Research and development of III-V semiconductor surfaces for improved device interfaces
Lång, Jouko (2013-10-19)
Research and development of III-V semiconductor surfaces for improved device interfaces
Lång, Jouko
(19.10.2013)
Turun yliopisto Annales Universitatis Turkuensis A I 473
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-29-5544-2
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-29-5544-2
Kuvaus
Siirretty Doriasta
Tiivistelmä
This thesis is devoted to understanding and improving technologically important
III-V compound semiconductor (e.g. GaAs, InAs, and InSb) surfaces and
interfaces for devices. The surfaces and interfaces of crystalline III-V materials
have a crucial role in the operation of field-effect-transistors (FET) and highefficiency
solar-cells, for instance. However, the surfaces are also the most
defective part of the semiconductor material and it is essential to decrease the
amount of harmful surface or interface defects for the next-generation III-V
semiconductor device applications. Any improvement in the crystal ordering at
the semiconductor surface reduces the amount of defects and increases the
material homogeneity. This is becoming more and more important when the
semiconductor device structures decrease to atomic-scale dimensions. Toward
that target, the effects of different adsorbates (i.e., Sn, In, and O) on the III-V
surface structures and properties have been investigated in this work.
Furthermore, novel thin-films have been synthesized, which show beneficial
properties regarding the passivation of the reactive III-V surfaces.
The work comprises ultra-high-vacuum (UHV) environment for the controlled
fabrication of atomically ordered III-V(100) surfaces. The surface sensitive
experimental methods [low energy electron diffraction (LEED), scanning
tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS), and synchrotron radiation
photoelectron spectroscopy (SRPES)] and computational density-functionaltheory
(DFT) calculations are utilized for elucidating the atomic and electronic
properties of the crucial III-V surfaces. The basic research results are also
transferred to actual device tests by fabricating metal-oxide-semiconductor
capacitors and utilizing the interface sensitive measurement techniques
[capacitance voltage (CV) profiling, and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy]
for the characterization. This part of the thesis includes the instrumentation of
home-made UHV-compatible atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) reactor for growing
good quality insulator layers.
The results of this thesis elucidate the atomic structures of technologically
promising Sn- and In-stabilized III-V compound semiconductor surfaces. It is
shown that the Sn adsorbate induces an atomic structure with (1×2)/(1×4)
surface symmetry which is characterized by Sn-group III dimers. Furthermore,
the stability of peculiar ζa structure is demonstrated for the GaAs(100)-In
surface. The beneficial effects of these surface structures regarding the crucial
III-V oxide interface are demonstrated. Namely, it is found that it is possible to
passivate the III-V surface by a careful atomic-scale engineering of the III-V
surface prior to the gate-dielectric deposition. The thin (1×2)/(1×4)-Sn layer is
found to catalyze the removal of harmful amorphous III-V oxides. Also, novel
crystalline III-V-oxide structures are synthesized and it is shown that these
structures improve the device characteristics. The finding of crystalline oxide
structures is exploited by solving the atomic structure of InSb(100)(1×2) and
elucidating the electronic structure of oxidized InSb(100) for the first time.
III-V compound semiconductor (e.g. GaAs, InAs, and InSb) surfaces and
interfaces for devices. The surfaces and interfaces of crystalline III-V materials
have a crucial role in the operation of field-effect-transistors (FET) and highefficiency
solar-cells, for instance. However, the surfaces are also the most
defective part of the semiconductor material and it is essential to decrease the
amount of harmful surface or interface defects for the next-generation III-V
semiconductor device applications. Any improvement in the crystal ordering at
the semiconductor surface reduces the amount of defects and increases the
material homogeneity. This is becoming more and more important when the
semiconductor device structures decrease to atomic-scale dimensions. Toward
that target, the effects of different adsorbates (i.e., Sn, In, and O) on the III-V
surface structures and properties have been investigated in this work.
Furthermore, novel thin-films have been synthesized, which show beneficial
properties regarding the passivation of the reactive III-V surfaces.
The work comprises ultra-high-vacuum (UHV) environment for the controlled
fabrication of atomically ordered III-V(100) surfaces. The surface sensitive
experimental methods [low energy electron diffraction (LEED), scanning
tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS), and synchrotron radiation
photoelectron spectroscopy (SRPES)] and computational density-functionaltheory
(DFT) calculations are utilized for elucidating the atomic and electronic
properties of the crucial III-V surfaces. The basic research results are also
transferred to actual device tests by fabricating metal-oxide-semiconductor
capacitors and utilizing the interface sensitive measurement techniques
[capacitance voltage (CV) profiling, and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy]
for the characterization. This part of the thesis includes the instrumentation of
home-made UHV-compatible atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) reactor for growing
good quality insulator layers.
The results of this thesis elucidate the atomic structures of technologically
promising Sn- and In-stabilized III-V compound semiconductor surfaces. It is
shown that the Sn adsorbate induces an atomic structure with (1×2)/(1×4)
surface symmetry which is characterized by Sn-group III dimers. Furthermore,
the stability of peculiar ζa structure is demonstrated for the GaAs(100)-In
surface. The beneficial effects of these surface structures regarding the crucial
III-V oxide interface are demonstrated. Namely, it is found that it is possible to
passivate the III-V surface by a careful atomic-scale engineering of the III-V
surface prior to the gate-dielectric deposition. The thin (1×2)/(1×4)-Sn layer is
found to catalyze the removal of harmful amorphous III-V oxides. Also, novel
crystalline III-V-oxide structures are synthesized and it is shown that these
structures improve the device characteristics. The finding of crystalline oxide
structures is exploited by solving the atomic structure of InSb(100)(1×2) and
elucidating the electronic structure of oxidized InSb(100) for the first time.
Kokoelmat
- Väitöskirjat [2895]