficiency
can be obtained for the TCPC-based cell.
In summary, we have experimentally demonstrated that
TCPC BR, combining flat 1D-PC and conductive randomtextured AZO, can provide significant light scattering while
maintaining high reflectivity in the light trapping range from
550 nm to 800 nm. Compared with the a-Si:H solar cells on
CPC BR and traditional AZO/Ag BR, the cell with TCPC BR
showed an improved Jscwithout deterioration of VocandFF,
resulting in a total efficiency enhancement of 17.2% and 5%,respectively. The TCPC BR overcame the issues of high electri-
cal resistance and low scattering in conventional photonic crystal
reflectors, which limited their appl ications in thin film solar cells.
The work was supported by the National Natural
Science Foundation of China (Nos. 61176060 and
61377031), The key Project of Natural Science Foundation
of Tianjin (No. 12JCZDJC28300), The National High-TechR&D Program of China (No. 2011AA050503), The National
Basic Research Program of China (No. 2011CBA00705,
2011CBA00706, and 2011CBA00707), and Major Scienceand Technology Support Project of Tianjin (No.
11TXSYGX22100). Also acknowledged are the funding
supports from South Dakota BOR PIF Grant, NationalScience Foundation (Grants Nos. 1248454, 1248970, and
0903804) and the State of South Dakota.
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(a) Total reflectance (TR) and transmittance (TT) curves and (b) haze factor.FIG. 6. (a) J-Vcurves and (b) EQE curves of a-Si:H TFSC with differing
BRs (CPC, TCPC, and textured AZO/Ag).073506-4 Chen et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 073506 (2014)
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1.4896375.pdf | Influence of high magnetic field on the luminescence of Eu3+-doped glass ceramics
Wei Jiang, Junpei Zhang, Weibo Chen, Ping Chen, Junbo Han, Beibei Xu, Shuhong Zheng, Qiangbing Guo,
Xiaofeng Liu, and Jianrong Qiu
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 116, 123103 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4896375
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896375
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/116/12?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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169.230.243.252 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 01:03:27Influence of high magnetic field on the luminescence of Eu31-doped glass
ceramics
Wei Jiang,1Junpei Zhang,2Weibo Chen,1Ping Chen,1Junbo Han,2Beibei Xu,1
Shuhong Zheng,1Qiangbing Guo,1Xiaofeng Liu,1,a)and Jianrong Qiu1,3,a)
1State Key Laboratory of Silicon Materials, Department of Materials Science and Engineering,
Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310027, China
2Wuhan National High Magnetic field Center, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan,
Hubei 430074, China
3State Key Laboratory of Luminescent Materials and Devices, South China University of Technology,
Guangzhou, Guangdong 510640, China
(Received 24 June 2014; accepted 11 August 2014; published online 24 September 2014)
Rare earth (RE) doped materials have been widely exploited as the intriguing electronic
configuration of RE ions offers diverse functionalities from optics to magnetism. However, thecoupling of magnetism with photoluminescence (PL) in such materials has been rarely reported in
spite of its fundamental significance. In the present paper, the effect of high pulsed magnetic field
on the photoluminescence intensity of Eu
3þ-doped nano-glass-ceramics has been investigated. In
our experiment, Eu-doped oxyfluoride glass and glass ceramic were prepared by the conventional
melt-quenching process and controlled heat treatment. The results demonstrate that the integrated
PL intensity of Eu3þdecreases with the enhancement of magnetic field, which can be interpreted in
terms of cooperation effect of Zeeman splitting and magnetic field induced change in site symme-
try. Furthermore, as a result of Zeeman splitting, both blue and red shift in the emission peaks of
Eu3þcan be observed, and this effect becomes more prominent with the increase of magnetic field.
Possible mechanisms associated with the observed magneto-optical behaviors are suggested. The
results of the present paper may open a new gate for modulation of luminescence by magnetic field
and remote optical detection of magnetic field. VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4896375 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
Functional materials with both magnetic and optical
properties have sparked considerable interest due to theirpotential applications in magnetic field detection, high accu-
racy communications, and high magnetic field calibration.
1–3
Materials doped with lanthanide ions are ideal candidates to
realize these functions because of their intriguing magnetic
properties, rich 4f energy levels in optical frequency, and
excellent photostability.4,5According to the Judd-Ofelt
theory,6,7the effect of applied magnetic field on the photolu-
minescence (PL) intensities of rare-earth (RE) ions is
extremely weak because of the even parity of magnetic field.Some recent work, however, revealed that the external
applied magnetic field strongly affected the PL intensities of
RE doped materials.
1–3,8–10For example, Tikhomirov et al.
reported that the intensity of the4S3/2!4I15/2emission of
Er3þin nano-glass-ceramics decreased by two orders of
magnitude in the presence of magnetic field up to 50 T.1
Similarly, Liu and his co-workers found that the PL intensity
of NaGdF 4:Nd3þ,Yb3þ,Er3þnanocrystals could be effi-
ciently tuned under external magnetic field by varying theconcentration of Nd
3þdoping.2
To make use of the magneto-optical effect in bulk mate-
rials, transparent glass ceramics might be a better alternativefor optical application as large single crystals are not easily
accessible. Among different types of glass, RE doped oxy-
fluoride glass ceramics have been widely studied as they pos-
sess not only relatively high chemical and mechanical
stability but also relatively low phonon energy.11,12Such
systems have in fact been employed for the studying of
optical-magnetic effect,1but the poisonous nature of its main
components PbF 2and CdF 2hinders its extensive application.
Alkaline-earth fluorides are therefore better matrix due to
their stability and high solubility for RE ions.13Concerning
the type of RE ions, europium (Eu) ion has been used exten-sively as luminescence activator for its strong characteristic
emission. Furthermore, Eu
3þion can serve as hypersensitive
probe as its red emission is highly sensitive to the structureand site symmetry. This high symmetry sensitivity as well as
the relatively high luminescent efficiency and narrow emis-
sion bandwidth suggests that Eu
3þions might also facilitate
the optical detection of magnetic field.14,15
In this work, the effect of strong pulsed magnetic field on
the PL properties of Eu-doped glass ceramic containing SrF 2
nanocrystals was studied. The in tegrated PL intensity is reduced
with the increment of magnetic field, possibly due to the change
of symmetry of ligand environment and absorption triggered bymagnetic field. Both blue shift and red shift of peaks were
found in the
5D0!7F4emission band, and the possible mecha-
nisms are discussed. These remarkable changes indicate thatthe studied material can serve as a good optical-magnetic dual-
functional material for various potential applications.a)Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic
addresses: xfliu@zju.edu.cn and qjr@zju.edu.cn.
0021-8979/2014/116(12)/123103/5/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 116, 123103-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 116, 123103 (2014)
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169.230.243.252 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 01:03:27II. EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
Oxyfluoride glass with composition of
50SiO 2–22Al 2O3–20SrF 2–6NaF–2EuF 3(in mol %) was pre-
pared by the conventional melt-quenching process, usingSiO
2,A l 2O3, NaF, SrF 2, and EuF 3as raw materials. In a typi-
cal process, the homogenized powder mixtures were melted
in a covered corundum crucible at 1450/C14C for 45 min in air
atmosphere, and then the melt was poured onto a cold brass
plate and pressed by another plate to form the glass chips.
Followed by a heat treatment at 590/C14C for 1 h in air, the
transparent glass ceramics containing SrF 2nanocrystals were
obtained.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements for the samples
were performed with a D/MAX-2550 pc diffractometer with
Cu K aas the radiation source. Transmission electron micros-
copy (TEM) was carried out using a FEG-TEM (Tecnai G2
F30 S-Twin, Philips-FEI, The Netherlands). A FLS920 fluo-
rescence spectrophotometer (Edinburgh Instrument Ltd., UK)was employed for the measurement of emission and excitation
spectra without magnetic field. The PL spectra under pulsed
magnetic field were measured using a similar fiber-optical sys-tem reported previously.
9,10A pulsed magnetic field generated
by a liquid nitrogen-cooled resistive coil with a pulsed dura-
tion of 270 ms was applied to the sample, which was locatedin the center of the magnet. The PL spectra were collected
with a fiber optical probe under the excitation by a Ti:sapphire
laser beam, which was focused onto the sample using a fiberoptical system. The PL signal was analysed by an EM-CCD
(Andor DU970P) and a monochromator (Andor SR500). The
absorption spectrum for the excitation light (392 nm) underdifferent magnetic field strengths was determined using the
same optical setup. All the measurements were carried out at
room temperature, except that the PL spectra recorded in mag-netic field were taken for samples cooled to 77 K.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The as-made glass is completely amorphous as no dif-
fraction peaks can be observed from the XRD pattern givenin Fig. 1(a). After crystallization, the XRD pattern shows
prominent diffraction peaks of cubic SrF
2. By using the
Scherrer formula,11the calculated size of SrF 2nanocrystals
is about 6 nm. Figs. 1(b)and1(c)give the TEM and HRTEM
(high resolution transmission electron microscope) images of
the glass ceramics. The nanocrystals were homogeneouslydistributed inside the glass ceramic. From the TEM images,
the size of SrF
2nanocrystals in the glass ceramic is about
5 nm, in accordance with the size calculated above.Moreover, HRTEM image reveals well-defined crystalline
lattice and a interplanar spacing of 0.329 nm, corresponding
to the (111) lattice plane of the SrF
2crystals.
Fig.2(a)shows the excitation and emission spectra of the
Eu-doped glass ceramics. The excitation spectrum (monitored
at 615 nm) shows a highest peak centered at 392 nm, matchingthe Eu
3þ:7F0!5L6transition. Under 392 nm excitation, the
emission spectra of both samples consist of many peaks (Fig.
2(b)), corresponding to transitions from the5D0to the7Fj
(j¼0–4) levels of the Eu3þions. After partial crystallization,
the reduction of the emission intensity is ascribed to theconversion of Eu3þto Eu2þ. In addition, the presence of better
resolved Stark levels of each emission bands implies that
Eu3þions enter into more ordered sites in the glass ceramics.
On the other hand, it is well known that the5D0!7F2transi-
tion is electric dipole transition which is highly sensitive to
the surrounding ligand environment, while the5D0!7F1
FIG. 1. (a) XRD patterns of Eu-doped glass (red dashed line) and glass
ceramics (black line). The standard pattern for SrF 2is shown as a reference.
(b) TEM image of nano-glass-ceramics. (c) HRTEM of the glass ceramics
containing SrF 2nanocrystals. The white circles highlight the area where
SrF 2nanocrystals are precipitated inside the vitreous matrix. The inset is an
enlarged image of a typical SrF 2nanocrystal.
FIG. 2. (a) PLE (monitored at 615 nm) and PL (excited at 392 nm) spectra
of Eu-doped glass ceramics. (b) The5D0!7Fj(j¼0–4) emission bands of
both glass and glass ceramics at room temperature (excited at 392 nm).
(c) Emission spectra (excited at 392 nm) of the Eu3þ-doped glass ceramics
under various magnetic fields at 77 K. The peaks can be ascribed to the
transitions from5D0to the7Fj(j¼0–4).123103-2 Jiang et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 123103 (2014)
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169.230.243.252 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 01:03:27transition is magnetic dipole transition which is not influenced
by the ligand environment.14,16The ratio of the integrated
intensities of the5D0!7F1to the5D0!7F2transitions is
therefore associated with the crystal site symmetry around the
doped Eu3þions.17We therefore define R ¼I(5D0!7F2)/
I(5D0!7F1), which can be used for the analysis of site sym-
metry. The smaller the R value is, the higher the symmetry
is.16According to the emission spectra, the calculated index R
value of glass is 3.135, as compared to 1.086 for the glass ce-ramic. This change of R value demonstrates that the site sym-
metry of the doped Eu
3þions in glass ceramic was much
higher than that in glass, indicating that Eu3þions in the glass
move into the cubic SrF 2nanocrystals after partial crystalliza-
tion of the as-melt glass.
In the presence of magnetic field, the same set of transi-
tions is observed in Fig. 2(c). Interestingly, from the spectra
we can clearly see that the intensities of the peaks decrease
with the increase of the magnetic field.
Fig. 3(a) shows the dependence of the total integrated
PL intensities of the Eu3þ-doped glass ceramic on the mag-
netic field at 77 K. It is quite obvious that the PL integratedintensities are reduced as magnetic field intensify. When the
magnetic field is smaller than 14 T, the emission intensity
drops slowly with the increase of magnetic field; in the rangeof 14 T–42 T, the PL intensity sharply decreases with the
magnetic field. Totally, the PL integrated intensity decreased
by about 26.1% at 42 T as compared to that of the originalvalue recorded at 0 T. For a detailed analysis, we found that
the integrated PL intensities of transitions from
5D0!7F1,
5D0!7F2, and5D0!7F4are all reduced by 30.5%, 32.4%,
and 31.9%, respectively, in magnetic field of 42 T, as shown
in Figs. 3(b)–3(d) . In addition, similar field dependences of
emission intensity are present for all the above transitions.
The suppression of PL of RE ions by magnetic field has
been reported in a recent work by Tikhomirov’s group.1In
their system, the emission from Er3þ:4S3/2!4I15/2in the
glass ceramic was suppressed by magnetic field, which wasattributed to the Zeeman splitting of4S3/2into four levels, in
which the lowest level exhibited negligible transition proba-
bility. In the present case, however, the excited5D0level is
non-degenerate (J ¼0); therefore, it does not show Zeeman
splitting. Du et al. has ascribed the reduction of PL in a Eu-
doped YVO 4single crystal to the change in the site symmetry
around Eu3þ,9which has been known to affect its PL. Under
strong magnetic field, slight structural distortion around the
paramagnetic Eu3þion can be possible, resulting in the
change in site symmetry. This is because in the presence of
magnetic field, magnetization of the material that involves
the magnetic ordering of paramagnetic centers is not avoid-able. This magnetic effect can sometimes lead to a structural
phase transition. For instance, the Gd
5(Si1.8Ge2.2) alloy
showed a reversible field-induced first-order structural transi-tion from a P112
1/a monoclinic (paramagnetic) to a Pnma
orthorhombic (ferromagnetic), resulting in the strong magne-
toelastic effects due to the large difference in the cell con-stants of the two phases.
18In addition, it is widely known that
magnet field can induce a shape change for a particular type
of magnetic alloys. For instance, the NiCoMnIn alloy exhibitsa 3% deformation and almost full recovery of the original
shape in magnetic field, due to the reversible martensitic
phase transition transformation from the antiferromagnetic(or paramagnetic) to the ferromagnetic parent phase at 298 K
in this system.
19Based on these previous observations, we
believe that probably a similar structural influence can beinduced to the studied systems in the presence of strong mag-
netic field up to 40 T, leading to a small disturbance of the
local structure around Eu
3þions. This effect may associate
with the strong magnetic interaction between the 4f electrons
of Eu3þions doped in the glass ceramic sample, while the
detailed mechanisms need to be elucidated further.
As discussed previously, the change in site symmetry
can be correlated with the spectra intensity ratio R, defined
as the intensities ratio of the5D0!7F2to the5D0!7F1
transitions. The index R values at various magnetic fields
were shown in Fig. 4(a). It is obvious that the index R value
decreases with the enhancement of applied magnetic field,
FIG. 3. (a) The dependence of the total integrated PL (excited at 392 nm)
intensities of Eu3þ-doped glass ceramic on the magnetic field at 77 K;
(b) the dependence of the integrated PL (excited at 392 nm) intensities of
5D0!7F1emission band, (c)5D0!7F2emission band, and (d)5D0!7F4
emission band of Eu3þon the magnetic field at 77 K.
FIG. 4. (a) The index R values at various magnetic fields and (b) the depend-
ence of /C0log (I/I 0) on magnetic field at 77 K. The blue curves are provided
as guidance for eye.123103-3 Jiang et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 123103 (2014)
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169.230.243.252 On: Thu, 27 Nov 2014 01:03:27which indicates that the site symmetry of Eu3þions becomes
higher. With the increase in the strength of magnetic field,
an initial slow decrease ( <14 T) of R value is followed by a
rapid drop in PL intensity from 14 T to around 35 T. Finally,
a saturation effect seems to take for field higher than 35 T,
where again a slow change of PL is found. Apparently, thistrend is consistent with the dependence of PL intensity on
the magnetic field. Although the variation of the index R
value from 1.086 to 1.040 is not large, the change of crystalsite symmetry of Eu
3þions is apparently related to the
reduction of PL intensities.
The reduction of PL intensity in magnetic field may also
relate to the change in absorption in magnetic field. We
examined dependence of absorption of the excitation light
on magnetic field by recording the intensities of transmittedlight at different magnetic fields. The absorbance can be then
calculated according to the Beer-Lambert law.
20As shown
in Fig. 4(b), the absorption of the 392 nm laser decreased
with the enhancement of magnetic field, which is in agree-
ment with the remarkable reduction in emission intensity of
both electric dipole and magnetic dipole transitions (Fig. 3),
implying that the reduction of absorption is also responsible
for the decrease of PL integrated intensities. Due to possible
shift in the positions of the ground and the excited statesinduced by Zeeman effect, the reduced absorption could
arise from the energy mismatch of the excitation light in
higher magnetic field. In other words, the reduction inabsorption and suppression of emission can be of the same
magnetic origin. Furthermore, Zeeman splitting results in the
broadening of each 4f levels (J 6¼0) as shown below. This
could be another reason for the suppression of PL because it
may lead to enhanced cross-relaxation rate among nearby
Eu
3þions as the energy gaps between lower and higher 4f
levels are reduced.
As discussed above, magnetic field splits 4f levels of RE
ions due to Zeeman effect and this effect becomes prominentat higher magnetic field. We indeed observed shift of peak
positions and it is most notable for the
5D0!7F4transition,
as shown in Figs. 5(a)and5(b). The peaks of the5D0!7F4
transition of Eu3þions show clear blue shift at higher energy
side and red shift at lower energy side. Fig. 5(d) shows the
energy level diagram of Eu3þions. The excited state5D0is
non degenerate (J ¼0); therefore, it does not show Zeeman or
Stark splitting. The lower ground state7F4splits into several
Zeeman levels under external magnetic field. Since the gapbetween the Zeeman levels becomes larger with the increase
of magnetic field, the upper subbands shift to higher position
in the energy level diagram while the lower subbands moveto lower position, leading to blue shift and red shift of peaks.
The dependence of energy shift of these two peaks on
the magnetic field was shown in Fig. 5(c). It is parabolic
when the applied magnetic field is less than about 14 T. This
dependence becomes linear when the magnetic field exceeds
14 T, which is in agreement with the theory of Zeeman effect.In a PbF
2-based glass ceramic, a similar phenomenon was
observed in the4I13/2!4I15/2emission band of Er3þions by
Saurel et al.21who ascribed the parabolic dependence on
magnetic field to the quantum confinement as the optical gap
of PbF 2is smaller than that of the glass network. Incomparison, it is the magnetic confinement that makes the de-
pendence linear at stronger magnetic fields. However, in the
present case, the optical band gap of the precipitated SrF 2is
6.9 eV,22larger than that of the surrounding glass matrix.
Despite a similar field dependence is observed, their explana-
tion based on quantum confinement may be not valid here.
This parabolic field dependence may relate with the changeof effective g-factor under high magnetic field, which was
predicted theoretically in a previous report.
23The detailed
mechanism remains to be revealed in further studies.
IV. CONCLUSION
In conclusion, the influence of external magnetic field
on the PL of Eu3þ-doped nano-glass-ceramics has been stud-
ied. The PL integrated intensity of Eu3þdecreased with the
enhancement of magnetic field, which is explained by thecooperation effect of the Zeeman splitting, the change in site
symmetry of Eu
3þions, and the cross-relaxation effect
between adjacent Eu3þions. Furthermore, Zeeman splitting
also results in both blue shift and red shift of peaks with the
strengthening of magnetic field. The detailed reason for the
observed magneto-optical behaviors deserves furtherinvestigation.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was financially supported by the National
Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 51132004and 51102209), and the National Basic Research Program of
China (2011CB808100). The authors thank the Pulsed High
Magnetic Field Facilities at the Wuhan National HighMagnetic Field Center.
1V. K. Tikhomirov, L. F. Chibotaru, D. Saurel, P. Gredin, M. Mortier, and
V. V. Moshchalkov, Nano Lett. 9, 721 (2009).
2Y. Liu, D. Wang, J. Shi, Q. Peng, and Y. Li, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 52,
4366 (2013).
FIG. 5. (a) Emission from the5D0!7F4transition of Eu3þions; (b) the
enlarged part of the rectangular region (dashed line) in Fig. 5(a); (c) depend-
ence of energy shift for the two peaks (shown in Fig. 5(a)) on the magnetic
field; and (d) energy level diagram of Eu3þions, the gray arrows stand for
the non-irradiative transition processes.123103-4 Jiang et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 123103 (2014)
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Opt. Lett. 38, 3754 (2013).
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R. G. Sa. Chu, M. Fujii, and J. Qiu, J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 4, 402 (2013).
5S. Gai, C. Li, P. Yang, and J. Lin, Chem. Rev. 114, 2343 (2014).
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15D. Tu, Y. Liu, H. Zhu, R. Li, L. Liu, and X. Chen, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed.
52, 1128 (2013).
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1.4887796.pdf | Carrier transport properties of nanocrystalline Er3N@C80
Yong Sun, Yuki Maeda, Hiroki Sezaimaru, Masamichi Sakaino, and Kenta Kirimoto
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 116, 034301 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4887796
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4887796
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/116/3?ver=pdfcov
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33Carrier transport properties of nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80
Y ong Sun,1,a)Yuki Maeda,1Hiroki Sezaimaru,1Masamichi Sakaino,1,b)and Kenta Kirimoto2
1Department of Applied Science for Integrated System Engineering, Kyushu Institute of Technology,
Senshuimachi, Tobata, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka 804-8550, Japan
2Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Kitakyushu National College of Technology,
5-20-1 shii, Kokuraminami, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka 802-0985, Japan
(Received 14 May 2014; accepted 26 June 2014; published online 15 July 2014)
Electrical transport properties of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80with fcc crystal structure were
characterized by measuring both temperature-dependent d.c. conductance and a.c. impedance. Theresults showed that the Er
3N@C 80sample has characteristics of n-type semiconductor and an elec-
tron affinity larger than work function of gold metal. The Er 3N@C 80/Au interface has an ohmic
contact behavior and the contact resistance was very small as compared with bulk resistance of theEr
3N@C 80sample. The charge carriers in the sample were thermally excited from various trapped
levels and both acoustic phonon and ionic scatterings become a dominant process in different tem-
perature regions, respectively. At temperatures below 250 K, the activation energy of the trappedcarrier was estimated to be 35.5 meV, and the ionic scattering was a dominant mechanism. On the
other hand, at temperatures above 350 K, the activation energy was reduced to 15.9 meV, and the
acoustic phonon scattering was a dominant mechanism. In addition, a polarization effect from thecharge carrier was observed at low frequencies below 2.0 MHz, and the relative intrinsic permittiv-
ity of the Er
3N@C 80nanocrystalline lattice was estimated to be 4.6 at frequency of 5.0 MHz.
VC2014 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4887796 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
The endohedral fullerenes have attracted attention for
their applications in optics,1bio-medicine,2electronics,3
magnetics,4and quantum information processing.5–8Such
applications would require the fabrications of their crystal-
line structures and metal electrode on the materials. One of
their interest properties is a charge transfer from the endohe-dral atoms to the fullerene cage. The charge transfer has
been widely investigated,
9–13as these materials are expected
to display remarkable electronic and structural propertiesassociated with this charge transfer. Among these endohedral
fullerenes, trimetallic nitride endohedral fullerenes (TNEFs),
such as Sc
3N@C 80and Er 3N@C 80, can be obtained in large
yield and evaporated onto heated substrates14because of
their thermal stabilities.15,16After the extensive studies in
theoretical calculations and experimental analysis for iso-lated molecule of the materials, few fundamental investiga-
tions are now carried out on electrical properties of the
endohedral fullerenes in condensation states, recently.
The self-assembled island formations of Sc
3N@C 80and
Er3N@C 80molecules on Au(111) and Ag/Si(111) surfaces
have been investigated.17Charge transport properties of
the Sc 3N@C 80film prepared by drop-casting its CS 2solution
on the quartz substrate, such as carrier mobility and
energy band structure, have also been studied.9The
Sc3N@C 80thin film exhibits a low electron mobility of
5:7/C210/C03cm2V/C01s/C01under normal temperature andatmospheric pressure. However, it is not easy so far as to
obtain enough amounts of the endohedral fullerenes to mea-
sure physical and electrical characters. Therefore, the diffi-culties in fabricating crystals and actual devices still remain,
and a discussion of the carrier transport properties through
the TNEFs/metal contact was not carried out in detail.
In this study, we prepared a nanocrystalline Er
3N@C 80
solid sample by pressing powder material to a pellet withtwo gold electrodes. The temperature-dependent conducti-vity of the Er
3N@C 80sample was measured in the condition
of various applied electric fields. In addition, the resistance
and capacitance of the Au/Er 3N@C 80/Au structure were
obtained at various d.c. bias and a.c. voltages. The results
obtained in this study indicate that the charge transfer leads
to a high conductivity of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80solid
as well as a low contact resistance with gold electrodes. The
energy levels at the Er 3N@C 80/Au interface and the trans-
port properties of the charge carriers passing through thesample will be discussed.
II. EXPERIMENTAL
Er3N@C 80powder with purity >95 wt. % was pur-
chased from LUNA Innovations to make a sample specimen
for measurement.18,19The Er 3N@C 80powder was pressed
into a pellet at room temperature at 1.25 GPa for 50 min. Theso formed pellet was 5.0 mm in diameter and 0.55 mm in
thickness. Two gold electrodes on the surfaces of the sample
were prepared using an Au nano-particle paste (NAU-K05B,Daiken), and the sample was annealed at temperature of
500 K in vacuum for 30 min. Prior to electrical measure-
ments the powder and pellet samples were characterized bya)E-mail address: sun@ele.kyutech.ac.jp
b)Present address: Department of Vehicle Production Engineering, NISSAN
MOTOR CO. LTD., 560-2, Okatsukoku, Atsugi-city, Kanagawa-pref. 243-
0192, Japan.
0021-8979/2014/116(3)/034301/00 VCAuthor(s) 2014
116, 034301-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33an x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS; AXIS-NOVA,
SHIMATSU/KRATOS) and x-ray diffraction (XRD; JEOL
JDX-3500 K). In the XPS analysis, the beam diameter ofAl Kaline was 55 lm, and the binding energy resolution was
0.15 eV.
In the electrical measurements, the current passing
through the sample was measured using a digital electrome-
ter (ADVANTEST R8252) with a current resolution of
1.0 fA at various d.c. bias voltages from 0.001 to 3.0 V. Thepellet sample was set in a vacuum chamber of a cryostat dur-
ing the electrical measurements. The base pressure of the
vacuum chamber was less than 10
/C05Pa. The current meas-
urements were carried out in the course of heating up or
cooling down process between the temperatures from 100 K
to 500 K. The rate of heating or cooling was 0.14 K min/C01
with a stepwise increment of 1.0 K.
The impedance of the sample was measured at room
temperature in atmosphere to separate the bulk and interfaceresistances in the sample by using a Cole-Cole plot method.
The impedance Z ¼Z
0þjZ00was used to characterize both
resistance and capacitance by plotting the imaginary part/C0Z
00¼/C0Im½Z/C138versus the real part Z0¼Re½Z/C138of the imped-
ance. The important information pertinent to the Er 3N@C 80/
Au structure can be obtained.
III. RESULTS
Three x-ray photoemission spectra of the pellet sample
at room temperature were show in Fig. 1. They were
obtained from the surface of the Er 3N@C 80sample before
and after Arþion sputtering for 10 and 30 s, respectively.
Eight peaks at binding energies of 9, 56, 98, 167, 242, 285,531, and 999 eV were observed in the spectra. The 9 eV peak
is attributed to a photoemission from 4 felectrons of Er
atoms. The double peaks at 56 and 98 eV are the photoemis-sions from Er MVV, and the 167 eV peak is from Er 4 d. The
peak around 285 and 531 eV comes from C 1 sand O 1 score
level, respectively. The peaks around 999 eV correspond toO KLL Auger emission. Also, the peaks around 240 eV
observed after the Ar
þion sputtering are from Ar 2 p1/2and
2p3/2core levers. In the XPS spectra, the Arþion sputtering
causes both the decrease in the O-related peaks and the
increases in Er and C-related peaks. Namely, the oxygen
atoms adsorb only on the surface of the pellet sample. Fromthe spectrum after the 30 s Ar
þion sputtering, atomic ratio
of Er/C is evaluated to be 3.64 at. %, close to the stoichio-
metric ratio of 3.61 at. % for Er 3N@C 80. Also, the photoem-
ission from the N atoms cannot be detected due to its smaller
relative sensitivity factor (RSF, 0.505) and concentration as
well as encapsulation in the C 80cage. Although the RSF of
C1sis also small, 0.318, its XPS intensity is somewhat
strong because of the abundant concentration of C atoms in
the Er 3N@C 80molecules.
The enlarged photoemission spectra from O 1 score
level were shown in Fig. 2for various Arþion sputtering
times. The Arþion sputtering results in the decrease of the
peak intensity and the shift of the peak toward the low
energy side. The results indicate that the oxygen atoms
adsorbed only on the surface of the pellet sample as well asthere is an electronic interaction between the adsorbed oxy-
gen atoms.
The photoemission spectra from the Er 4 dcore level
were enlarged in the energy scaling and they were plotted in
Fig. 3. The peak at binding energy of 169.5 eV does not
change with increasing sputtering time. This result suggestsa weak electronic interaction between the Er atoms with
adsorption oxygen atoms on the surface of the C
80cage. On
the other hand, the peak intensity increases after the Arþion
sputtering due to desorption of the adsorbed oxygen atoms.
Figure 4shows the photoemission spectra from the C 1 score
level in the enlarged binding energy scale. The intensity ofthe C 1 speak increased after the Ar
þion sputtering but no
significant peak shift was observed. This may be related to
the conjugation effect of pelectrons on the surface of the
C80cage.
XRD patterns of the as-received Er 3N@C 80powder
sample were shown in Fig. 5. Several diffraction peaks can
FIG. 1. X-ray photoemission spectra of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sam-
ple prepared at a pressure of 1.25 GPa. The spectra are detected on the sur-
face of the sample before and after Arþion sputtering for 10 and 30 s.FIG. 2. Enlarged x-ray photoemission spectra from O 1 score level before
and after Arþion sputtering for 10 and 30 s.034301-2 Sun et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33be recognized for the pattern, a strong peak at 2 h¼9:30 deg
and four broad peaks centered at 2 h¼18:00;25:70;32:95;
and 50 :80 deg. The enlarged XRD pattern of the 2 h¼9:30
deg peaks was shown in the inset to Fig. 5. As seen in the
inset figure, no significant asymmetry is observed for this
diffraction peak. The 2 h¼9:30 deg peak was ascribed to
the diffraction from (111) planes of a face-centered cubic(fcc) crystal structure with a lattice constant of 1.65 nm. The
grain size of the as-received powder sample was estimated to
be 4 nm from the full width at half-maximum (FWHM) ofthe (111) peaks.
Cole/C0Cole plots of the a.c. impedance of the Au/
Er
3N@C 80/Au structure at room temperature at the peak
voltage of 1.0 V at the d.c. bias voltage of 0.0 V was shown
in Fig. 6. The Cole /C0Cole plot exhibits a semicircle, indicat-
ing that the impedance is reflected only by both resistanceand capacitance of the bulk Er
3N@C 80sample and its inter-
facial component can be ignored. The bulk resistance andcapacitance are defined from the real and image parts of the
impedance, their values are 7 :28/C2105Xand 1 :08/C210/C012F
at the frequency of 300 KHz. We must also point out that the
bulk resistance of the sample in atmosphere increases due to
the adsorption of gas molecules, which results in the local-ization of the charge carrier.
The current-voltage ( I-V) characteristics of the Au/
Er
3N@C 80/Au sample at temperatures of 300 and 500 K
were shown in Fig. 7. The currents passing through the sam-
ple at 300 and 500 K can be fitted as a quadratic function of
the d.c. bias voltage in the range of 0.001–3.0 V. The quad-ratic I-Vcharacteristic is related to a hopping conductance of
the charge carrier in molecular materials
20and is distinctly
different to an exponential I-Vcharacteristic of the Schottky
barrier. The results in Figs. 6and7indicate that the contact
between the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sample and the Au
electrode is ohmic and the electron affinity of the Er 3N@C 80
sample is larger than the work function of gold metal.
Therefore, we can characterize directly the carrier transport
properties of the sample by measuring its field andtemperature-dependent I-Vcharacteristics. In general, when
FIG. 4. Enlarged x-ray photoemission spectra from C 1 score level before
and after Arþion sputtering for 30 s.FIG. 5. X-ray diffraction patterns of the as-received Er 3N@C 80powder. The
inset shows the enlarged patterns of the (111) diffraction peaks.
FIG. 6. Cole-Cole plot of the impedance of the Au/Er 3N@C 80/Au structure
at room temperature at a.c. voltage of 1.0 V at d.c. bias voltage of 0.0 V.FIG. 3. Enlarged x-ray photoemission spectra from Er 4 dcore level before
and after Arþion sputtering for 30 s.034301-3 Sun et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33the electrical transport is governed by space charge limited
conduction (SCLC) mechanism,21,22the current Iis repre-
sented by
IE;TðÞ ¼9Sere0lE;TðÞ E2
8L; (1)
where Eis the strength of the applied electric field, Tis the
absolute temperature, Sis the area of the electrode, Lis the
thickness of the sample, ere0is the permittivity, and lðE;TÞ
is the mobility of the charge carrier in the sample. Namely,the current Iis a quadratic function of the electric field
E¼V=L. Here, the mobility lðE;TÞis field and temperature
dependent and is described as follows:
23
lE;TðÞ ¼qR2/C23
kT/C20/C21
exp/C0/C15a/C0D/C15a
kT/C26/C27
; (2)
where Ris the mean free pass of the charge carrier, /C23is the
thermal vibration frequency of the host molecule, qis the
unit of electronic charge, /C15ais the activation energy of the
trapped charge carrier, and D/C15a¼ðE=4pere0qÞ1=2the change
of/C15aafter the electric field Eis applied. Here, ere0¼e1e0is
the permittivity at high frequency. One can notice from Eq.
(2)that the /C23is dependent of temperature. Therefore, Eq. (2)
can be written as follows:
lE;TðÞ ¼Taexp/C0/C15a/C0D/C15a
kT/C26/C27
; (3)
where ais a constant depending on scattering mechanism of
the charge carrier during the electrical transport process.
The current Iat various d.c. bias voltages were measured
as a function of temperature during heating up and cooling
down processes. Arrhenius plots of I/C241=kTat the d.c. bias
voltage of 1.0 V were plotted in Fig. 8. The current I
increases with temperature in the range of 100–500 K and
cannot been fitted using single exponential function. The
result indicates that there is different aand/C15aat high and low
temperature sides. We have conformed from the Arrhenius
plots of I/C241=kTthat the current I can be fitted by usinga¼/C01:5 for high temperature side and a¼1:5 for low
temperature side, respectively.
Arrhenius plots of the I/C2T1:5/C241=kTfor high temper-
ature side and I/C2T/C01:5/C241=kTfor low temperature side at
the d.c. bias voltage of 1.0 V during heating up and cooling
down processes were shown in Figs. 9(a) and9(b). The good
linear relationships in the Arrhenius plots indicate that the
electrical transport properties of the nanocrystalline
Er3N@C 80sample can be explained using Poole-Frenkel
model.23The a¼/C01:5 at high temperature side and a¼
1:5 at low temperature side suggest various scattering mech-
anisms of the charge carrier in the sample. On the basis ofthe Arrhenius plots at various d.c. voltages, we obtained
the activation energies of the trapped charge carrier to be
/C15
a¼15:9 meV for high temperature side and /C15a¼35:5 meV
for low temperature side. The D/C15ais in the range of 1 :6
/C210/C02/C248:8/C210/C01meV and can be ignored as compared
with /C15a.
The dielectric properties of the nanocrystalline
Er3N@C 80sample were characterized by measuring its im-
pedance spectra. In general, an equivalent electric circuit ofa metal/semiconductor/metal system can be represented by a
parallel combination of the interfacial resistance (R
i) and ca-
pacitance (C i) in series with a parallel arrangement of the
bulk resistance (R B) and capacitance (C B).24–26In this study,
both R iand C iare small enough and can be ignored. The
bulk resistances at frequencies of 6.25 KHz and 5.0 MHzwere plotted in Fig. 10(a) as a function of the d.c. bias volt-
age. R
Bis constant at frequency of 5.0 MHz but it decreases
with increasing d.c. bias voltage at frequency of 6.25 KHz.On the other hand, the bulk capacitances at frequencies of
6.25 KHz and 5.0 MHz were plotted in Fig. 10(b) as a func-
tion of the d.c. bias voltage. C
Bis also constant at 5.0 MHz
but it decreases with increasing d.c. bias voltage at frequency
of 6.25 KHz. The dielectric properties as shown in Fig. 10
indicate that there are two kinds of polarization mechanismsin the nanocrystalline Er
3N@C 80sample. One is related to
the conducting charge carriers, which contribute to theFIG. 7. Current-voltage characteristics of the Au/Er 3N@C 80/Au structure at
300 and 500 K.
FIG. 8. The current passing through the Au/Er 3N@C 80/Au structure as a
function of temperature during heating up and cooling down process.034301-4 Sun et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33sample polarization at lower frequencies only because of a
low mobility of the carrier in the sample. Other one is related
to the dielectric properties of the Er 3N@C 80crystal lattice,
which contributes to the sample polarization in the higherfrequencies.
The bulk resistance R
Band capacitance C Bwere defined
as these of the resistance and capacitance at maximum of theCole-Cole curve. The time of the charge carrier passing
through the sample, the resonance time s, can be obtained
from a relationship of xs¼1, where x¼2pfand
s¼R
BCB, and fthe frequency of the carrier passing through
the sample.
The relative permittivities of the nanocrystalline
Er3N@C 80sample at various a.c. voltages at the d.c. bias
voltage of 0.0 V were plotted in Fig. 11as a function of the
a.c. frequency. The permittivity decreases rapidly withincreasing a.c. frequency from 8.5 at 6.25 KHz to 4.6 at
5.0 MHz. It becomes constant at higher frequencies. No sig-
nificant difference due to the a.c. bias voltage is observed.The larger permittivities at low frequency side are related to
the polarization from the charge carrier. On the other hand,
FIG. 10. (a) Bulk resistances of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sample at
6.25 kHz and 5 MHz as a function of d.c. bias voltage. (b) Bulk capacitancesof the nanocrystalline Er
3N@C 80sample at 6.25 kHz and 5 MHz as a func-
tion of d.c. bias voltage.
FIG. 11. Relative permittivities of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sample at
various d.c. bias voltages as a function of frequency.
FIG. 9. (a) Arrhenius plots of I /C2T1:5/C241=kTat high temperature side during
heating up and cooling down process. (b) Arrhenius plots of I /C2T/C01:5/C241=kT
at low temperature side during heating up and cooling down process.034301-5 Sun et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33the smaller permittivities at high frequencies are due to the
polarization of the Er 3N@C 80crystal lattice only.
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Energy band structure of the Er 3N@C 80/Au interface
From the results in Figs. 6and7, we can conclude that
the Er 3N@C 80/Au interface corresponds to an Ohmic con-
tact, namely, there is not the Schottky barrier for the carriertransport passing through the interface. The Er
3N@C 80sam-
ple is n-type semiconductor with the electron affinity larger
than the work function of gold metal, 5.1 eV.27Tang et al.
have calculated the energy levels of the C 80and Er 3N@C 80
molecules with Ihsymmetry by using density function theory
(DFT).28The highest occupied molecular orbital-lowest
unoccupied molecular orbital (HOMO-LUMO) gap and the
LUMO level are 0.05 eV and /C03:80 eV for C 80and 0.13 eV
and/C05:40 eV for Er 3N@C 80molecule, respectively. In their
theoretical results, the electron affinity of the Er 3N@C 80
molecule is larger than the work function of gold metal. Thisis consistent with our experimental results in this studybecause no Schottky barrier was observed at the Er
3N@C 80/
Au interface. Namely, the ohmic contact at the Er 3N@C 80/
Au interface indicates a large electron affinity of the nano-crystalline Er
3N@C 80solid.
As far as we know, there are still no experimental results
on the energy structure of the Er 3N@C 80crystal. At present,
the surface potential analysis is an effective method to inves-
tigate the electronic structures of fullerene-related materi-
als.29–31Several experimental results indicated that the shift
of the surface potential, the difference between the work
function of metal and the electron affinity of fullerene-
related materials, depends on film thickness of the materi-als.
29,32–34Therefore, the energy band structure of the
Er3N@C 80material may depend on its crystallographic and
interfacial properties.
B. Dielectric properties
As shown in Fig. 11, the relative permittivity of the nano-
crystalline Er 3N@C 80sample decreases from 8.5 at 6.25 KHz
to 4.6 at 5.0 MHz. At low frequencies, the resistance and ca-pacitance of the Er
3N@C 80sample decrease with increasing
d.c. bias voltage as shown in Fig. 10. The results indicate that
polarization properties of the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sam-
ple at low frequencies are related to its electrical properties
such as the mobility and concentration of the charge carrier.
For example, the time sis 1:44/C210/C06s at 6.25 KHz and
1:94/C210/C07s at 5.0 MHz, respectively. The period of the a.c.
voltage, t,i s1 :6/C210/C04s for 6.25 kHz and 2 :0/C210/C07sf o r
5.0 MHz, respectively. It is clear that sð1:44/C210/C06sÞ
/C28tð1:6/C210/C04sÞat 6.25 KHz and sð1:94/C210/C07sÞ
ffitð2:0/C210/C07sÞat 5.0 MHz. This fact indicates that the
polarization of the charge carrier affects the dielectric proper-ties of the sample at lower frequencies only.
At present, the permittivity of the Er
3N@C 80solid has
not been reported as far as we know. It is well known thatthe crystal C
60lattice has an intrinsic permittivity of 4.4.35,36
The dipole dynamics in the endohedral metallofullereneLa@C 82have been studied theoretically and experimen-
tally.37,38In the solid state, pure La@C 82has a fcc structure
at room temperatures. The C 82cage with C2vsymmetry is
highly disordered in high-symmetry lattice. In the La@C 82
molecule three electrons transferred to the C 82cage from the
endohedral La atom. Electrostatic interactions result in theendohedral La
3þion being located close to the cage edge
and an important consequence of such an arrangement is a
molecular electric dipole. At room temperature, the relativepermittivity of the La@C
82molecular solid is 40 at 100 Hz
and 25 at 1.0 MHz. The large permittivity is due to a
dynamic response of the ½La/C1383þ½C82/C1383/C0dipole in the La@C 80
molecule. In this study, the intrinsic permittivity of the
Er3N@C 80sample, 4.6, is larger than that of C 60crystal, 4.4.
This may be related to the electron transfer from Er 3N cluster
to C 80cage because of the formation of three dipoles,
½ErN/C1383þ½C80/C1383/C0, between the cluster and the C 80cage. On the
other hand, the permittivity of the Er 3N@C 80is smaller than
that of La@C 80because of a high asymmetry of ½Er/C138þ½N/C138/C0
and½ErN/C1383þ½C80/C1383/C0as compared with ½La/C1383þ½C82/C1383/C0.
In addition, the dielectric properties of the fullerene-
related materials are strongly affected by the adsorptions of
O and N atoms.39,40The fact that both C 60and oxygen mole-
cules are non-polar, together with the evidence of reversibleoxygen diffusion into the C
60solid, strongly suggest that
these dipoles arise from charge transfer between oxygen
molecules and C 60cages. The amount of this charge transfer
is bound to be very small, reflecting the fact that the electron
affinities of both C 60and molecular oxygen are relatively
high. Due to the large size of the C 60molecules, this small
charge transfer creates large dipole moments. Since the elec-
tron affinity of the C 60molecule, 2.65 eV,41is considerably
higher than that of molecular oxygen, 0.45 eV,42one might
expect oxygen to be the donor and C 60the acceptor of
electrons.
C. Electrical transport properties
Based on the measurement results of temperature-
dependent current as shown in Figs. 7–9, we can include that
the conductivity of the Er 3N@C 80sample is governed by
both mobility and concentration of the charge carrier. Thereare different temperature dependences on the mobility and
concentration of the carrier at high and low temperature
sides. At high temperature side, the activation energy ofthe trapped carrier is 15.9 meV as well as the temperature
dependence of the mobility is l/T
/C01:5. This temperature
dependence suggests an acoustic phonon scattering mecha-nism
43during the carrier transport. On the other hand, at low
temperature side, the activation energy is 35.5 meV as well
as the temperature dependence of the mobility is l/T1:5.
The activation energy of the trapped carrier becomes large
and there is a dominant ionic scattering process44at low tem-
perature side.
It is well known that a phase transition between single
cubic (sc) and fcc phases in the C 60crystal occurs when tem-
perature varies passing through 260 K.45,46This transition is
described to be due to a free rotation of C 60molecules on its
crystal lattice. Because of the same molecular symmetry, Ih,034301-6 Sun et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 034301 (2014)
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129.12.235.98 On: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:15:33between the C 60and C 80cages, a similar phase transition
may occur in the Er 3N@C 80crystal phase. This transition
temperature may be above 350 K due to a large mass and di-ameter of the Er
3N@C 80molecule.
It has also been reported that the energy band structure
of the C 60crystal changes when the sc-fcc phase transition
occurs.47Similar changes on the energy band structure may
occur in the Er 3N@C 80crystal phase. This change results in
the decrease of the activation energy of the trapped carrier inEr
3N@C 80solid at sufficiently high temperatures. In order to
clarify the relationship between the energy band structure
and the activation energy of the trapped carrier, furtherexperiments such as far infrared (FIR) absorption measure-
ment on the Er
3N@C 80material are needed.
V. CONCLUSION
We have studied the carrier transport properties of the
nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sample by measuring temperature-
dependent conductivity and curre nt-voltage characteristics.
The electrical transport in the nanocrystalline Er 3N@C 80sam-
ple was governed by space charge limited conduction mecha-
nism which is explained usin g Poole-Frenkel model. At
temperatures above 350 K, the charge carriers during the trans-port were scatted mainly by acoustic phonon scattering pro-
cess. On the other hand, ionic scattering was a dominant
process in the charge carrier transport at temperatures below250 K. There were different activation energies of the trapped
charge carrier in high and low temperature regions, 16 meV
for temperatures above 350 K and 35.5 meV for temperaturesbelow 250 K. The differences on the scattering mechanism and
the activation energy of the charge carrier can be explained on
the basis of molecular crystal structure and van der Waalsinteraction between the Er
3N@C 80molecules.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was partially supported by Project No. 15 /C0
B01, Program of Research for the Promotion ofTechnological Seeds, Japan Science and Technology
Agency (JST). The work was also partially supported by
Grant-in-Aid for Exploratory Research No. 23651115, JapanSociety for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).
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1.4897452.pdf | First-principles study of structural, electronic, vibrational, dielectric and elastic
properties of tetragonal Ba2YTaO6
C. Ganeshraj and P. N. Santhosh
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 116, 144104 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897452
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897452
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/116/14?ver=pdfcov
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29First-principles study of structural, electronic, vibrational,
dielectric and elastic properties of tetragonal Ba 2YTaO 6
C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosha)
Low Temperature Physics Laboratory, Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Madras,
Chennai 600 036, Tamil Nadu, India
(Received 15 August 2014; accepted 27 September 2014; published online 13 October 2014)
We report first-principles study of structural, electronic, vibrational, dielectric, and elastic
properties of Ba 2YTaO 6, a pinning material in high temperature superconductors (HTS), by using
density functional theory. By using different exchange-correlation potentials, the accuracy of thecalculated lattice constants of Ba
2YTaO 6has been achieved with GGA-RPBE, since many
important physical quantities crucially depend on change in volume. We have calculated the
electronic band structure dispersion, total and partial density of states to study the band gap originand found that Ba
2YTaO 6is an insulator with a direct band gap of 3.50 eV. From Mulliken
population and charge density studies, we conclude that Ba 2YTaO 6have a mixed ionic-covalent
character. Moreover, the vibrational properties, born effective charges, and the dielectric permittivitytensor have been calculated using linear response method. Vibrational spectrum determined through
our calculations agrees well with the observed Raman spectrum, and allows assignment of symmetry
labels to modes. We perform a detailed analysis of the contribution of the various infrared-activemodes to the static dielectric constant to explain its anisotropy, while electronic dielectric tensor of
Ba
2YTaO 6is nearly isotropic, and found that static dielectric constant is in good agreement with
experimental value. The six independent elastic constants were calculated and found that tetragonalBa
2YTaO 6is mechanically stable. Other elastic properties, including bulk modulus, shear modulus,
Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, and elastic anisotropy ratios are also investigated and found that
Poisson’s ratio and Young’s modulus of Ba 2YTaO 6are similar to that of other pinning materials in
HTS.VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897452 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
For many decades, transition metal oxides have received
much attention owing to their diverse properties like colossaldielectric constant,
1magnetoresistance,2high temperature
superconductors (HTS),3magnetocaloric effect,4and magne-
toelectric effect.5Perovskite and its structurally related
oxides have been widely studied due to their interesting
physical properties and extensive structural diversity. Even
though many compounds adopt the ideal cubic perovskitearistotype, most perovskites undergo a distortion away from
high-symmetry cubic structure.
6Perovskite oxide has the
general stoichiometry ABO 3and is composed of corner-
sharing BO 6octahedra with A-site cation occupying void
created by the three dimensional octahedral network. Thus,
the B cations are at the centers of the octahedra, while the Acations occupy 12-fold- coordinated sites. This ideal struc-
ture, which is usually described by lattice parameter a
p, dis-
plays a wide variety of structural instabilities in the variousmaterials. The low symmetry structure can be described as a
distorted structure with respect to ideal cubic structure.
These distortions often influence the physical properties andremarkable structural chemistry has been observed in these
materials. These distortions may involve rotations and distor-
tions of the BO
6octahedra as well as displacements of thecations from their ideal sites. The most common distortion
consists of rigid unit modes (RUM), where BO 6octahedra
remain almost rigid and the rotation of octahedra generates
antiferrodistortive distortion. The second type of distortion is
ferroelectric, where the A or B cations are displaced againstrigid BO
6octahedra. The third type of distortion involves de-
formation of BO 6octahedra. A detailed study on the octahe-
dral tilting in cation ordered double perovskite using numberof technique, including group theoretical analysis,
7has been
examined by various groups. The family of double perov-
skite Ba(B01/2B001/2)O3have been investigated in last two
decades for their microwave and infrared dielectric proper-
ties. Among double perovskites, Ba 2YTaO 6(BYTO) under-
goes an equitranslational improper ferroelastic second orderphase transition from cubic ( Fm-3 m ) to tetragonal ( I4/m)
structure without any unit cell multiplication, characterized
by the tilting of the oxygen octahedra (Glazer’s notation:a
0a0c/C0) along c-axis, around 253 K.8A pressure induced
phase transition from cubic to tetragonal structure is also
observed between 4.3 and 5.6 GPa with a onset of an octahe-dral tilting distortion about c-axis.
9Recently, BYTO has
been used in a form of nanocomposites with YBa 2Cu3O7,a s
an artificial pinning centres immobilizing quantized vorticesin HTS, to enhance the ability of HTS to carry electrical cur-
rent with zero resistance at high temperature and magnetic
fields.
10Also, BYTO is a useful microwave dielectric
resonator material with e/C2432 near room temperature with
very low dielectric loss.8a)Email: santhosh@physics.iitm.ac.in. Tel.: þ91 44 2257 4882. Fax: þ91 44
2257 4852.
0021-8979/2014/116(14)/144104/10/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 116, 144104-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29In this paper, we present ab initio study of the structural,
electronic, vibrational, dielectric, and elastic properties of
tetragonal BYTO. We have calculated structural parameters,
electronic band structure and electronic density of states(DOS), and nature of bonding of BYTO. Lattice dynamical
properties, including zone-centre vibrations, Born effective
charge, and electronic and static dielectric permittivitytensors, are calculated by first principles linear response
method. A detailed analysis of the contribution of the various
infrared-active modes to the static dielectric constant hasbeen done to explain its anisotropy. In addition to that, we
have also calculated the elastic constants, bulk modulus of
BYTO using first-principles method.
II. COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS
The calculations were performed based on density func-
tional theory (DFT) using CAmbridge Serial Total Energy
Package code (CASTEP) with local-density approximation(LDA) and generalized gradient approximation (GGA).
11
The interaction of electrons with ion cores was representedby norm conserving pseudopotential for Ba (5s
25p66s2), Y
(4s24p64d15s2), Ta (5d36s2), and O (2s22p4). A plane
wave basis set with cut off energy 690 eV was used to
expand the valance electronic wave functions. Theexchange-correlation potential used in the calculations is
LDA, GGA, GGA-PBE, GGA-PW91, and GGA-RPBE. The
sampling of Brillouin zone was carefully tested and based onthese convergence tests, a k-point grid of 4 /C24/C23 was used.
A1 2 /C212/C29 k-point grid was used for calculating vibra-
tional properties. The Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno(BFGS) minimization scheme was used in geometry optimi-
zation.
12The geometry optimization is performed with the
experimentally observed cell parameters and internal coordi-nates of ions,
13,14until the maximum energy, force, stress,
and displacement on the system converge to the tolerance
values of 10/C05eV, 0.03 eV/A ˚, 0.05 GPa, and 0.001 A ˚, respec-
tively. The lattice dynamics of BYTO is studied by density
functional perturbation theory (DFPT) within the theory of
linear reponse.15This method includes calculations of charge
response to the lattice distortions for the specified vectors in
the first Brillouin zone. The frequencies and displacementpatterns of the phonon modes were calculated using the
dynamical matrix method.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A. Crystal and electronic structure
BYTO possesses a tetragonal structure ( I4/m), with
c-axis (tetragonal and optical axis) as a high symmetry axis,
corresponding to an out of phase tilting of the octahedraaround four-fold c-axis (Glazer’s notation: a
0a0c/C0(Ref. 16)).
I4/m has the structural equivalence between a-axis and
b-axis as well as structural difference between a-axis/b-axisand c-axis. The optimized crystal structure along ac and ab
plane is illustrated in Figure 1. Table Ishows the results of
optimized lattice parameters obtained using the GGA-RPBEmethod along with LDA, GGA, GGA-PBE, GGA-PW91,
and available experimental results. These results are consist-
ent with the fact that LDA often underestimates lattice con-stant, while GGA reduces this error considerably.
18The
optimized internal co-ordinates of BYTO are given in
Table IIalong with available experimental values. Figure 2
shows the calculated band structure along the high symmetry
directions and the observed bandgap is /C243.50 eV between
the valance band maximum and the conduction band mini-mum along C-point. Unfortunately, we have been unable to
find the experimental values of the energy gap in the litera-
ture. But, it is known that the GGA calculation underesti-mates the band gap of semiconductors and insulators.
19The
lowest valence bands occur between /C011 and /C010 eV and
are essentially dominated by Ba 5p states with small pres-ence of O 2s and 2p states and non-negligible presence from
O 3d to Y/Ta 3p states. The valence band lies between
/C24/C04.5 and 0 eV (E
F), which is derived mainly from O 2p
states but also, there is a quite strong hybridization between
FIG. 1. Crystal structure of tetragonal
(I4/m) unit cell of BYTO projected
along ac and ab planes. Yellow andRed balls are represents Ba and O ions.
The violet and green octahedra repre-
sent TaO
6and YO 6. This figure was
drawn using VESTA.17
TABLE I. Calculated (LDA, GGA-RPBE, GGA-PBE, and GGA-PW91)
and experimental lattice constant and volume of Ba 2YTaO 6.
LDA GGA-RPBE GGA-PBE GGA-PW91 Exp.
a, b (A ˚) 5.8374 5.9552 5.9301 5.9205 5.9551
c( A˚) 8.3452 8.4419 8.4155 8.4023 8.4482
V( A˚3) 284.36 299.38 295.94 294.52 299.60144104-2 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29O 2p states with d states of Ta and Y, due to the presence of
Ta and Y atoms within the Ta(Y)O 6octahedra and to lesser
extent with Ba d states. The nature of chemical bonding canbe elucidated from the total to partial density of states
(DOS). By comparing the total DOS (Figure 2(b)) with angu-
lar momentum projected DOS (Figures 3(a)–3(d) ), one can
show that some electrons from p states of O, d states of Ta,
and Y are transferred into valence bands (VBs) and contrib-
ute to covalent interactions between Ta(Y)-O bonds and alsoTa-O bond has high covalency than Y-O bond. The conduc-
tion band is situated above E
Fat around /C243.4 eV to 6.6 eV.
The conduction band around 5 eV is mainly contributed fromd states of Y, Ta, and Ba as well as from O 2p states.
B. Mulliken band population
In Sec. III A , it has been shown that there exists a signif-
icant hybridization of Ta/Y 3d with O 2p states in BYTO
indicating the bonding in this system cannot be purely ionicbut must exhibit a covalent part. In order to have a clear pic-
ture about the nature of chemical bonding between constitu-
ent of BYTO, we have calculated Mulliken band populationand Born effective charges.
The Mulliken band population is essential for evaluating
the bonding character in a material. A high value of bondpopulation indicates a covalent bond, and a low value indi-
cates an ionic nature. Positive and negative values indicate
bonding and antibonding states, respectively. The Mullikenpopulation reported in Table IIIshows that the Ba-O bond
exhibits almost ionic nature with slight covalency, whereas
Ta/Y-O bond has mixed covalent and ionic characteristics.Since Ta-O bond has higher Mulliken population than that ofY-O bond, it is slightly more covalent than Y-O bond. Since
the overlap of t
2g(d0configuration) of Ta (Figure 3(b))i s
higher than that of Y (Figure 3(c)) with ligand orbitals, Ta-O
bonding energy is higher than that of Y-O bonds and this
lead a higher covalent character Ta-O bond than that of Y-O
bond. The two different wyckoff positions of O atoms lead asmall change in bond length between O
1and O 2with Ba, Ta,
and Y ions. Further, the interatomic distance (Table III)
between Ta (Y) and O is /C241.9522 A ˚(/C242.2689 A ˚) and that
between Ba and O is /C242.9818 A ˚and 2.8870 A ˚(for O 1and
O2) indicating the covalent bonding between Ta(Y) and O
ions and ionic bonding between Ba and O ions. It is to bementioned that if we consider the self-consistently calculated
valence charges (Table IV), the chemical formula for the
system may roughly be written as Ba
21.22Y1.08Ta1.51O6/C00.84.
Thus, we find a significant deviation from the charge distri-
bution of charge balanced Ba 22Y3Ta5O6/C02. The strong
hybridization between O 2p states and the Ta(Y) d statesreveals that the static Ta (Y) and O charges are significantly
less than þ5(þ3) and /C02. According to the ionicity scale,
20
the population ionicity can be calculated as
Pi¼1/C0exp½/C0jPc/C0Pj=P/C138; (1)
where P is the overlap population of the bond, P cis the bond
population, for a purely covalent bond (P c¼0.75). P iis equal
to zero for purely covalent bond and to unity for purely ionic
bond. The Ta- O bond exhibits high covalency than Y-Obond, whereas Ba-O bond exhibits high ionicity.
C. Born effective charges
Born effective charges (Z*) play a fundamental role in
the dynamics of the crystal lattices. They govern the ampli-tude of the long-range coulomb interactions between nuclei
and the splitting between longitudinal optic (LO) and trans-
verse optic (TO) phonon modes. For an insulator, Z
*is a
measure of change in electronic polarization due to ionic dis-
placements. The form of effective tensor for the constituents
is determined by the site symmetry of ions. Z*is defined as
the proportionality coefficient relating, at linear order, the
polarization per unit cell created along the bdirection, to the
displacement along the direction aof the atoms belonging to
the sublattice j, under the condition of zero electric field ( e)TABLE II. Calculated (experimental) structural parameters of BYTO using
GGA-RPBE.
Wyckoff sites x y z
Ba 4d ( /C04) 0 0.5 0.25
Y 2a (4/m) 0 0 0
Ta 2b (4/m) 0 0 0.5
O1 4e (4) 0 0 0.2685
(0.2687)
O2 8h (m) 0.2520 0.2857 0.0
(0.2175) (0.2578)
FIG. 2. (a) Electronic band structure
along high symmetry directions and
(b) DOS of BYTO.144104-3 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29Z/C3
abjðÞ¼X0@Pa
@sbjðÞ/C12/C12/C12/C12
e¼0; (2)
where X0is the unit cell volume. The components of these
tensors reflect the effects of covalency or ionicity with
respect to some reference ionic value.
Z*related to the atoms constituting BYTO are reported
in Table IV. In this case, the cartesian x, y, and z are aligned
along the crystalline [100], [010], and [001] directions. Intetragonal symmetry, the Born effective charge tensor is
diagonal and reduces to values Z
*
xx¼Z*
yy¼Z*
?and
Z*
zz¼Z*
?, except Z*of O 2. The off-diagonal elements
(Z*
yx¼Z*
yx) arise from the tetragonal distortion due to
lower site symmetry of O.21Since O 2along [100] and [010]
direction ((m) site symmetry, (x, y, 0)) and O 1along [001]-
direction (4 site symmetry, (0, 0, z)) is bonded with Ta (Y)
atoms, a large anomalous contributions to Z*, on Ta/Y and
O2ions in the ab-plane and on Ta/Y and O 1ions in the apical
direction (along [001] direction). This anomalouscontribution clearly indicates that a strong dynamic charge
transfer takes place along the Ta/Y-O bond. When O atom isdisplaced closer to Ta/Y atom, the change in bond hybridiza-
tion causes transfer of electrons from O to Ta (Y). This trans-
fer of electrons results in an increase in Ta (Y) bondcovalency. The deviation in large anomalous contributions
of Born effective tensors, along and perpendicular to [001]
direction, reflects the sensitivity to the atomic displacementof the partially covalent character of Ta/Y-O bond, owing to
the point site symmetry of the ions. The charge observed on
Ba indicates the ionic covalent character of bonding along 3crystallographic directions. In the ab-plane, the value of Z
*
on O 1and along apical direction on O 2is close to nominal
value ( /C02) indicating the ionic character of bonding. The fi-
nite value of Z*
yx¼Z*
yxoccurs due to site symmetry (m) of
O2ions. The anisotropic diagonal elements of Z*of O 2and
finite off-diagonal element of O 2clearly reflect the presence
of covalent bonding of interactions.22
In order to gain further insight into the nature of the
bonding accurately, we calculate the electron density distri-bution for BYTO. The charge density in our calculation is
derived from a reliable converged wave function and hence
it can be used to study the bonding nature of solid. The totalcharge density plots of BYTO along [100] direction show
the deviation of the spherically distributed charge density
around O ions, as shown in Figure 4. Moreover, it also shows
that the deviation of the spherically distributed charge den-
sity is more towards Ta atoms than Y atom, indicating the
slightly high covalent nature of Ta–O bond than Y-O bond.The spherical distribution of charges around Ba ions indi-
cates a dominated ionic nature of interaction.
FIG. 3. Partial DOS of (a) Ba, (b) Ta,
(c) Y, and (d) of BTYO. The Fermienergy is set to zero.
TABLE III. The calculated (experimental) bond population, population ion-
icity, and bond length of BYTO using GGA-RPBE.
Bond Bond population, P Population ionicity, P iBond length (A ˚)
Ba - O 1 0.06 0.999 2.9818 (2.979)
Ba - O 2 0.06 0.999 2.8870 (2.867)
Y-O 1 0.42 0.564 2.2687 (2.210)
Y-O 2 0.40 0.524 2.2689 (2.216)
Ta - O 1 0.57 0.271 1.9522 (2.015)
Ta - O 2 0.57 0.254 1.9516 (2.000)144104-4 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29D. Vibrational properties
The linear response method was used to calculate vibra-
tional properties of BYTO. The linear response method pro-vides an analytical way of calculating the second derivative
of the total energy with respect to perturbation. A perturba-
tion in ionic positions yields the dynamical matrix and pho-nons. The lattice vibration mode with q /C250 plays a dominant
role in Raman scattering and infrared absorption. Therefore,
the vibration frequency at the C(q¼0) is called as normal
vibration mode. Using method of factor group analysis, we
determine the distribution of the zone-centre vibrational
modes in terms of the representation of C
4hpoint group
CðI4=mÞ¼6Tð2AuþBgþEgþ2EuÞ
þ2LðAgþEgÞþt1ðAgÞþ2t2ðAgþBgÞ
þ2t3ðAuþEuÞþ2t4ðAuþEuÞ
þ2t5ðEgþBgÞþt6ðEuÞ;
where t1,t2, and t3are related to Y(Ta)-O stretching mode,
andt4,t5, and t6are O- Y(Ta)-O bending modes. T and L
are translational and librational lattice modes, respectively.The symbols A and B represent nondegenerate and E double
degenerate vibrational modes; symmetric and antisymmetric
modes with respect to a centre of inversion are denoted bysubscripts g and u, respectively. There are nine Raman-
active and infrared (IR)-active modes that exist. In the
Raman-active modes, Y and Ta atoms are at rest. Table V
compares calculated frequencies at the Brillouin zone center
with available experimental and theoretical results. Theagreement with experimental values is typically within 5%,
which is good for a first principles calculation.
23Figure 5
shows the displacement patterns of allowed Raman modes of
vibration of BYTO. Among Raman modes, three modes
(95 cm/C01, 398 cm/C01, and 597 cm/C01) are presumably arises
due to the descent to lower symmetry (cubic-tetragonal sym-
metry).26The highest Raman A g(847 cm/C01) mode corre-
sponds to the displacement of oxygen atom along Y-O-Taaxis, while all the cations are at rest. This frequency is
mainly determined by the Ta-O and Y-O distances and bond-
ing forces, and thus by the chemical nature of the Ta and Yoctahedral cations. In this mode, all the O atoms are moving
outward/inward, known as breathing mode.
28In B g
(602 cm/C01) mode, only in-plane O 2atoms are involved, with
one diagonally opposite pair displaced outwards (inwards)
and other pair displaced inwards (outwards), known as out-
of-phase stretching.29Here, the Ba atoms are also displaced
in opposite direction along c-axis. The A g(597 cm/C01) mode
is an octahedral stretching mode (only oxygen atoms are
vibrating), where the four in-plane O 2atoms are displaced
FIG. 4. Charge density distribution of BYTO along [100] direction.TABLE V. Calculated and experimental frequencies (cm/C01), assignment of
the Raman and IR modes of BYTO using GGA-RPBE and oscillator
strength (Debye2A˚/C02(amu)/C01) of IR mode. The phonon frequencies are
presented in increasing order.
Symmetry Cal. Exp.a,bModeOscillator strength,
Aab(m) Cal.cCal.d
Eg168 R 76.4
Eg295 (105) 104 R 109.8
Bg197 R 109.8
Ag1114 (Soft mode) R
Eg3398 (388) 384 R 390 403.7
Bg2403 R 403.9
Ag2597 (795e) 573 R 562 583
Bg3602 R 567 583.1
Ag3847 (838) 836 R 841 823
Au193 110 IR 24.58 125.3
Eu199 IR 17.11 124.7
Au2204 IR 112.54 210.4
Eu2211 IR 88.37 211
Eu3228 218 IR 26 225.3
Au3258 264 IR 0.20 270.9
Eu4260 IR 5.17 271.0
Au4546 540 IR 61.41 548.5
Eu5552 IR 59.53 548.3
aReference 24.
bReference 25.
cReference 26.
dReference 27.
eRaman mode due to local defects.TABLE IV. Components of the calculated Born effective charge tensors at the Ba, Ta, Y, and O sites of BYTO using GGA-RPBE and Mulliken charges of
Ba, Ta, Y, and O.
Z*
xx Z*
xy Z*
xz Z*
yx Z*
yy Z*
yz Z*
zx Z*
zy Z*
zz Mulliken charges jej
Ba 2.72 0.01 0.0 /C00.01 2.72 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.80 1.22
Ta 6.99 0.03 0.0 /C00.03 6.99 0.0 0.0 0.0 7.00 1.51
Y 4.81 /C00.12 0.0 0.12 4.81 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.84 1.08
O1 /C02.05 0.01 0.0 /C00.01 /C02.05 0.0 0.0 0.0 /C04.55 /C00.84
O2 /C03.42 /C01.22 0.0 /C01.25 /C03.15 0.0 0.0 0.0 /C02.08 /C00.84144104-5 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29inwards and the two apical O atoms are displaced outwards
and vice versa, known as out-of-phase stretching.29The B g
(403 cm/C01) is Raman active scissor mode, where O 2atoms
are displaced in ab-plane and Ba atoms are displaced in op-posite direction along c-axis. The E
g(398 cm/C01) mode is an
octahedral tilt mode ([110] rotation), with Ba atoms are dis-
placed in ab-plane.30The A g(114 cm/C01) mode is anti-phase
rotations of the octahedra about [001] and O 1atoms are dis-
placed opposite direction along c-axis. The B g(97 cm/C01)
mode is a scissoring mode with Ba atoms are displaced op-posite direction along c-axis. Here, O
1atoms are not dis-
placed.31In Eg (95 cm/C01) mode, diagonally opposite pair of
O2atoms is displaced opposite direction along c-axis with
O1and Ba atoms along c-axis are displaced in ab plane in
opposite direction. The vibration of E g(68 cm/C01) mode issimilar to that of last mode (95 cm/C01). All E gmodes are dou-
bly degenerate modes that involve the motion in the ab plane
of the tetragonal BYTO have the same frequency and charac-
ter for the displacement along either a or b axis.
Figure 6shows the displacement patterns of allowed IR
modes of vibration of BYTO. The E umodes are an inplane
mode; all atoms are displaced only in ab-plane, while in A u
modes, the atoms are displaced along c-axis. The IR modes
552 cm/C01, 546 cm/C01, 211 cm/C01, and 204 cm/C01(2E uand 2A u)
are octahedral stretching modes.32The 260 cm/C01, 258 cm/C01,
and 228 cm/C01modes (2E uand A u) are corresponding to octa-
hedral bending and stretching modes. The lowest frequency
modes 99 cm/C01and 93 cm/C01(Euand A u) consist of bending
vibration of octahedra along with polar motion of Ba atoms
against all atoms, known as last mode.33–35The 204 cm/C01
FIG. 5. Illustrations of the displacement patterns of the Raman modes of BYTO. Each displacement vector is obtained from the eigen vector by dividing e ach
component by the square root of the corresponding atomic mass. This figure was drawn using VESTA.17144104-6 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29and 211 cm/C01modes are known as Slater mode33with a con-
tribution from Ba displacements.
E. Dielectric properties
The electronic dielectric permittivity tensor, e1,i s
related to second derivative of the electronic energy withrespect to electric field and has been computed using linear
response method.
36For our calculations, no scissor correc-
tion has been used. Because of the symmetry properties oftetragonal crystal structure of BYTO, this tensor is diagonal
with two independent components, parallel ( e
zz1¼ejj1) and
perpendicular ( exx1¼eyy1¼e?1) to the tetragonal axis.
The calculated values of these two independent components
aree?1¼4.57 and ejj1¼4.61, indicate that BYTO is apositive uniaxial ( ezz1/exx1>1) tetragonal crystal with a
quite isotropic electric response to a homogeneous field.
Unfortunately, there are no available experimental or theo-
retical data reported in the literature for electronic dielectricpermittivity tensor of BYTO for comparison purpose.
Nevertheless, the magnitudes of the e
1components are simi-
lar to those observed in BaTiO 3(e1¼5.60),37ZrO 2
(e1¼4.805), A-La 2O3(e1¼4.924),38KNbO 3(e1¼4.69),
NaNbO 3(e1¼4.96), and ZrSiO 4(e1¼4.14).39
It is well known that DFT usually overestimates the
absolute values of e1with respect to the experimental ones.
This problem has been related to the lack of polarization de-
pendence of the quasi-local (GGA) and local (LDA)exchange-correlation functionals. In spite of this error in the
absolute value, the evolutions of the optical dielectric
FIG. 6. Illustrations of the displacement patterns of the IR modes of BYTO. Each displacement vector is obtained from the eigen vector by dividing each com-
ponent by the square root of the corresponding atomic mass. This figure was drawn using VESTA.17144104-7 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29permittivity tensor are, in general, qualitatively well
described by GGA and LDA calculations.
Since electronic dielectric tensor describes the response
of the electron gas to a homogeneous electric field if the ions
are taken as fixed at their equilibrium positions, one need to
use a model, which assimilates the solid to a system ofundamped harmonic oscillator in order to include the
response of the crystal lattice to the electric field. The static
dielectric tensor, e
0, can be therefore decomposed into an
electronic and an ionic part such as
e0
ab¼e1
abþ4p
X0X
mAabmðÞ
x2
m: (3)
The infrared oscillator strengths, A, are a second–order ten-
sor given by
AabmðÞ¼X
c;jZ/C3
acjðÞffiffiffiffiffiffi ffiMjp ecj;mðÞ"#/C3X
c;jZ/C3
bcjðÞffiffiffiffiffiffi ffiMjp ecj;mðÞ"#
;(4)
where the sums run over all atoms jand space directions !,
Mkis the mass of the jth atom, and e !(j,m) and xmare,
respectively, !jcomponent of the eigen vector and the fre-
quency of the mth mode obtain ed from the diagonalization of
the analytical part of the dynam ical matrix. The relevant com-
ponents of the oscillator strengt h tensor (parallel-parallel com-
ponent for A 2umodes and the perpendicular-perpendicular
component for E umodes) are given in Table V. According to
the symmetry of BYTO structure, e0is a diagonal tensor with
two different components e0
?¼36.58 and e0
jj¼45.51. From
Table V, it is found that the IR modes A u1(93 cm/C01)a n dA u2
(204 cm/C01) have small (large) oscillator strength (frequency)
and they almost equally contribute to e0
jj. In addition to that,
Eu1(99 cm/C01)a n dE u2(211 cm/C01) have also nearly equally
contribute to e0
?,s m a l l e rt h a nt h a to fA u1and A u2and explains
why e0
jjis slightly higher than e0
?.B yc o n t r a s tt o e1,t h e
inclusion of ionic contribution results in an anisotropic e0with
e0
jjslightly higher than e0
?. The dielectric response of BYTO
is therefore mainly ionic with slightly higher value of e0along
optical axis (c-axis) than in orthogonal plane (ab plane). Inorder to compare our results with experimental data, we aver-
age the values of e
0parallel and perpendicular to c-axis. The
average value of e0obtained by taking one third of the trace of
respective dielectric tensors ([2 e0
jjþe0
?]/3) is 39.55, close to
experimentally observed value 32.5 around T c/C24253 K.8The
calculated dielectric tensor component values are expected tobe overestimated due to underestimation of band gaps in DFT
calculation and it is attributed to the lack of polarization
dependence in the exchang e-correlation functional.
F. Elastic properties
Elastic constants characterize the ability of a material to
deform under small stresses. The elastic tensor c ijisdetermined by performing six finite distortions of the lattice
and deriving the elastic constants from strain-stress relation-
ship.38Because of the symmetry of the I4/m structure of
BYTO, these tensors have only 6 independent elements to be
determined. The mechanical stability in a tetragonal crystal
is determined by Born’s mechanical stability condition, therequirement that the crystal be stable against any homoge-
nous elastic deformation, as follows:
ðC
11/C0C12Þ>0;ðC11þC33/C02C13Þ>0
C11>0;C33>0;C44>0;C66>0;
ð2C11þC33þ2C12þ4C13Þ>09
>>=
>>;: (5)
The elastic constants of our calculation in Table VIsatisfy
all the stability conditions. In particular, C12is smaller than
C11, and C 13is smaller than the average of C 11and C 33. The
other elastic properties (bulk modulus (B) and shear modulus
(G)) can be calculated based on the calculated elastic con-
stants c ij. In the calculation of elastic moduli, there are two
different theories, Reuss theory and Voigt theory.41The bulk
BR(BV) and shear G R(GV) modulus using Reuss theory
(Voigt theory) are given as follows:
BV¼1
9c11þc22þc33 ðÞ þ2c12þc23þc31 ðÞ ðÞ ;(6)
GV¼1
15c11þc22þc33 ðÞ /C0c12þc23þc31 ðÞ ð
þ3c44þc55þc66 ðÞ ; (7)
1
BR¼s11þs22þs33 ðÞ þ2s12þs23þs31 ðÞ ; (8)
15
GR¼4s11þs22þs33 ðÞ /C04s12þs23þs31 ðÞ
þ3s44þs55þs66 ðÞ ; (9)
where c ijand s ijare the elastic stiffness coefficients and the
elastic compliance coefficients, respectively. For tetragonal
system, c 22equals c 11,c23equals c 13, and c 55equals c 44.sijis
the inverse matrix of c ijand vice versa. It is known that the
Voigt bound is obtained by the average polycrystalline mod-
uli based on the assumption of uniform strain throughout a
polycrystal and is the upper limit of the actual effective mod-uli,
42while the Reuss bound is obtained by assuming a uni-
form stress and is the lower limit of the actual effective
moduli.43The arithmetic average of Voigt and Reuss bounds
is termed as the Voigt-Reuss-Hill approximations.41Bulk B H
and shear G Hmoduli using Hill theory are given as follows:
BH¼ðBVþBRÞ=2; (10)
GH¼ðGVþGRÞ=2: (11)
TABLE VI. Calculated properties of BYTO using GGA-RPBE including elastic constants c ij’s (GPa), bulk modulus B (GPa), and shear modulus G (GPa) in
Voigt-Reuss-Hill approaches, B/G ration, Young’s modulus E (GPa), and Poisson ratio tin Hill approach.
C11 C12 C13 C33 C44 C66 GV GR GH BV BR BH BH/GH E t
315.25 185.21 54.57 333 64.2 129.72 96.23 82.40 89.32 172.47 169.48 170.97 1.91 221.86 0.26144104-8 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29If B H/GH(Pugh criterion) is lesser (bigger) than 1.75, the
material is considered brittle (ductile).44By combining me-
chanical stability restrictions with Eq. (8), one can easily
obtain1
3C12þ2C13 ðÞ <BV<1
3C11þ2C33 ðÞ . It implies
that bulk modulus B V(172.47 GPa) must be larger than the
weighted average of C 12and C 13(119.9 GPa), and smaller
than the weighted average of C 11and C 33(302.03) and also
the condition1
3C12þ2C13 ðÞ <BH<1
3C11þ2C33 ðÞ is sat-
isfied. Since BYTO possesses tetragonal symmetry with
c-axis as a high symmetry axis, the elastic stiffness constants
C11,C22,C33can be directly related to the crystallographic
a, b, and c-axis, and C 44,C55, and C 66indicates the shear
elasticity applied to the two-dimensional rectangular lattice
in the (100), (010), and (001) planes. The weakest elastic
stiffness constant C 11and C 22than C 33represents weakness
of lattice interaction along crystallographic a and b-axis.
Moreover, the C 44and C 55found to have weakest shear stiff-
ness constant, indicating the soft shearing transformationalong (100) and (010), respectively. The observed weakest
stiffness constants and shear stiffness constant are mainly
due to the out of phase Ta(Y)O
6octahedra tilting about
c-axis.
The analysis of elastic anisotropy is of great significance
for understanding the mechanical properties of crystal.Young’s modulus and Poisson ratio are important parameters
for selecting materials in engineering design. Young’s modu-
lus E and Poisson’s ratio tare obtained by the following
formulas:
40
E¼9BG=ð3BþGÞ; (12)
t¼ð3B/C02GÞ=ð2ð3BþGÞÞ: (13)
From the predicted value B Hand G Hin Table VI, the
Young’s modulus and poisson’s ratio of BYTO are 221.86
GPa and 0.26, respectively. The calculated poisson ratio
(0.26) is similar to that of other pinning materials BaZrO 3
(0.237),45Y2O3(0.257),46and BaCeO 3(0.294).47Also, the
calculated Young’s modulus (221.86 GPa) is similar to that
of BaZrO 3(22964 GPa)48and Y 2O3(198.562 GPa),46but
higher than that of BaCeO 3(109.6 GPa).47
In the present work, we use universal elastic anisotropy
index AU(AU¼5GV/GRþBV/BR/C06) for crystal with any
symmetry to estimate the anisotropic characteristic of tetrag-
onal BYTO. For isotropic materials, AU¼0. If the value of
AUdeviates from zero, the material has larger anisotropy.
For tetragonal BYTO, the predicted value is 0.856 slightly
deviates from 0, indicating the small elastic anisotropy char-
acteristics of BYTO. In addition, the anisotropy indexes ofbulk and shear moduli (A
Band A G) proposed by Chung and
Buessen49are used to estimate the anisotropic characteristics
of the system are given as
AB¼ðBV/C0BRÞ=ðBVþBRÞ; (14)
AG¼ðGV/C0GRÞ=ðGVþGRÞ; (15)
where A B¼AG¼0 represents elastic isotropic and
AB¼AG¼1 represents the maximum anisotropy. For tetrag-
onal BYTO, A Band A Gare 0.0087 and 0.0774, which are
far away from 1, suggesting again existence of a smallcompression and shear anisotropy. This is the first prediction
of elastic properties of tetragonal BYTO and yet to be veri-
fied experimentally.
Further, we also estimated the Debye temperature HD,
which is an important fundamental quantity that related to
many physical properties such as specific heat.50At low tem-
peratures, vibrational excitations arise from acoustic vibra-
tions and HDfrom elastic constants is the same as that from
specific heat measurements. Debye temperature can be esti-mated from the average sound velocity t
m:51
HD¼h
k3n
4pNAq
M/C18/C19 1
3
tm; (16)
where h is plank constant, k is Boltzmann’s constant, N Ais
Avogadro’s number, qis the density, M is the molecular
weight, and n is the number of atoms in the unit cell. The av-
erage sound velocity tmis approximately calculated from
tm¼1
32
v3
lþ1
v3
t/C18/C19/C20/C21/C01
3
; (17)
where tlandttare longitudinal and transverse sound veloc-
ities, respectively, can be obtained from Navier’s equation50
as follows:
tl¼ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
ð3Bþ4GÞ=3qp
; (18)
tt¼ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi
G=qp
: (19)
The calculated values of tl,tt, and tmare 5.64 km/s,
3.54 km/s, and 4.46 km/s, which yield a HDof 537.7 K, close
to those obtained for Ba 2MgWO 6(570 K),52SrRuO 3
(525.5 K),53BaSnO 3(522 K),54and other pinning material in
HTS BaZrO3 (544 K)55and Y 2O3(533.42 K).48
IV. CONCLUSIONS
In summary, the band structure, bonding analysis, vibra-
tional, dielectric, and elastic properties of Ba 2YTaO 6were
investigated using first principles calculations are based on
density functional theory. The calculated electronic band
structure results indicated that the compound is an insulatorwith a direct band gap of 3.50 eV. An inspection of Mulliken
population, born effective charges, and distribution of charge
density shows that this material has mixed ionic–covalentcharacter. The Raman and infrared active phonon modes are
calculated and properly assigned. The calculated and meas-
ured phonon energies are in good agreement. The electronicdielectric tensor of Ba
2TaYO 6is nearly isotropic, and the
magnitude of its components is similar to those reported in
ferroelectric materials. The static dielectric permittivity con-stants have been computed and found that the average static
dielectric constant is in good agreement with experiment. A
detailed analysis of the contribution of the different vibra-tional modes to the static dielectric constant has been per-
formed, including the computation of oscillator strength. By
contrast to electronic dielectric tensor, its static dielectrictensor is anisotropic in plane orthogonal to the optical axis of
this material. The calculation of elastic constants has been144104-9 C. Ganeshraj and P . N. Santhosh J. Appl. Phys. 116, 144104 (2014)
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128.59.222.12 On: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 15:53:29performed and satisfies the Born mechanical stability criteria
for tetragonal materials, indicates the fact that the Ba 2YTaO 6
is mechanically stable. Other elastic properties, including
bulk modulus, shear modulus, Young’s modulus, Poisson’s
ratio, and elastic anisotropy ratios are also investigated. The
calculated Poisson’s ratio is similar to that of other pinningmaterials.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge to Department of
Biotechnology, India for the financial support to procureCASTEP. We also thank to Dr. A. Gopalakrishna,
Department of Biotechnology- IIT Madras for his help to
procure and use CASTEP. The authors thankfullyacknowledge the computer resources, technical expertise, and
assistance provided by the High Performance Computing
Environment (HPCE), IIT Madras. The crystal structure andvibrational modes are drawn using VESTA software.
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1.4894819.pdf | New Products
Andreas Mandelis
Citation: Review of Scientific Instruments 85, 099501 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4894819
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4894819
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Nanoscale chemical mapping
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Bruker has released Inspire, an integrated scan-
ning probe microscopy infrared (IR) system for10-nm spatial resolution in chemical and materi-als property mapping. The novel system incorpo-rates Bruker’s proprietary PeakForce IR mode toenable nanoscale IR reflection and absorption map-ping for a wide range of applications, includingthe characterization of microphases and their in-terfaces in polymer blends, plasmons in the 2Delectron gas of graphene, and chemical heterogene-ity in complex materials and thin films. The In-spire features sensitivity down to molecular mono-layers, even on samples not amenable to standardatomic force microscopy (AFM) techniques. It isa scanning-probe-based nanoscale characterizationsystem that extends AFM into the chemical regimeby providing IR reflection and absorption imag-ing down to a spatial resolution of 10 nm usingscattering scanning near-field optical microscopy.All optics, detectors, and configurable sources andall AFM hardware and software needed for atomicresolution imaging are included in a compact, ro-
bust, integrated package. Bruker’s PeakForce IR
mode builds on the company’s PeakForce tap-ping direct force control technology. According toBruker, PeakForce IR overcomes the limitationsof contact and of TappingMode, and thus of tra-ditional near-field optical and photothermal ap-proaches to nanoscale IR imaging. It also avoidssample damage from lateral forces, retaining high-est resolution on soft polymers, and enables high-resolution imaging of polymer brushes and evenpowders. PeakForce IR includes ScanAsyst self-optimization and PeakForce quantitative nanome-chanical property mapping nanomechanics for in-stantly correlated nanomechanical data. The com-prehensive set of optional modes includes Peak-Force tunneling AFM (TUNA), which enables
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conductivity mapping on samples not amenable to
contact mode AFM, and PeakForce Kelvin probeforce microscopy (KPFM), which employs FM de-tection for high spatial resolution work functionmapping while avoiding the mechanical cross-talkaffecting single-pass FM-KPFM.— Bruker Corpo-
ration, 40 Manning Road, Billerica, MA 01821.(978-663-3660) http://www.bruker.com
DC hypoid right-angle
gearmotor
Bison Gear and Engineering has launched a perma-
nent magnet DC brushed motor version of its Pow-erSTAR hypoid right-angle product line. The newgearmotor offers the gearing advantages of the ACmotor PowerSTAR series in addition to easy vari-able speed control and high start-up torque. TheDC motor PowerSTAR series features permanentmagnet, totally enclosed, non-ventilated DC mo-tors with dynamically balanced armatures, tang-type diamond turned commentators, high-grade ce-ramic magnets, and oversized replaceable brushes.The motors are built to Class F insulation stan-dards. Each motor series will feature different volt-age options to align with specific applications:720 and 725 series—12, 24, 90, 130, and 180 Vand 730 series—24, 90, 130, and 180 V . Likethe AC motor version, the DC PowerSTAR comesequipped with advanced hypoid gearing technol-ogy that, according to the company, provides upto 4×the efficiency of a typical worm gearmo-
tor and mounting configurations for both impe-rial and metric equipment. The DC motor versionis suitable for remote or battery powered applica-tions and equipment requiring high start-up torqueor variable speed control, such as gate operators,
pumping stations, and food service conveyors.—
Bison Gear and Engineering, 3850 Ohio Avenue,St. Charles, IL 60174. (800-282-4766 or 630-377-4327) http://www.bisongear.com
Rotational rheometer
ATS RheoSystems, a division of the Cannon In-
strument Company, has introduced the Black Pearlcontrolled shear rate rotational rheometer. It isrugged, capable of both steady shear and yieldstress testing, and has a compact footprint. De-signed for performing routine quality control testsand complex research and development evalua-tions, the Black Pearl rheometer is suitable for in-vestigating the mixing, stirring, and process flowcharacteristics of fluid systems. It comes stan-dard with built-in Peltier temperature control forall measuring systems. Cone and plate, parallelplate, and concentric cylinder measuring systemsare included. The measuring systems employ novel“quick capture” mounting technology; the gap-
ping mechanism is accurate and user adjustable.The Black Pearl is interfaced and controlled us-ing Windows-based software. Featuring real-timedisplay of test values, automated program con-trol, and “test definition” windows to rapidly cre-ate multiple step experiments, it provides instan-taneous viscosity flow curves. Interactive graph-ing allows full control over displayed, printed,and plotted variables. User-enterable data sets anddata comparison are available with simple dataexportation through Windows Clipboard. The de-vice is CE certified, denoting that it meets therequirements of the applicable European Uniondirectives.— ATS RheoSystems, 231 Crosswicks
Road, Bordentown, NJ 08505. (609-298-2522)http://www.atsrheosystems.com
Helium-3 cryostat
The ultra-low temperature (ULT) group of JanisResearch has developed an enhanced top-loadinghelium-3 cryostat with the sample in a UHV en-vironment. The model HE-3-TLSUHV-STM ULTsystem is optimized for atomic resolution scan-ning tunneling microscope (STM) measurementsand can be integrated with a commercially sup-plied or user-built STM. A central UHV tube (32mm diameter or larger) and gate valve providetop-loading access to the low-temperature, high-magnetic-field region for sample and tip exchange.Vertical, horizontal, and 2D/3D vector field super-conducting magnets are available and fully inte-grated. ULT STM systems are frequently used toinvestigate the electronic and magnetic propertiesof materials. Applications include quantum com-puting and information, electronics, and nanoscale
manufacturing. A ULT STM system can be used
to observe or manipulate the topography and elec-tronic structures of atoms, islands, molecules, andsurfaces. Techniques such as magnetic force mi-croscopy and spin-polarized STM can be used toinvestigate a variety of materials in conjunctionwith variable temperature and magnetic field con-ditions. Typical materials studied include metals,semiconductors, thin films, and carbons such asgraphene and carbon nanotubes. The Janis HE-3-TLSUHV-STM provides an operating time of>80 h at a base temperature of <300 mK; longer
operating times are also possible with the use ofadditional He-3 gas. Quiet operation is assuredthrough proprietary acoustic noise reduction fea-tures inside the 1 K pot and the vibration-reducingmechanical support structure on the He-3 pot. For
further vibration reduction, it is possible to oper-ate the system without pumping on the 1 K pot.The system includes a mechanical heat switch forrapid precooling and cooled 4 K and 1.5 K radia-tion shutters for maximum hold time and minimumbase temperature. Other available features includea sliding seal, low- and high-frequency wiring, andpre-installed optical fibers.— Janis Research Com-
pany, LLC, 225 Wildwood Avenue, Woburn, MA01801. (781-491-0888) http://www.janis.com
NEW DETECTORS,
MEASUREMENTS, ANDMATERIALS
Two-component epoxy
Master Bond EP112LS is a two-part epoxy suit-
able for impregnation, potting, encapsulation, seal-ing, and coating applications, particularly in theaerospace and optoelectronics industries. Opticallyclear, EP112LS features reliable non-yellowingproperties and has a refractive index of 1.55. Theelectrically insulative system is resistant to chemi-cals including water, oils, fuels, acids, and bases.It is serviceable over the temperature range of
−60
◦Ft o+450◦F, has a working life exceed-
ing two to three days at room temperature, andrequires oven curing. Post curing will enhance itsproperties. With a mixed viscosity of 50–200 cps,EP112LS bonds well to various substrates, in-cluding metals, composites, glass, ceramics, andmany rubbers and plastics. Bonds feature a tensilestrength, compressive strength, and tensile mod-ulus of 11 000, 20 000, and 400 000 psi at room
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 05:16:38099501-3 Andreas Mandelis Rev.S c i .I n s t r um.85, 099501 (2014)
temperature, respectively. EP112LS has high di-
mensional stability and a shelf life of one yearin original, unopened containers. It is availablein half-pint, pint, quart, gallon, and five-galloncontainer kits.— Master Bond, Inc., 154 Hobart
Street, Hackensack, NJ 07601. (201-343-8983)http://www.masterbond.com
High-energy x-ray and neutron
CMOS detector
The latest addition to Andor’s scientific com-
plementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (sCMOS)Zyla family, the Zyla 5.5 HF fiber-optic coupledsCMOS, is the company’s fastest and highest-resolution platform for high-energy x-ray and neu-
tron “indirect” detection. It offers a 5.5-megapixel
array with a 6.5- μm pixel, 100 frames/s sus-
tained acquisition rate, and ultra-low 1.2 e
−read-
out noise. The fiber optic design maximizes pho-ton throughput and ensures high image fidelityrelay from the scintillator. A modular architec-ture allows a wide range of scintillators, fiber-optic tapers, and beryllium filters to be coupled to-gether. Therefore the Zyla HF configuration canbe adjusted to match the requirements of appli-cations such as x-ray materials imaging, noninva-sive x-ray bio- and medical imaging, or neutrontomography.— Andor Technology USA, 425 Sulli-
van Avenue, Suite 3, South Windsor, CT 06074.(860-290-9211) http://www.andor.com
Power supplies for precision
measurement
According to Keithley Instruments, its new series
2280S programmable DC power supplies are, un-like conventional power supplies, also sensitivemeasurement instruments. They have the speedand dynamic range needed to measure the standby
current loads and load current pulses produced
by battery-powered wireless, medical, and in-dustrial devices. Applications include characteriz-ing wireless sensors, radio-frequency identificationtags, intrinsically safe devices, low-power semi-conductor devices, and consumer electronics. Se-ries 2280S supplies can output up to 192 W oflow-noise, linear-regulated DC power. The model2280S-32-6 can output up to 32 V at up to 6 A,and the model 2280S-60-3 can output up to 60 Vat up to 3.2 A. For users who want to utilize thesame model of instrument for research, design, andproduction test, series 2280S provides a balanceof sourcing and measurement capabilities at eco-nomical cost. The power supplies can make volt-age and current readback measurements with up to6
1
2digits of resolution for maximum precision or
31
2digits for greater speed. V oltage output mea-
surements can be resolved down to 100 μVa n d
load currents from 100 nA to 6A can be accuratelymonitored. Four load current measurement ranges(10 A, 1 A, 100 mA, and 10 mA) support measur-ing full load currents, standby mode currents, andsmall sleep mode changes precisely. For monitor-ing fast-changing and pulse-like load currents, se-ries 2280S supplies can capture dynamic load cur-rents as short as 140 μs to observe load currents in
all operating modes to determine the device’s to-tal power consumption. Each state of a power-upload sequence and a power-down sequence can bemeasured. Measurements of 2500 readings/s makeit possible to characterize and test the current drawat each of the start-up states. Testers of devices orsystems with high in-rush currents can program thevoltage output’s rise time to slow the voltage rampand avoid voltage overshoot, which could poten-tially damage the device under test. V oltage falltime is also programmable to prevent a fast rampdown of the output voltage. A bright, 4.3 in. thinfilm transistor screen displays a large amount ofinformation. To reduce the chance of test errors,source settings and other data appear next to themeasurement readings. Soft-key buttons and a nav-
igation wheel provide an intuitive user interface
with shallow, easy-to-navigate menus. The icon-based main menu simplifies configuring tests. Thepower supplies’ graphing function makes it easyto monitor the stability of the load current, cap-ture and display a dynamic load current, or viewa start-up or turn-off load current. The power sup-plies take measurements quickly, store up to 2500measurement points, and compute statistics on thestored data. Statistical calculation options includeaverage, maximum, minimum, peak-to-peak, andstandard deviation. The built-in “list mode” func-tion simplifies testing a design over its operatingvoltage range automatically or studying how thedesign responds to DC output changes. Up to ninelists of sequenced voltage levels can be created andsaved with up to 99 distinct voltages in each list. Asingle trigger automatically executes the list onceor multiple times. To minimize test times in au-tomated systems, an external trigger input allowsfor hardware synchronization and control by othersystem instruments. Series 2280S power suppliesfeature KickStart instrument start-up software thatpermits automated acquisition of large amountsof data. General purpose interface bus, universal
serial bus (USB), and LXI LAN interfaces offer
additional options for programming and control-
ling series 2280S supplies. The LXI core compli-ant LAN interface and built-in web page supportremote control and monitoring, so users can al-ways access the power supply and view measure-ments. A choice of front or rear panel terminals en-hances connection flexibility. For maximum volt-age accuracy, rear panel four-wire remote sensingensures that the output voltage programmed is thelevel actually applied to the load. Series 2280S sup-plies are suitable for both benchtop and automatedtesting.— Keithley Instruments, Inc., 28775 Aurora
Road, Cleveland, OH 44139-1891. (888-534-8453or 440-248-0400) http://www.keithley.com
NEW FACILITIES AND
HARDWARE
Processor for DAQ systems
A processor board for ADwin-Pro-II data acqui-
sition and control systems recently introduced byCAS DataLoggers and Jager has a 64-bit floating-point unit (FPU) for math co-processing. The Pro-CPU-T12 processor module offers real-time com-puting and is largely software-compatible to pre-vious versions. The Pro-II system provides com-plex applications with a high data rate while the
fast processor allows an intelligent pre-selection
of relevant data, mathematical functions, or digitalchannel filtering. According to the company, it cansatisfy demanding applications including physicsexperiments, vibration monitoring, failure analy-sis, and high-speed data acquisition. With Ether-net support allowing for high-speed data transfer,ADwin’s Pro-CPU-T12 module enables stan-dalone data recording in applications where thereis no personal computer (PC) or connection toone. The processor module – the ADwin CPU –is the center of the ADwin-Pro II system. It exe-cutes the ADbasic programming instructions andaccesses the inputs, outputs, and interfaces of theother modules. The Pro-CPU-T12 processor of-fers a 1 GHz clock, 1 GB main memory for stor-ing code and data, and a 1 Gb Ethernet inter-face for communication to the PC. These featuresmake the 64-bit double-precision FPU 5 ×faster
than its predecessor module, the CPU-T11. Thenew module has a trigger input and two digital in-put/outputs (I/Os). The board can run C code em-bedded into ADbasic code. The module enablesstandalone operation without a PC using the Boot-loader. Users can choose either USB or a serial ad-
vanced technology attachment (SATA) storage de-
vice on the module: the SATA device can either beintegrated into the module or removable. Accessto the memory is provided via processor moduleor via network file system, server message block,or file transfer protocol from the Ethernet network.ADwin data acquisition systems feature tightly-coupled analog and digital inputs along with coun-ters to provide users’ applications with very low-latency operation. The ADwin-Pro II series uses amodular form factor with plug-in modules to al-low up to 480 analog or digital inputs in a singlechassis, a 300-MHz digital signal processor, andan Ethernet communications interface. Other I/Ooptions include CANbus, SSI, Profibus/Fieldbus,RS-232/485, and signal conditioner modules.—
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CAS DataLoggers, Inc., 12628 Chillicothe Road,
Chesterland, OH 44026. (800-956-4437 or 440-729-2570) http://www.dataloggerinc.com
HD/SD USB audio/video
encoder
Sensoray has added the model 2263S USB au-
dio/video encoder to its line of broadcast grade,low-latency, real-time video solutions. Support-ing multiple analog and digital input formats, themodel 2263S captures high definition (HD) orstandard-definition (SD) video and simultaneouslysends a compressed and an uncompressed (pre-view) stream to the host. Supported video inputsinclude digital visual interface (DVI), component(with a component to DVI-I adapter, not included),and composite. Audio is optionally captured from
analog line input, compressed and multiplexed into
transport stream. The device is suitable for the cap-ture of multiple video sources, as for example invideo pipeline inspection, radar and sonar process-ing, remote video surveillance, and traffic moni-toring. The model 2263S is designed as a USBvideo class device, which means it does not re-quire a device-specific driver. It is controlled usinga video application program interface (DirectShowor Video4Linux). Sensoray provides software de-velopment kits that speed up application develop-ment for several operating systems. A demo ap-plication illustrates the encoder’s capabilities andserves as a starting point for custom development.The device implements efficient H.264 video com-pression. The resulting data is output as a mov-ing picture experts group transport stream (MPEG-TS) or in MP4 or audio video interleave (A VI) fileformats. Audio compression is performed usinglow-complexity advanced audio coding. Hardwaretimestamps used for multiplexing help keep audioand video data in sync. Motion joint photographicexperts group (MJPEG) compression is supportedfor snapshots and A VI streams.— Sensoray, 7313
Southwest Tech Center Drive, Tigard, OR 97223.(503-684-8005) http://www.sensoray.com
NEW LITERATURE AND
SOFTWARE
Supercontinuum laser
software
PicoQuant has released a new version of Easy-
Tau software for its FluoTime 300, an automatedfluorescence lifetime spectrometer with a steady-state option. The EasyTau software now supportsmeasurements with an integrating sphere and thecompany’s Solea supercontinuum laser. The in-tegrating sphere can reproduce published litera-ture data of selected quantum yield standards suchas Rhodamin 6G, Coumarin 153, and Ru(bpy)3.A dedicated measurement wizard in EasyTau al-lows even untrained users to make precise quan-
tum yield measurements in a few minutes. The
Solea laser can now also be directly controlledfrom the software. The laser’s wavelength tun-ability, variable repetition rates, and short pulsewidths allow excitation scans and fluorescence life-time measurements to be performed over a broadspectral and temporal range using only a sin-gle laser.— PicoQuant GmbH, Rudower Chaussee
29, 12489 Berlin, Germany. (49-(0)30-6392-6942)http://www.picoquant.com
Scientific graphics software
According to Golden Software, its Grapher 11 isan accurate, efficient 2D and 3D graphing programthat meets graphing needs from simple to complex.Designed primarily for scientists, engineers, and
business professionals, and featuring an interfaceclaimed to be easy to use, Grapher converts datainto more than 60 fully customizable graph types.It allows users to create publication-quality graphsquickly and easily. Among the new features in thisrelease of Grapher are the three new graph types:polar vector plots, ternary class scatter plots, and2D and 3D doughnut plots. Polar vector plots con-nect two points on a polar coordinate system withan arrow. The ternary class scatter plot creates athree system ternary diagram with symbols wherethe symbols change based on a fourth variable. The2D and 3D doughnut plots create graphs similar toa pie chart, but with a hole in the center. 2D dough-nut plots can be stacked to compare variables asthey change. A new axis linking feature allows axesto be linked so that changes only need to be madeto one axis. All linked axes automatically updatewhen the master controlling axis changes. Link-ing works for axis length, scale, limits, tick markspacing, and position. The limits can be set to a
mathematical equation, allowing axes with differ-
ent units to be linked. Another feature improved inGrapher 11 is the class scatter plots. Classes cannow be based on text or numbers, allowing eas-ier class scatter plots to be created from any data.In addition, the number of classes has increased to300 for better representation of all data. Grapher 11operates in a Microsoft Windows environment withWindows XP, Vista, 7, or 8.— Golden Software,
Inc., 809 14th Street, Golden, CO 80401-1866.(303-279-1021) http://www.GoldenSoftware.com
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129.174.21.5 On: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 05:16:38 |
1.4897241.pdf | High-pressure structural and elastic properties of Tl2O3
O. Gomis, D. Santamaría-Pérez, J. Ruiz-Fuertes, J. A. Sans, R. Vilaplana, H. M. Ortiz, B. García-Domene, F. J.
Manjón, D. Errandonea, P. Rodríguez-Hernández, A. Muñoz, and M. Mollar
Citation: Journal of Applied Physics 116, 133521 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897241
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897241
View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/116/13?ver=pdfcov
Published by the AIP Publishing
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55High-pressure structural and elastic properties of Tl 2O3
O. Gomis,1,a)D. Santamar /C19ıa-P/C19erez,2,3J. Ruiz-Fuertes,2,4J. A. Sans,5R. Vilaplana,1
H. M. Ortiz,5,6,b)B. Garc /C19ıa-Domene,2F . J. Manj /C19on,5D. Errandonea,2
P . Rodr /C19ıguez-Hern /C19andez,7A. Mu ~noz,7and M. Mollar5
1Centro de Tecnolog /C19ıas F /C19ısicas, MALTA Consolider Team, Universitat Polite `cnica de Vale `ncia,
46022 Vale `ncia, Spain
2Departamento de F /C19ısica Aplicada-ICMUV, MALTA Consolider Team, Universidad de Valencia,
Edificio de Investigaci /C19on, C/Dr. Moliner 50, 46100 Burjassot, Spain
3Earth Sciences Department, University College London, Gower Street, WC1E 6BT London, United kingdom
4Geowissenschaften, Goethe-Universit €at, Altenh €oferallee 1, 60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
5Instituto de Dise ~no para la Fabricaci /C19on y Producci /C19on Automatizada, MALTA Consolider Team, Universitat
Polite `cnica de Vale `ncia, 46022 Vale `ncia, Spain
6CINVESTAV-Departamento de Nanociencia y Nanotecnolog /C19ıa, Unidad Quer /C19etaro, 76230 Quer /C19etaro, Mexico
7Departamento de F /C19ısica, Instituto de Materiales y Nanotecnolog /C19ıa, MALTA Consolider Team,
Universidad de La Laguna, 38205 La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain
(Received 23 July 2014; accepted 24 September 2014; published online 7 October 2014)
The structural properties of Thallium (III) oxide (Tl 2O3) have been studied both experimentally
and theoretically under compression at room temperature. X-ray powder diffraction measurements
up to 37.7 GPa have been complemented with ab initio total-energy calculations. The equation of
state of Tl 2O3has been determined and compared to related compounds. It has been found experi-
mentally that Tl 2O3remains in its initial cubic bixbyite-type structure up to 22.0 GPa. At this pres-
sure, the onset of amorphization is observed, being the sample fully amorphous at 25.2 GPa. The
sample retains the amorphous state after pressure release. To understand the pressure-inducedamorphization process, we have studied theoretically the possible high-pressure phases of Tl
2O3.
Although a phase transition is theoretically predicted at 5.8 GPa to the orthorhombic Rh 2O3-II-type
structure and at 24.2 GPa to the orthorhombic a-Gd 2S3-type structure, neither of these phases were
observed experimentally, probably due to the hindrance of the pressure-driven phase transitions at
room temperature. The theoretical study of the elastic behavior of the cubic bixbyite-type structure
at high-pressure shows that amorphization above 22 GPa at room temperature might be caused bythe mechanical instability of the cubic bixbyite-type structure which is theoretically predicted
above 23.5 GPa.
VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC .[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4897241 ]
I. INTRODUCTION
Thallium (III) oxide (Tl 2O3) is a sesquioxide which
occurs naturally as a rare mineral named avicennite.1Tl2O3
crystallizes at ambient conditions in the body-centered cubicbixbyite-type structure with space group (S.G.) Ia-3, No.206, Z ¼16.
2–4Bixbyite-type Tl 2O3is isomorphic to the
cubic structure of In 2O3and several rare-earth sesquioxides.
Apart from the bixbyite structure, the corundum-type struc-ture has been reported to be synthesized at high pressures
and high temperatures.
5
Tl2O3can be applied in many technological areas.6In
particular, it has been used as an electrode in high-efficiency
solar cells due to its very low resistivity.7,8It has also been
studied for optical communication applications becauseof its strong reflectance in the near infrared region
(1300–1500 nm);
9however, its most promising application is
in thallium oxide-based high-temperature superconductors.10
Despite its interesting technological applications, Tl 2O3
is one of the less studied sesquioxides probably because ofthe poisonous nature of thallium. In particular, contact with
moisture and acids may form poisonous soluble thalliumcompounds, like thallium acetate, whose contact with skin
should be avoided.
11Consequently, many properties of Tl 2O3
are unknown. In particular, it was long thought that this com-
pound behaves as a metallic conductor;12–14however, it has
been recently shown that it is a degenerate n-type semicon-
ductor.15This result is in good agreement with transport
measurements which suggest that n-type conductivity comes
from oxygen deficiency in the crystalline lattice.13,16–18It is
also in good agreement with optical measurements providing
a band gap between 1.40 and 2.75 eV.9,12,16
Very little is known about the structural and mechanical
properties of Tl 2O3. The bulk moduli of both bixbyite-type
and corundum-type structures are unknown. In this context,
studies of Tl 2O3under compression could help in under-
standing its physical properties. In this work, we report an
experimental and theoretical study of bixbyite-type Tl 2O3at
room temperature and high-pressure (HP) by means of angledispersive X-ray diffraction (ADXRD) measurements and ab
initio calculations. Technical aspects of the experiments and
calculations are described in Secs. IIandIII, respectively.
Results are presented and discussed in Sec. IVand conclu-
sions summarized in Sec. V.a)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail:
osgohi@fis.upv.es
b)On leave from Departamento de F /C19ısica, Universidad Distrital “Francisco
Jos/C19e de Caldas,” 110311 Bogot /C19a, Colombia.
0021-8979/2014/116(13)/133521/9/$30.00 VC2014 AIP Publishing LLC 116, 133521-1JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55II. EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
Commercial Tl 2O3powder with 99.99% purity (Sigma-
Aldrich) was crushed in a mortar with a pestle to obtain a
micron-sized powder. XRD measurements performed at 1atm and room temperature with a Rigaku Ultima IV diffrac-
tometer (Cu K
aradiation) confirmed the bixbyite-type struc-
ture of Tl 2O3.
HP-ADXRD experiments at room temperature up to
37.7 GPa were carried out at beamline I15 of the Diamond
Light Source using a monochromatic X-ray beam(k¼0.4246 A ˚) and a membrane-type diamond-anvil cell
(DAC). Tl
2O3powder was loaded in a 150– lm diameter
hole of an inconel gasket in a DAC with diamond-culet sizes
of 350 lm. A 16:3:1 methanol-ethanol-water mixture was
used as pressure-transmitting medium. A strip of gold wasplaced inside the gasket and used as the pressure sensor.
Pressure was determined using the gold equation of state
(EOS): B
0¼167.5 GPa, and B0’¼5.79, whose parameters
are obtained with a third-order Birch-Murnaghan equation.19
The X-ray beam was focused down to 30 /C230lm2using
Kickpatrick-Baez mirrors. A pinhole placed before the sam-ple position was used as a clean-up aperture for filtering out
the tail of the X-ray beam. The images were collected using
a MAR345 image plate located at 350 mm from the sample.The diffraction patterns were integrated as a function of 2 h
using FIT2D in order to give conventional, one-dimensional
diffraction profiles.
20The indexing and refinement of the
powder diffraction patterns were performed using the
Unitcell,21POWDERCELL,22and GSAS23,24program
packages.
III. THEORETICAL CALCULATIONS
We have performed ab initio total-energy calculations
within the density functional theory (DFT)25using the plane-
wave method and the pseudopotential theory with the
Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP).26We have
used the projector-augmented wave scheme (PAW)27imple-
mented in this package to take into account the full nodal
character of the all-electron charge density in the core
region. Basis set, including plane waves up to an energy cut-off of 520 eV were used in order to achieve highly converged
results and accurate description of the electronic properties.
The exchange-correlation energy was described with thegeneralized gradient approximation (GGA) with the PBEsol
prescription.
28A dense special k-points sampling for the
Brillouin zone (BZ) integration was performed in order toobtain very well-converged energies and forces. At each
selected volume, the structures were fully relaxed to their
equilibrium configuration through the calculation of theforces on atoms and the stress tensor. This allows obtaining
the relaxed structures at the theoretical pressures defined by
the calculated stress. In the relaxed equilibrium configura-tions, the forces on the atoms are less than 0.006 eV/A ˚, and
deviations of the stress tensor from a diagonal hydrostatic
form are less than 1 kbar (0.1 GPa). The application of DFT-based total-energy calculations to the study of semiconductor
properties under HP has been reviewed in Ref. 29, showingthat the phase stability, electronic, and dynamical properties
of compounds under pressure are well described by DFT.
Ab initio calculations allow the study of the mechanical
properties of materials. The elastic constants describe the
mechanical properties of a material in the region of small
deformations, where the stress-strain relations are still linear.The elastic constants can be obtained by computing the mac-
roscopic stress for a small strain with the use of the stress
theorem.
30Alternatively, the macroscopic stress can be also
calculated using density functional perturbation theory
(DFPT).31In the present work, we perform the evaluation of
the elastic constants of Tl 2O3with the use of the DFT as
implemented in the VASP package.32The ground state and
fully relaxed structures were strained in different directions
according to their symmetry.32The total-energy variations
were evaluated according to a Taylor expansion for the total
energy with respect to the applied strain.33Due to this fact, it
is important to check that the strain used in the calculationsguarantees the harmonic behavior. This procedure allows us
to obtain the C
ijelastic constants in the Voigt notation. The
number of independent elastic constants is reduced by crys-talline symmetry.
34
IV. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A. X-ray diffraction and structural properties
The crystalline structure of cubic bixbyite-type Tl 2O3
(see Fig. 1) has two different types of six-fold-coordinated
thallium atoms. Thallium located at the 8 bWyckoff site has
slightly distorted octahedral coordination whilst thallium
located at 24 dWyckoff site has distorted trigonal prismatic
coordination. Finally, oxygen atoms occupy 48 eWyckoff
sites. From XRD measurements carried out at 1 atm and
room temperature outside the DAC, we have made aRietveld refinement of the lattice parameter and relative
FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the crystalline structure of cubic
bixbyite-type Tl 2O3. The unit-cell and atomic bonds are shown. Oxygen cor-
responds to small (red) atoms while Tl(1) located at 8 band Tl(2) located at
24dcorrespond to light blue and dark blue atoms, respectively.133521-2 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55atomic positions of the bixbyite-type structure. The refine-
ment R-values are Rp¼7.7% and Rwp¼10.2%. These results
(summarized in Table I) are in quite a good agreement with
those of Refs. 2–4, and with our calculations, all of them
included in Table Ifor comparison.
Figure 2shows ADXRD patterns of Tl 2O3up to
37.7 GPa. Diffractograms up to 22 GPa can be indexed with
the cubic bixbyite-type Tl 2O3structure. The main difference
between diffraction patterns up to 22 GPa is the shift ofBragg peaks to higher angles with pressure as the result of a
unit-cell volume decrease. A typical peak broadening of
XRD peaks
35is detectable above 11 GPa. In this respect,
before continuing the discussion of the results, we would
like to comment on possible non-hydrostatic effects in our
experiments. We have checked that non-hydrostatic condi-tions above 11 GPa do not induce a tetragonal or rhombohe-
dral distortion of the cubic structure. As an example, the
Rietveld refinement of the powder XRD pattern measured at18.2 GPa is included in Fig. 2. The refined parameters were:
the scale factor, phase fractions, lattice parameters, profile
coefficients, xfractional atomic coordinate of the Tl(2) atom,
the overall displacement factor, and the background. The
high quality of the Rietveld refinement shows that Tl
2O3
remains in the cubic phase at 18.2 GPa; i.e., just before the
onset of the amorphization process, as will be explained
below. We note that the broadening of XRD peaks above
11 GPa could be due to the loss of quasi-hydrostatic condi-tions of the pressure-transmitting medium
36–38or to local
distortions caused by the appearance of defects which could
be precursors of the pressure-induced amorphization (PIA)that will be commented later on.
From the refinement of the diffraction patterns up to
22 GPa, we obtained the pressure dependence of the Tl
2O3
lattice parameter. In the Rietveld refinement, the oxygen
atomic coordinates were supposed not to vary with pressure
due to its small X-ray scattering cross section in comparisonto that of thallium atom. Rietveld refinements carried out on
HP-ADXRD data for Tl
2O3show that the xfractional atomic
coordinate of the Tl(2) atom up to 22 GPa was similar to thatat 1 atm within experimental uncertainty. This result agreeswith the weak pressure dependence of this atomic parameter
obtained from our theoretical calculations (according to sim-
ulations, the xfractional atomic coordinate of Tl(2) in Tl
2O3
TABLE I. Structural parameters of bixbyite-type Tl 2O3at 1 atm.
X-ray diffractionaAb initio PBEsolbNeutron diffractioncX-ray diffractiondNeutron diffractione
a(A˚) 10.5390(4) 10.6074 10.543 10.5344(3) 10.5363
Tl(1) site: 8 bx ¼0.25 x¼0.25 x¼0.25 x¼0.25 x¼0.25
y¼0.25 y¼0.25 y¼0.25 y¼0.25 y¼0.25
z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25
Tl(2) site: 24 dx ¼0.969(1) x¼0.9667 x¼0.971(4) x¼0.96815(22) x¼0.9657(8)
y¼0 y¼0 y¼0 y¼0 y¼0
z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25 z¼0.25
O site: 48 ex ¼0.388(5) x¼0.3829 x¼0.397(5) x¼0.3824(17) x¼0.3897(10)
y¼0.394(3) y¼0.3885 y¼0.377(6) y¼0.3905(15) y¼0.3982(11)
z¼0.148(3) z¼0.1540 z¼0.157(5) z¼0.1542(18) z¼0.1431(12)
aOur XRD measurements.
bOur calculations.
cReference 2.
dReference 3.
eReferernce 4.FIG. 2. Room temperature XRD patterns of Tl 2O3at selected pressures. The
background has not been subtracted. The diffractogram measured at
18.2 GPa is shown as empty circles. The calculated and difference XRD pat-
terns at 18.2 GPa obtained from a Rietveld refinement are plotted with solid
lines. The residuals at 18.2 GPa are Rp¼2.3% and Rwp¼3.0%. Bragg
reflections from Tl 2O3and gold are indicated with vertical ticks at 2.1 and
18.2 GPa. Gold reflections are marked with plus ( þ) symbols. The XRD
pattern at 1 atm after releasing pressure is shown at the top.133521-3 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55varies from 0.9667 at 0 GPa to 0.9664 at 22 GPa). The pres-
sure evolution of the unit-cell volume of Tl 2O3is plotted in
Fig. 3. We have fitted these data with second-order Birch-
Murnaghan (BM2) and third-order Birch-Murnaghan (BM3)
EOSs.39Weights derived from the experimental uncertain-
ties in both pressure and volume were assigned to each datapoint in both fits. The fits were carried out with the EoSFit
software (v.5.2).
40All the experimental and theoretical val-
ues at zero pressure for the volume, V0, bulk modulus, B0,
and its first-pressure derivative, B0’, are summarized in
Table II. Our experimental values are in relatively good
agreement with our calculated values. For the case of our ex-perimental data, the obtained value for the weighted chi-
squared, v
2
w, in the BM2 and BM3 EOS fits is 6.2 and 6.7;
respectively. We note that, the refinement of the B0’ parame-
ter in the BM3 EOS fit does not improve the fit of the data
because the v2
wincreases to a value of 6.7 and the standard
deviation of B0increases with respect to that obtained with
the BM2 EOS, thus indicating that an expansion of the EOS
to third order is not required to fit the data. These results
show that the second-order equation of state is an adequaterepresentation of the volume-pressure data of Tl
2O3. For
comparison purposes, the EOS parameters for isostructural
In2O3are also included in Table II.41–43It can be highlightedthat the experimental value for B0in Tl 2O3(B0¼156(3)
GPa) is approximately 15% smaller than that obtained for
In2O3(B0¼184(10) GPa).43In this comparison, we consid-
ered the EOS parameters obtained with a BM2 EOS with B0’
fixed to 4 because the B0andB0’ parameters are strongly
correlated.44The lower value of B0for cubic Tl 2O3when
compared to that of In 2O3is consistent with the decrease of
the bulk modulus of bixbyite-type sesquioxides when the
ionic radius of the Acation increases in the series A¼In, Tl.
We note that bixbyite-type sesquioxides like In 2O3and
Tl2O3are much less compressible than sesquioxides of late
group-15 elements in the Periodic Table like cubic a-Sb 2O3
(S.G.: Fd–3m, No. 227, Z ¼16)45and monoclinic a-Bi2O3
(S.G.: P21/c, No. 14, Z ¼4).46
Figure 2shows a drastic decrease of the intensity of the
Bragg reflections of cubic Tl 2O3between 18.2 and 22 GPa.
In addition, at 25.2 GPa, all the sharp crystalline peaks of
cubic Tl 2O3disappear and two broad peaks appear at 8.75/C14
and 11.53/C14(noted with asterisk marks). These two peaks
remain up to 37.7 GPa, the maximum pressure achieved in
our experiment and exhibit a small shift to higher anglesbetween 25.2 and 37.7 GPa. These results can be interpreted
as an amorphization of Tl
2O3above 22.0 GPa which is
already completed at 25.2 GPa and will be discussed inSec. IV B .
B. Amorphization
It is commonly accepted that PIA in crystalline solids
may occur if the crystalline structure becomes mechanical ordynamically unstable at a certain pressure; i.e., if mechanical
stability criteria are violated or if the phonon dispersion
curves contain imaginary frequencies for phonon modes at agiven pressure.
47PIA due to these instabilities usually occurs
when the crystalline solid cannot undergo a phase transition
to a HP crystalline phase at a smaller pressure than that ofamorphization. The hindrance of the pressure-driven phase
transition between two crystalline phases is usually due to
the presence of kinetic barriers between the low- and high-pressure structures. This barrier cannot be overcome if the
temperature is not high enough and consequently the transi-
tion is frustrated at low temperatures. Therefore, it is worthto investigate which could be the frustrated HP phase of
Tl
2O3and at which pressure the phase transition is predicted
to occur.
In order to look for candidates of HP phases of Tl 2O3,
we have performed total-energy calculations for Tl 2O3with
the structures observed experimentally in In 2O3at different
pressures and temperatures.48–52They include bixbyite-type
(Ia–3), corundum-type (S.G.: R–3c, No. 167, Z ¼6), ortho-
rhombic Rh 2O3-II-type (S.G.: Pbcn , No. 60, Z ¼4), and
orthorhombic a-Gd 2S3-type (S.G.: Pnma , No. 62, Z ¼4)
structures. We have also considered in our calculations the
orthorhombic Rh 2O3-III-type structure (S.G. Pbca , No. 61,
Z¼8), which is a high-temperature and low-pressure form
of Rh 2O3,53and two of the structures commonly found in
rare-earth sesquioxides (RES) under different pressure andtemperature conditions,
54–58like the monoclinic B-RES
(S.G.: C2/m, No. 12, Z ¼6) and trigonal A-RES (S.G.FIG. 3. Evolution of the unit-cell volume with pressure. Symbols refer to ex-
perimental data. Error bars are smaller than symbol size. Red dashed line
and blue dotted line represent the fit of experimental data with a BM2 andBM3 EOS; respectively. Theoretical results are plotted with solid line.
TABLE II. Experimental (Exp.) and theoretical (Th.) EOS parameters for
cubic bixbyite-type Tl 2O3at zero pressure. Last column indicates the EOS
type used (BM2 ¼Birch-Murnaghan of 2ndorder, BM3 ¼Birch-Murnaghan
of 3rdorder). Results for isostructural In 2O3are included for comparison.
Compound V0(A˚3) B0(GPa) B0’ Reference EOS type
Tl2O3(Exp.) 1170.6(1) 147(13) 5(2) This work BM3
Tl2O3(Exp.) 1170.6(1) 156(3) 4 (fixed) This work BM2
Tl2O3(Th.) 1193.2(1) 125.0(4) 4.97(4) This work BM3
Tl2O3(Th.) 1191.5(5) 134.2(7) 4 (fixed) This work BM2
In2O3(Exp.) 1038(2) 194(3) 4.75 (fixed) 41 BM3
In2O3(Exp.) 1035.4(2) 178.9(9) 5.15 42 BM3
In2O3(Exp.) 1028(2) 184(10) 4 (fixed) 43 BM2133521-4 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55P–3m1, No. 164, Z ¼1) structures. Finally, to complete the
study, we have also considered as candidates for HP phases
of Tl 2O3structures observed in transition-metal sesquioxides
at different pressures and temperatures. These structures are
the Sb 2S3-type (S.G.: Pnma , No. 62, Z ¼4) found in
Ti2O3,59,60the distorted orthorhombic perovskite or
GdFeO 3-type (S.G.: Pnma , No. 62, Z ¼4) found in Fe 2O3
(hematite)61and the orthorhombic post-perovskite or
CaIrO 3-type (S.G.: Cmcm , No. 63, Z ¼4) found in Mn 2O3.62
The enthalpy difference vs. pressure diagram for the dif-
ferent Tl 2O3polymorphs, taking as reference the enthalpy of
the bixbyite-type phase, is plotted in Fig. 4. Our calculations
predict a phase transition from the bixbyite-type phase
(Ia–3) to the Rh 2O3-II-type phase ( Pbcn ) at 5.8 GPa, and
from the Rh 2O3-II-type phase to the a-Gd 2S3-type phase
(Pnma ) at 24.2 GPa. This sequence of pressure-induced
phase transitions for Tl 2O3is the same as for In 2O3.48,49The
main difference is the phase transition pressures predictedtheoretically in both compounds: 5.8 GPa (7–11 GPa) and
24.2 GPa (36–40 GPa) for Tl
2O3(In2O3).48,49The fact that
our HP-ADXRD measurements in Tl 2O3up to 37.7 GPa do
not show evidence of the phase transitions predicted at
5.8 GPa and 24.2 GPa, but an amorphization whose onset is
around 22 GPa, suggests that kinetic barriers might be pres-ent in the phase transition to the HP phases at room tempera-
ture in Tl
2O3. Note that the phase transition from the
bixbyite-type to the Rh 2O3-II-type structure was observed in
In2O3at room temperature above 30 GPa (Ref. 43) and the
transition to the a–Gd 2S3-type structure in In 2O3was not
observed at room temperature between 1 atm and 51 GPa.49
In fact, an amorphous halo was observed in In 2O3at 51 GPa
and room temperature; thus suggesting a PIA in In 2O3at
room temperature above this pressure. On the other hand, thephase transition in In
2O3from the Rh 2O3-II-type structure to
thea–Gd 2S3-type structure was observed at HP and high
temperature.49Furthermore, the phase transition pressures in
In2O3were observed experimentally close to those theoreti-
cally predicted only in HP and high temperatureexperiments.48,49Those works already showed that large ki-
netic barriers are present in In 2O3at room temperature
between the bixbyite-type, Rh 2O3-II-type and a–Gd 2S3-type
structures; therefore, similar barriers are expected to occur
for the same structures in Tl 2O3. In particular, the hypothesis
of the kinetic frustration of the pressure-induced phase tran-sition from the bixbyite-type to the Rh
2O3-II-type structure
in Tl 2O3will be explored in detail in future simultaneous HP
and high temperature experiments on Tl 2O3, as it was al-
ready done for In 2O3.48–52We note that our ab initio calcula-
tions do not include kinetic energy barriers and therefore the
theoretically predicted HP phases for bixbyite-type Tl 2O3
could be found experimentally in future HP and high temper-
ature experiments where the kinetic energy barriers can be
overcome. Finally, we want to stress that Tl 2O3remains
amorphous after decompression from 37.7 GPa to 1 atm, i.e.
PIA in Tl 2O3at room temperature is irreversible.
C. Elastic properties
In order to further understand the amorphization process
in Tl 2O3, we have studied the mechanical stability of the
cubic bixbyite-type (Ia-3) structure of Tl 2O3at HP. This
structure belongs to the cubic Laue group CII with pointgroup m-3 which has three independent second order elastic
constants: C
11,C12, and C44. Table IIIsummarizes the values
of the three Cijin Tl 2O3at zero pressure as obtained from
ourab initio calculations. The calculated elastic constants of
bixbyite-type In 2O3taken from Ref. 63are also included in
Table IIIfor comparison. The values of the three elastic con-
stants of Tl 2O3are smaller than those of In 2O3. This result
supports the smaller zero pressure bulk modulus of Tl 2O3
when compared to that of In 2O3as previously commented.
A lattice is mechanically stable at zero pressure only if
the Born stability criteria are fulfilled.64In the case of cubic
systems, these criteria are
C11þ2C12>0;C11–C12>0;C44>0: (1)
FIG. 4. Theoretical calculation of enthalpy difference vs. pressure for Tl 2O3
polymorphs. Enthalpy of bixbyite-type phase is taken as the reference.
Enthalpy is written per two formula units for all structures for the sake of
comparison.TABLE III. Calculated Cijelastic constants and elastic moduli B, G, E (in
GPa) and the Poisson’s ratio, /C23, for Tl 2O3at zero pressure. Elastic moduli
and Possion’s ratio are given in the Voigt, Reuss and Hill approximations,
labeled respectively with subscripts V, R, and H. The B/G ratio and the
Zener anisotropy factor, A, are also given. Calculated data at zero pressure
taken from Ref. 63for In 2O3are also added for comparison.
Tl2O3aIn2O3b
C11 177.0 234.3
C12 99.2 107.2
C44 32.8 62.7
BV¼BR¼BH 125.1 149.6
GV,GR,GH 35.3, 35.0, 35.1 63.0c
EV,ER,EH 96.7, 96.1, 96.4 165.8c
/C23V,/C23R,/C23H 0.37, 0.37, 0.37 0.32c
BV/GV,BR/GR,BH/GH 3.55, 3.57, 3.56 2.37c
A 0.84 0.99
aOur calculations with GGA-PBEsol prescription.
bCalculated with the GGA approximation.
cResults calculated in the Hill approximation from reported elastic
constants.133521-5 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55In our particular case, all the above criteria are satisfied
for bixbyite-type Tl 2O3at zero pressure; therefore, cubic
Tl2O3is mechanically stable at 1 atm (10/C04GPa), as it was
expected. When a non-zero uniform stress is applied to the
crystal, the above criteria to describe the stability limits of
the crystal at finite strain are not adequate and the Born sta-bility criteria must be modified. In this case, the elastic stiff-
ness (or stress-strain) coefficients are defined as
B
ijkl¼Cijklþ1=2½dikrjlþdjkrilþdilrjkþdjlrik–2dklrij/C138;
(2)
where the Cijklare the elastic constants evaluated at the cur-
rent stressed state, rijcorrespond to the external stresses, and
dklis the Kronecker delta.65–67In the special case of
hydrostatic pressure applied to a cubic crystal,
r11¼r22¼r33¼/C0P, and the elastic stiffness coefficients
are:B11¼C11–P,B12¼C12þP, and B44¼C44–P, where
Pis the hydrostatic pressure. Note that the BijandCijcoeffi-
cients are equal at 0 GPa. When the Bijelastic stiffness coef-
ficients are used, all the relations of the theory of elasticity
can be applied including Born’s stability conditions which
are identical in both loaded and unloaded states.66–69
The bulk ( B) and shear ( G) moduli of cubic Tl 2O3can
be obtained in the Voigt,70Reuss,71and Hill72approxima-
tions, labeled with subscripts V,R, and H, respectively, using
the formulae73
BV¼BR¼B11þ2B12
3; (3)
BH¼BVþBR
2; (4)
GV¼B11/C0B12þ3B44
5; (5)
GR¼5B11/C0B12 ðÞ B44
4B44þ3B11/C0B12 ðÞ; (6)GH¼GVþGR
2: (7)
In the Voigt (Reuss) approximation, uniform strain
(stress) is assumed throughout the polycrystal.70,71On the
other hand, Hill has shown that the Voigt and Reuss averages
are limits and suggested that the actual effective BandG
elastic moduli can be approximated by the arithmetic mean
of the two bounds.72The Young ( E) modulus and the
Poisson’s ratio ( /C23) are given by74,75
EX¼9BXGX
GXþ3BX; (8)
/C23X¼1
23BX/C02GX
3BXþGX/C18/C19
; (9)
where the subscript Xrefers to the symbols V,R, and H.We
summarize in Table IIIall the values obtained for B, G, E ,
and /C23in bixbyite-type Tl 2O3at zero pressure in the Voigt,
Reuss, and Hill approximations. Note that our calculatedvalue for the bulk modulus in the Hill approximation
(B
H¼125.1 GPa) is in very good agreement with the value
ofB0¼125.0(4) GPa obtained from our PBEsol structural
calculations via a BM3 EOS fit. This result gives us confi-
dence about the correctness of our elastic constants
calculations.
Table IIIalso includes the values of the ratio between
the bulk and shear modulus, B/G, and the Zener anisotropy
factor, A. The B/G ratio has been proposed by Pugh to pre-
dict brittle or ductile behavior of materials.76According to
the Pugh criterion, a B/G value above 1.75 indicates a tend-
ency for ductility; otherwise, the material behaves in a brittlemanner. In our particular case, we found a value of
B/G¼3.56 in the Hill approximation indicating that the ma-
terial should be ductile at 1 atm. The Zener anisotropy factorAfor our cubic cell is defined as A¼2B
44/(B11/C0B12). IfAis
equal to one, no anisotropy exists. On the other hand, the
FIG. 5. Pressure dependence of the
theoretical (a) Cijelastic constants and
(b)Bijelastic stiffness coefficients of
bixbyite-type Tl 2O3. Solid lines con-
necting the calculated data points are
shown as a guide to the eyes.133521-6 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55more this parameter differs from one, the more elastically
anisotropic is the crystalline structure. In cubic Tl 2O3,theA
value (0.84) is slightly different from 1 and evidence a smallelastic anisotropy of our cubic cell at 1 atm.
Figures 5(a) and5(b) show the pressure dependence of
the three calculated C
ijelastic constants and the three Bij
elastic stiffness coefficients of bixbyite-type Tl 2O3, respec-
tively. It can be seen that B11andB12increase monotonically
as pressure increases, while B44decreases monotonically as
pressure increases and at 23.5 GPa crosses the 0 GPahorizontal line. This fact is related with the mechanical insta-
bility of bixbyite-type Tl 2O3and will be discussed in the
next paragraphs.
The knowledge of the behavior of the three elastic stiff-
ness coefficients with pressure allows us to study the me-
chanical stability of bixbyite-type Tl 2O3as pressure
increases. The new conditions for elastic stability at a given
pressure P, known as the generalized stability criteria, are
obtained by replacing in Eq. (1)theCijelastic constants by
theBijelastic stiffness coefficients, and are given by77
M1¼B11þ2B12>0; (10)
M2¼B11/C0B12>0; (11)
M3¼B44>0; (12)
where B11,B12, and B14are the elastic stiffness coefficients
at the considered pressure. These generalized stability crite-
ria are plotted in Fig. 6. It is found that Eq. (12), related to a
pure shear instability, is violated at 23.5 GPa while Eq. (11),
called the Born instability,77is violated at 26.0 GPa.
Therefore, our theoretical study of the mechanical stability
of Tl 2O3at HP suggests that the bixbyite-type phase
becomes mechanically unstable beyond 23.5 GPa. This pres-
sure is slightly above but very close to the pressure at which
the onset of PIA takes place experimentally. Consequently,this result suggests that shear instability could be involved in
the PIA process of Tl
2O3at room temperature. We want to
stress that our calculations are performed for a perfectFIG. 6. M10¼M1/10,M2, and M3stability criteria for bixbyite-type Tl 2O3as
a function of pressure. The pressure for the onset of the amorphization pro-
cess, Pam, in our experiments is indicated.
FIG. 7. Pressure dependence of (a) BH, (b) GH, (c) EH, (d) /C23H, (e) BH/GH, and (f) A. Solid lines connecting the calculated data points are shown as a guide to
the eyes. Results are shown in the Hill approximation.133521-7 Gomis et al. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 133521 (2014)
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55material, whereas our powder samples are very defective and
contain a high concentration of O vacancies that make Tl 2O3
a degenerate n-type semiconductor. Therefore, we expect
that PIA in our sample takes place at a lower pressure than
that theoretically predicted since defects are known to induce
amorphization and decrease the pressure at which PIAbegins in a number of materials.
78,79
We have also performed the study of the dynamical sta-
bility in Tl 2O3in order to complement the study of the me-
chanical stability of Tl 2O3and verify that PIA in Tl 2O3is
caused by the mechanical instability of the cubic phase. To
check the dynamical stability of the cubic phase, we havecarried out ab initio calculations of the phonon dispersion
relations in bixbyite-type Tl
2O3. We have found that the
cubic phase is dynamically stable up to 32 GPa and that pho-nons with imaginary frequencies appear above this pressure.
This result thus indicates that bixbyite-type Tl
2O3becomes
dynamically unstable above 32 GPa.80Since this pressure is
higher than the pressure at which bixbyite-type Tl 2O3
becomes mechanically unstable, we conclude that PIA ofTl
2O3observed at room temperature at 22 GPa might be
caused by the mechanical instability of the cubic lattice at
pressures above 22 GPa.
Finally, for completeness we have plotted the pressure
dependence of the elastic moduli ( BH,GHand EH),/C23H
Poisson’s ratio, BH/GHratio, and AZener anisotropy factor
in Fig. 7. It is found that BHincreases with pressure and
reaches the value of 216.0 GPa at 23 GPa. On the other hand,
GHandEHdecrease with pressure approaching a value of
0 GPa near 23.5 GPa, pressure at which the mechanical insta-bility is predicted to occur. We note that the fact that the
shear modulus decreases with pressure is compatible with
the fact that the equation that first is violated (Eq. (12)) is the
one related with the pure shear instability because of the
decreasing of B
44with pressure. The Poisson’s ratio, /C23H,
increases with pressure and reaches a value of 0.49 at23 GPa. The B
H/GHratio increases with pressure, grows
exponentially above 19 GPa, and reaches a value of 94.4 at
23 GPa. The increase of the BH/GHratio with pressure indi-
cates that the ductility of Tl 2O3is enhanced under compres-
sion. In the case of the Zener anisotropy factor, A, it is found
that it increases with pressure reaching a maximum value ofA¼0.96 at about 11 GPa and afterward decreases quickly
above 20 GPa indicating a strong increase of the elastic ani-
sotropy above that pressure.
V. CONCLUDING REMARKS
We have studied both experimentally and theoretically
the structural properties of Tl 2O3under compression at room
temperature. The equation of state of Tl 2O3has been deter-
mined and its bulk modulus has been found to be smaller
than that of isostructural In 2O3.T l 2O3starts to amorphize
above 22 GPa and retains the amorphous structure at 1 atmwhen decreasing pressure from 37.7 GPa. The theoretically
predicted transitions to the Rh
2O3-II-type structure, near
6 GPa, and to the a-Gd 2S3-type structure, near 24 GPa, are
not observed experimentally, probably, due to the kinetic
hindrance of the phase transitions at room temperature.To understand the pressure-induced amorphization pro-
cess of Tl 2O3, we have studied theoretically both the me-
chanical and dynamical stability of the cubic phase at highpressures. In this respect, the mechanical properties of
bixbyite-type Tl
2O3at high pressures have been commented.
Our calculations show that amorphization might be causedby the mechanical instability of the bixbyite-type structure
predicted above 23.5 GPa since this phase is dynamically sta-
ble up to 32 GPa.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by the Spanish government
MEC under Grant Nos. MAT2010-21270-C04-01/03/04,
MAT2013-46649-C4-1/2/3-P, and CTQ2009-14596-C02-01,by the Comunidad de Madrid and European Social Fund
(S2009/PPQ-1551 4161893), by MALTA Consolider
Ingenio 2010 project (CSD2007-00045), and by GeneralitatValenciana (GVA-ACOMP-2013-1012 and GVA-ACOMP-
2014-243). We acknowledge Diamond Light Source for time
on beamline I15 under proposal EE6517 and I15 beamlinescientist for technical support. A.M. and P.R.-H.
acknowledge computing time provided by Red Espa ~nola de
Supercomputaci /C19on (RES) and MALTA-Cluster. B.G.-D. and
J.A.S. acknowledge financial support through the FPI
program and Juan de la Cierva fellowship. J.R.-F.
acknowledges the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation for apostdoctoral fellowship.
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202.28.191.34 On: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 18:37:55 |
1.4897105.pdf | Milling TimeandTemperature Dependence onFe 2TiO5
NanoparticlesSynthesizedby Mechanical Alloying Method
R.Fajarin*,H.Purwaningsih,Widyastuti,D.Susanti,andR.Kurnia
Helmy
Material and Metallurgical Engineering, Institute of Technology Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya 60111, Indonesia
* Email: fajar@mat-eng.its.ac.id
Abstract. Fe2TiO5is one type of titanate oxides which has M xTiyOzcrystal structure. It has various kinds of
applications due to its electric and magnetic properties such as spintron ics, electromagnetic devices, and gas sensor. In
this study, Fe 2TiO5nanoparticles were synthesized bysimple mechanical alloying using plan etary ball milling machine
with various milling times and sintering temperatures. TiO 2and Fe2O3powders obtained from coprecipitation process
were used as starting materials. The resulted Fe 2TiO5powders were characterized by X-Ray Diffraction (XRD),
Scanning Electron Microscopy(SEM), and Vibration Sample Magnetometer ( VSM) in order to observe crystal quality,
particles morphology, and magnetic propertiesrespectively. As the mill ingtime increases and the sinteringtemperature
decreases,thecrystalsizeofFe 2TiO5phasedecreases.ThesmallestcrystalsizeofthesynthesizedFe 2TiO5nanoparticles
was51 nmobtained bythe millingtime of 25 hours and sintering at1100oC.Thedistribution oftheresultedFe 2TiO5
nanoparticleswasnotsohomogeneousduetotheappearanceofsmallamount impurities.TheVSMmeasurementsshow
thataparamagneticpropertywas observed whichshouldbeanalyzed morede tailsonthelowexternalmagneticfields.
Keywords: Fe2TiO5, Nanomaterials,MechanicalAlloying,MillingTime,Sintering.
PACS:81.07.-b;81.40.-z;81.20.Fw;81.20.Wk;81.20.Ev
INTRODUCTION
Most of electronic devices in the last decade are
based on semiconductors. Among various oxidesemiconductors,then- type semiconductor α-Fe
2O3has
many applications and also has been studied becauseof its electric and magnetic properties. The otheradvantages ofthis oxide are lowcost production, highcorrosion resistance, non-toxic and environmentally-friendly oxides [1]. Pure phase of α-Fe
2O3has very
low conductivity. However, this electric property of α-
Fe2O3can be increased by incorporation addition or
doping. Improving electric properties means that it
willincreasetheusabilityasagassensingmaterial[2].
Addition of TiO 2in α-Fe2O3and vice versa has
attracted many researchers to investigate theirproperties, especiallyin optical properties [3]. Fe
2TiO5
is one ofthe pseudobrookite solid solution Fe yTi3-yO5
which has optical, electric and magnetic properties.This titanate oxide has many applications such as Li-ion battery and gas sensor [4, 5]. Researches onphotoelectrochemical, spin glass properties, and gassensitivity of both combination TiO
2-Fe2O3and
Fe2TiO5hadbeen done[6,7,8].
Several synthesis methods have been applied in
order to obtain pure Fe 2TiO5in polycrystals (bulk
forms),nanoparticles,andthinfilms.Fe 2TiO5thinfilm
on silica glass with crystal size 40 nm could beobtained from sol-gel method and Fe(NO 3)3.9H2Oa nd
Ti(OC3H7)4as the raw materials [9]. Fe 2TiO5
nanoparticles could also be synthesized from TiCl 3,
Fe(NO 3)3.9H2O, dan NH 2CONH 2as the raw materials
with hydrothermal route. The particle size rangeobtained fromthismethod was50– 200nm[4].
In the present paper, the nanoparticles of Fe
2TiO5
are obtained by simple mechanical mixing technique
as a synthesize method. The crystal structure,microstructure observation and room temperaturemagneticpropertiesareanalyzed.
METHODOLOGY
Iron (II) Chloride Tetrahydride, FeCl 2.4H2O, and
Titanium Oxide, TiO 2(Rutile Phase), all purchased
with analytical grade product, were used as startingmaterials. Pure α-Fe
2O3powders were synthesized
from sintering process of Fe 3O4powders obtained by
precipitation method of FeCl 2.4H2O. The solid
solution with weight ratio of α-Fe2O3:TiO2= 4.7:5.3
was prepared to synthesize Fe 2TiO5nanoparticles
using Planetary ball mill Fritsch Pulverisette P-5 as
mechanical alloying method with 300 rpm of millingspeed, BRP 6:1, and various milling times for 15, 20,and 25 hours in air atmosphere. The obtained milling
powders were compacted by pressing machine and
then sintered with various temperatures at 1100, 1200,
3rd International Conference on Theoretical and Applied Physics 2013 (ICTAP 2013)
AIP Conf. Proc. 1617, 63-66 (2014); doi: 10.1063/1.4897105
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC 978-0-7354-1254-5/$30.00
631300°C for 1 hour in air condition of Carbolite
furnace.
The powder X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) patterns
were recorded using PAN Analytical Diffractometer
with wavelength 1.54056 Å of CuK αradiation, 10 –
90o2θrange, and scan rate 0.02o. Phase identification,
lattice parametersandcrystal size were analyzed usingSearch-Match software and Peak-Profile analysis. TheScanningElectronMicroscope(SEM) FEI Inspect S50
was conducted to the surface of obtained powdersamples to investigate particle morphology. VibrationSample Magnetometer (VSM) was used to measurethemagnetizationofthesamplesinroomtemperature.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
Qualitative analysis based on XRD patterns of the
obtained powders just after milling process withvarious milling times are observed four identifiedphases, which are Fe
2O3(hematite),T i O2(anatase),
Fe3O4(magnetite)a n dT iO 2(rutile) with corresponded
JCPDF Number of 79-0007 at 2θ33.19°; 21-1272 at
2θ25.28°; 89-0950 at 2θ30.10°; and 77-0441 at 2θ
27.38°; respectively as can be seen in Figure 1. Theformation of Fe
3O4phase after milling process is due
to reversible reaction of α-Fe2O3to Fe3O4during
millingprocess. ThisisrelatedtothebreakingpartsofFe-O bonding in α-Fe
2O3and reacts with oxygen
inside the vial [10]. It is suggested that the millingprocess have enough energy needed to initialize thetransformation from α-Fe
2O3toFe3O4phase.
FIGURE 1. XRD patterns for powders obtained after
millingprocessfor15,20,and25hoursofmillingtime.
Based on the peak profile analysis, the peak of
anatasephaseat 2θ25.21° decreasesandit isfollowed
bypeak broadeningwith increasing FullWidth at HalfMaximum(FWHM) valueindicatingtransformation tomore amorphous phase. The disappearance of anatase
peaks is realized at 37.81° and 48.06° for the millingtime more than 15 hours. The decreasing anatase
phase is followed by the increasing rutilephase forsample with 20 hours of milling time. Transformation
ofanatasetorutilephase during mechanical alloying
process is occurred below its transformationtemperature. This is due to the thermal energy ofcollision during milling process and the crystal
defects, such as vacancy and crystal distortion that
may increase the free energy of anatasephase, thus
decreasethephasetransformationtemperature[11].
The diffraction peaks of Fe
2O3and TiO 2(anatase)
phases increased in their intensities and broadened intheir peak widths with increasing milling time. Thismay occur because of the smaller particle size andaccumulationofmicrostrainsaftermechanicalalloyingprocess [12]. There isno solid solution detected in thesamples after milling process, even after 25 hoursmilling, indicating the milling energyis not enough toreactallelementseach othertoform other compounds.
XRD patterns of samples after sintering process
with various temperatures at 1100, 1200, and 1300°Cfor 1 hour show that there are new diffraction peaksincrease which corresponds to the pseudobrookite
(Fe
2TiO5) phase as can be seen in Figure 2. The
formation of this new phase indicates partial reactionbetween iron oxides and titanium oxides. Thediffraction peaks of Fe
2O3and TiO 2(anatase)
decrease, suggesting the intermetallic diffusion takeplace and the solid solution reaction is occurred toformFe
2TiO5phase.
This phase transformation was begun at the
temperature higher than 900oC. The diffraction peaks
ofFe2TiO5phaseincreasedaswellastheincreasingof
sintering temperature. At high temperature, Fe 3O4
phase is oxidized toFe 2O3phase andreacts with TiO 2
to form Fe 2TiO5phase. As increasing thermal energy,
diffusion of Ti atoms increases and fills vacancy sitesof Fe
2O3structure, thus, it increases the diffraction
peaks of Fe 2TiO5phase as well as the crystal size.
Sinteringprocess as aheat treatment affects the crystalgrowth of Fe
2TiO5phase as shown in Figure 3. The
remaining anatasephase will transform to rutilephase
at high sintering temperature. The peaks of TiO 2
(rutile) phase increased with increasing sintering
temperature showing more crystalline phase wasformedinthesamples.
(a)
64FIGURE 2. XRD patterns for obtained powders after
sintering process with various sintering temperatures at1100,1200,1300
oCfor 1hour forsamples withmillingtime
for:a)15hours,b)20hours,andc)25hours.
1100 1200 1300405060708090100CrystalSize(nm)
SinteringTemperature(oC)Sinteringfor15hours
Sinteringfor20hours
Sinteringfor25hours
FIGURE 3. Sintering temperature dependence of Fe 2TiO5
crystalsizeswithvariousmillingtimes.
15 20 25405060708090100Sinteringat1100oC
Sinteringat1200oC
Sinteringat1300oCCrystalSize(nm)
MillingTime(hours)
FIGURE 4. Milling time dependence of Fe 2TiO5crystal
sizeswithvarioussinteringtemperatures.XRD analysis showed that Fe 2TiO5phase had not
formed yet until the samples were sintered. For thesintered samples, as the milling time increased, thecrystal size of Fe
2TiO5phase decreased. Figure 4
showstheeffectofmillingtimewithcrystalsizeinthe
sinteredsamples.
The particle morphology of sintered samples was
observed by SEM images. Figure 5 represents SEMimages of the obtained particles for sample with themilling time for 25 hours and various sinteringtemperatures for 1 hour. As increasing sinteringtemperature from 1100 – 1300
oC, the particle size
increased. This condition was shown bydisappearanceof small particles and followed by increasing size ofthelarger particles. Based on theseimages,the particlesize distribution seemed to have no homogeneity inshape. However, the trend of particle size was
consistentwithXRDdataanalysis.
FIGURE 5. Particlesmorphologyofthesinteredsamplesat
(a) 1100, (b) 1200, and (c) 1300oC with milling time for 25
hours.
FIGURE 6. Particlesmorphologyofthesinteredsamplesat
1300oCwithmillingtime for(a)15hoursand(b) 20hours.
10m 10m(a) (b)
10m 10m
10m(a) (b)
(c)(b)
(c)
65The differences of particles morphology and their
distributions can be seen in Figure 6 for sinteredsamples at 1300
oC with milling for 15 and 20 hours.
Comparing these two images shows that increasingmilling time will make particle size reduction which
means that the particle size will be smaller. This also
agreedwiththeXRDdataanalysis.
Magnetic properties of the obtained sintered
Fe
2TiO5samples were measured by VSM at room
temperature. Figure 7 shows hysteresis curves of 25hours milled sample with various sinteringtemperatures at 1100, 1200, and 1300
oC for 1 hour. It
can be seen that powders before sinteringprocess havelargemagnetization because of the existence of Fe
2O3
phaseinthesamples.Fe 2O3phase,even inTiO 2phase,
has ferromagneticbehavior, thusit will showmagnetichysteresiscurve.
The values of magnetic properties according to
their magnetization curves were summarized in Table1. After sintering process, it was realized that therewas magnetic properties changing. The magneticparameter values become smaller. This is related toformation of Fe
2TiO5phase and decreasing Fe 2O3
phase in the samples. TiO 2phases also have influence
in the magnetic properties. The obtained samplesbehave more paramagnetic as increasing sinteringtemperature.
-1 0 1-0.40.00.4
(d)(c)(b)M(emu/g)
H(T)(a)
FIGURE 7. Magnetic hysteresis curve of the sintered
samplesfor 25hourswithvarioussinteringtemperatures:(a)before sintering;(b)1100
oC;(c)1200oC;and(d)1300oC.
TABLE 1. Magneticparameters ofthesinteredsamples for
25hourswithvarioussinteringtemperatures.
SamplesMagneticProperties
Hc
(T)Ms
(emu/g)Mr
(emu/g)
Millingfor25hours0.069 0.385 0.149Beforesintering
Millingfor25hours0.058 0.228 0.0084at1100oC
Millingfor25hours0.043 0.176 0.0082at1200oC
Millingfor25hours0031 0.129 0.015at1300oCCONCLUSION
Nanoparticles of Fe 2TiO5have been successfully
synthesized by simple mechanical alloying methodusingballmillingtechnique.TheformationofFe
2TiO5
nanoparticles were followed by TiO 2as secondary
phase. The obtained Fe 2TiO5nanoparticles have
crystal size 51 nm measured by XRD peak profile
analysis and confirmed by SEM images observation.
The magnetic properties of the resulted samples havesmall magnetization and more paramagnetic behaviorrealized as increasing sintering temperature due todecreasingFe
2O3phaseinthesamples.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Ourteamresearchwouldliketosaythankyouvery
much to all collaborators who help the experimentaland analysis works. This work was supported by“Hibah Penelitian Laboratorium dana BOPTN ITS”with Number: 013674.135/IT2.7/PN.08.01/2013, date:Mei13,2013.
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