| Literature DB >> 27757941 |
Bastien Bonef1,2, Miguel Lopez-Haro3,4, Lynda Amichi3,4, Mark Beeler3,4, Adeline Grenier3,5, Eric Robin3,4, Pierre-Henri Jouneau3,4, Nicolas Mollard3,4, Isabelle Mouton3,5, Eva Monroy3,4, Catherine Bougerol3,6.
Abstract
The enhancement of the performance of advanced nitride-based optoelectronic devices requires the fine tuning of their composition, which has to be determined with a high accuracy and at the nanometer scale. For that purpose, we have evaluated and compared energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) and atom probe tomography (APT) in terms of composition analysis of AlGaN/GaN multilayers. Both techniques give comparable results with a composition accuracy better than 0.6 % even for layers as thin as 3 nm. In case of EDX, we show the relevance of correcting the X-ray absorption by simultaneous determination of the mass thickness and chemical composition at each point of the analysis. Limitations of both techniques are discussed when applied to specimens with different geometries or compositions.Entities:
Keywords: Atom probe tomography; Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy; III-Nitride nanostructures; Nanoscale composition analysis; Quantitative composition analysis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27757941 PMCID: PMC5069209 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-016-1668-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1HAADF-STEM image taken along the [11-20] zone axis showing one period of the multilayer stack with a scheme of the stack given in the inset
Fig. 2EDX analysis at different positions along the growth axis: close to the GaN buffer (left), zoom on four periods at an intermediate position (middle), and at the top part (right). a Al chemical maps. b Specimen thickness. c N/(Ga+Al) ratio. d Al/(Ga+A) ratio. e Probe size
Fig. 3APT analysis. a 3D reconstruction of the sample tip evaporated including seven periods of the stack. b Zoom over the black rectangle marked in a. c Variation along the growth axis of the Ga/(Ga+Al) and Al/(Ga+Al) ratios for the volume shown in b
Fig. 4a Variation of the Ga++/Ga+ ratio during the evaporation of the volume shown in Fig. 3b. The trend of the average field is given by red dotted line. b Variation of the N/(Ga + Al) ratio