| Literature DB >> 28314364 |
L Khomenkova1, D Lehninger2, O Kondratenko3, S Ponomaryov3, O Gudymenko3, Z Tsybrii3, V Yukhymchuk3, V Kladko3, J von Borany4, J Heitmann2.
Abstract
Ge-rich ZrO2 films, fabricated by confocal RF magnetron sputtering of pure Ge and ZrO2 targets in Ar plasma, were studied by multi-angle laser ellipsometry, Raman scattering, Auger electron spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction for varied deposition conditions and annealing treatments. It was found that as-deposited films are homogeneous for all Ge contents, thermal treatment stimulated a phase separation and a formation of crystalline Ge and ZrO2. The "start point" of this process is in the range of 640-700 °C depending on the Ge content. The higher the Ge content, the lower is the temperature necessary for phase separation, nucleation of Ge nanoclusters, and crystallization. Along with this, the crystallization temperature of the tetragonal ZrO2 exceeds that of the Ge phase, which results in the formation of Ge crystallites in an amorphous ZrO2 matrix. The mechanism of phase separation is discussed in detail.Entities:
Keywords: Auger electron spectroscopy; Ellipsometry; Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy; Germanium; Magnetron sputtering; Nanoclusters; Phase separation; Raman scattering; Thin films; X-ray diffraction; Zirconium oxide
Year: 2017 PMID: 28314364 PMCID: PMC5355413 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-017-1960-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Schematic presentation of “top-down” co-sputtering process (left image), sample architecture and annealing parameters (right image)
Fig. 2Experimental data (symbols) and fitting curves for Ψ(φ) (a) and Δ(φ) (b) obtained for the Ge-ZrO2 samples grown with different RFPGe. The RFPGe values are shown in the graphs
Fig. 3Variation of the refractive index (a) and absorption coefficient (b) for the Ge-ZrO2 samples versus RFPGe. The dashed lines showed the values corresponded to pure Ge and pure ZrO2 samples as well as tabulated data for GeO2 for comparison
The parameters of the samples versus deposition conditions
| RFPGe, | Ellipsometry data | RBS dataa | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n @ 632.8 nm | Ge, at.% | Ge, at% | Zr, at % | O, at% | Si, at% | Density, at/cm2 | |
| 0 | 1.970 | 0 | 0 | 26.5 | 67.0 | 6.0 | 1.35E + 18 |
| 0.7 | 1.749 | ~17 | 15.0 | 17.5 | 62.9 | 4.0 | 1.43E + 18 |
| 0.9 | 2.000 | ~21 | (22.0) | (16.0) | (57.0) | (3.0) | - |
| 1.1 | 2.641 | ~30 | 30.0 | 14.0 | 52.0 | 3.0 | 1.20E + 18 |
| 1.3 | 2.730 | ~32 | (33.0) | (13.0) | (50.0) | (3.0) | - |
| 1.6 | 2.983 | ~40 | 42.0 | 10.5 | 43.9 | 2.5 | 1.17E + 18 |
| 2.2 | 3.167 | ~47 | 53.0 | 8.0 | 35.9 | 2.0 | 1.09E + 18 |
aNote. The content of the elements placed in the parentheses was obtained by the extrapolation of RBS data
Fig. 4Element depth profiles in the Ge-ZrO2 sample grown with RFPGe = 1.1 W/cm2 obtained for as-deposited (a) and annealed at 800 °C (b) samples
Assignment of Zr-O and Si-O related vibration bands
| Type of bonding | Spectral position, cm−1 (vibration type) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Zr-O monoclinic | 350,425,520,595,740 (as-deposited) (20 °C) | [ |
| Zr-O tetragonal | 485, 615 | |
| Zr-O cubic | 450, 485, 615 | |
| Si-O-Si | 470 (rocking) (TO1), 820 (bending) (TO2) | [ |
| Si-O1− | 970 (terminal Si-O groups produced by network disruption) | [ |
Fig. 5Evolution of FTIR spectra with annealing temperature for ZrO2 films measured under normal (a) and Brewster (b) incidence of excited beam light. Annealing temperatures are mentioned in the figures
Assignment of Ge-O related vibration bands
| Type of bonding | Spectral position, cm−1 (vibration type) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Ge-O | 515, 555 and 587 (triplet of hexagonal GeO2) (stretching) | [ |
| Ge-O-Ge | 580 (bending), 870 (stretching) | [ |
| Ge-O− | 1060-1080 (non-bridging) | [ |
| Ge-O | 696 stretching (in ZrGeO4) | [ |
| Ge-O-Ge | 575 bending (in ZrGeO4) | |
| O-Ge-O | 453 bending (in ZrGeO4) | |
| Ge-O | 410 (ν(M-O) in [MO6]) | [ |
| 453 (δ(Ge-O) in [GeO4]) | ||
| 506 (ν(Ge-O) in [GeO4] glassy GeO2) | ||
| 502-580 shoulder (ν(Ge-O) in glassy GeO2) | ||
| 575 (ν(Ge-O) in [GeO6]) | ||
| 586 (δ(Ge-O) in [GeO4]) | ||
| 696 (ν(Ge-O) in [GeO4]3− in orthogermanates) | ||
| doublet 773, 793 (ν(Ge-O) in metagermanates [GeO3]2−) | ||
| shoulder 790–890 (ν(Ge-O) in polygermanates) | ||
| 910 (ν(Ge-O) in [GeO4]) | ||
| 1060 (ν(Ge-O) in orthogermanates [GeO4]2−) | ||
| 1080 (ν(Ge-O) in orthogermanates [GeO4]3−) |
Fig. 6Evolution of FTIR spectra with annealing temperature Ge-rich-ZrO2 films grown with RFPGe = 0.9 W/cm2 and measured under normal (a) and Brewster (b) incidence of exciting beam light. Annealing temperatures are mentioned in the figures
Fig. 7Evolution of Raman scattering of pure Ge (a) and Ge-rich-ZrO2 (b, c) samples with annealing temperature (a, b) and Ge content in the films (c). For (b) RFPGe = 0.9 W/cm2, [Ge] ~ 22%
Fig. 8Evolution of XRD patterns for pure ZrO2 (a) and Ge-rich-ZrO2 (b, c) samples with annealing temperature (a, b) and Ge content in the films (c). Annealing temperature and Ge content are shown in the figures
Chemical properties of Ge, Zr, and O and thermodynamic parameters of related oxides
| Parameter | Element | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Ge | Zr | O | |
| Ionic radius, Å | 0.53 [Ge4+] | 0.79 [Zr4+] | 1.40 [O2−] |
| Atomic radius, Å | 1.23 | 1.60 | 0.66 |
| Electronegativity, χ | 2.01 | 1.33 | 3.44 |
| Electronegativity difference upon bond formation, χM-χO | 1.43 | 2.11 | 0 |
| Coordination number in the M-O bond | 4 | 7 | - |
| Type of M-O bond | covalent polar | ionic | - |
| Length of M-O bond, Å | 1.77 | 2.13 | - |
| Standard molar enthalpy of the oxide formation | −261.9 (GeO) | −1100.6 (ZrO2) | - |
| Standard molar Gibbs energy of the oxide formation at 298.15 K, ΔfG0, kJ/mol | −237.2 (GeO) | −1042.8 (ZrO2) | - |