Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session B45: Semiconductor Surfaces, Films, and Nanostructures
11:15 AM–1:51 PM,
Monday, March 4, 2019
BCEC
Room: 211
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Elena Cimpoiasu, United States Naval Academy
Abstract: B45.00005 : Atomic layer epitaxy of aluminum nitride: Unraveling the connection between hydrogen plasma and carbon contamination
12:03 PM–12:15 PM
Presenter:
Steven Erwin
(United States Naval Research Laboratory)
Authors:
Steven Erwin
(United States Naval Research Laboratory)
John Lyons
(United States Naval Research Laboratory)
as aluminum nitride, is a long-sought goal in materials physics. One
promising approach is plasma-assisted atomic layer epitaxy, in which
separate reactant precursors are employed to grow the cation and
anion layers in alternating deposition steps. The use of a plasma
during the growth — most often a hydrogen plasma — is now routine
and generally considered critical, but the precise role of the
plasma is not well understood. We propose a theoretical atomistic
model and elucidate its consequences using analytical rate
equations, density-functional theory, and kinetic Monte Carlo
statistical simulations. We show that using a plasma has two
important consequences, one beneficial and one detrimental. The
plasma produces atomic hydrogen in the gas phase, which is important
for removing methyl radicals left over from the aluminum precursor
molecules. But atomic hydrogen also leads to atomic carbon on the
surface and, moreover, opens a channel for trapping these carbon
atoms as impurities in the subsurface region, where they remain as
unwanted contaminants. Understanding this dual role leads us to
propose a solution for the carbon contamination problem which leaves
the main benefit of the plasma largely unaffected.
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