| Literature DB >> 32451638 |
Tadas Paulauskas1, Vaidas Pačebutas2, Renata Butkutė2, Bronislovas Čechavičius2, Arnas Naujokaitis2, Mindaugas Kamarauskas2, Martynas Skapas2, Jan Devenson2, Mária Čaplovičová3, Viliam Vretenár3, Xiaoyan Li4, Mathieu Kociak4, Arūnas Krotkus2.
Abstract
The distribution of alloyed atoms in semiconductors often deviates from a random distribution which can have significant effects on the properties of the materials. In this study, scanning transmission electron microscopy techniques are employed to analyze the distribution of Bi in several distinctly MBE grown GaAs1-xBix alloys. Statistical quantification of atomic-resolution HAADF images, as well as numerical simulations, are employed to interpret the contrast from Bi-containing columns at atomically abrupt (001) GaAs-GaAsBi interface and the onset of CuPt-type ordering. Using monochromated EELS mapping, bulk plasmon energy red-shifts are examined in a sample exhibiting phase-separated domains. This suggests a simple method to investigate local GaAsBi unit-cell volume expansions and to complement standard X-ray-based lattice-strain measurements. Also, a single-variant CuPt-ordered GaAsBi sample grown on an offcut substrate is characterized with atomic scale compositional EDX mappings, and the order parameter is estimated. Finally, a GaAsBi alloy with a vertical Bi composition modulation is synthesized using a low substrate rotation rate. Atomically, resolved EDX and HAADF imaging shows that the usual CuPt-type ordering is further modulated along the [001] growth axis with a period of three lattice constants. These distinct GaAsBi samples exemplify the variety of Bi distributions that can be achieved in this alloy, shedding light on the incorporation mechanisms of Bi atoms and ways to further develop Bi-containing III-V semiconductors.Entities:
Keywords: Atomic resolution EDX; Atomic resolution HAADF; Bulk plasmon mapping; Dilute bismides; GaAsBi; HAADF image quantification; Monochromated EELS
Year: 2020 PMID: 32451638 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-020-03349-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703