Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
Conversion electron Mössbauer spectroscopy (CEMS) at room and low
temperature has been used to study thin SiO2 films implanted with Sn atoms and annealed
at 900°C. This work focuses on the determination of the Debye temperature (?D) and
Debye-Waller factors ( f ) of the Sn oxidized phases formed in this system. The Sn2+
oxidation state is the predominant one, even if a small percentage of the Sn atoms is in the
Sn4+ oxidation state. The real Sn-oxides fractions are calculated by normalizing the
resonant areas to the f values, as calculated from the temperature dependence of the related
resonant areas within a Debye model. The Sn4+ oxidation state, possibly related to Sn atoms
close to the SiO2 surface, represents less than 20% of the Sn atoms. For the Sn2+ oxidation
state, two different electronics configurations a and b, having different Debye temperature
and hyperfine parameters are identified. The component a, with a lower ?D (137 K), is the
predominant one and might be related to small (2-3 nm) amorphous SnOx clusters in the
SiO2 matrix. The component b could be related to substitutional Sn atoms in the SiO2
network forming a local Sn environment similar to the SnO amorphous compound.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Sn nanocrystals; low-temperature conversion electron Mössbauer spectroscopy; Debye temperature
List of contributors:
Mantovan, Roberto; Spiga, Sabina
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