Formation of terraced, nearly flat, hydrogen-terminated, (100) Si surfaces after high-temperature treatment in H-2 of single-crystalline silicon
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
Among the processes devoted to the preparation of chemically homogeneous (100) silicon surfaces, the ones for hydrogen termination are the most
promising, especially in view of the remarkable environmental stability of such surfaces. The simplest way to produce hydrogen-terminated
silicon (attack of a sacrificial, thermally grown, oxide in aqueous solution of HF) results in rough, strongly heterogeneous (although with
prevailing dihydride terminations) surfaces. These surfaces can, however, be flattened and homogenized by treating them in H-2 at high
temperature (>850 degrees C). The morphological and chemical changes undergone by the surface during the treatment are studied ex situ (via
x-ray-photoelectron spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, infrared absorption spectroscopy in the attenuated
total reflection mode, reflection high-energy electron diffraction, and thermal programmed desorption) and the mechanisms responsible for them
are discussed.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Jones, Derek; Palermo, Vincenzo
Published in: