Concurrent segregation and erosion effects in medium-energy iron beam patterning of silicon surfaces
Publisher:
IOP Publishing
Issued date:
2018-06-12
Citation:
Redondo-Cubero, A., Lorenz, K., Palomares, F. J., Muñoz, A., Castro, M., Muñoz-García, J., Cuerno, R. y Vázquez, L. (2018). Concurrent segregation and erosion effects in medium-energy iron beam patterning of silicon surfaces. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 30(27).
ISSN:
0953-8984
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Comunidad de Madrid
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Sponsor:
This research is supported by the MINECO/FEDER (Spain/UE) grants Nos. MAT2017-85089-C2-1-R, MAT2016-80394-R, FIS2015-66020-C2-1-P, FIS2015-73337-JIN, FIS2016-78883-C2-2-P, and BIO2016-79618-R, and by Comunidad de Madrid grant NANOAVANSENS ref. S2013/MIT-3029. We want to thank C. Ballesteros and B. Galiana for their help in the SEM measurements. ARC acknowledges the Ramón y Cajal contract number RYC-2015-18047 and KL thanks FCT, Portugal, for her grant as Investigador FCT.
Project:
Gobierno de España. FIS2015-66020-C2-1-P
Gobierno de España. MAT2016-80394-R
Gobierno de España. MAT2017-85089-C2-1-R
Gobierno de España. FIS2015-73337-JIN
Gobierno de España. FIS2016-78883-C2-2-P
Gobierno de España. BIO2016-79618-R
Comunidad de Madrid. S2013/MIT-3029
Keywords:
Ion beam sputtering
,
Patterning
,
Silicon
,
Iron silicide
,
Implantation
Rights:
© 2018 IOP Publishing Ltd.
Abstract:
We have bombarded crystalline silicon targets with a 40 keV Fe+ ion beam at different incidence angles. The resulting surfaces have been characterized by atomic force, current-sensing and magnetic force microscopies, scanning electron microscopy, and x-ray pho
We have bombarded crystalline silicon targets with a 40 keV Fe+ ion beam at different incidence angles. The resulting surfaces have been characterized by atomic force, current-sensing and magnetic force microscopies, scanning electron microscopy, and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. We have found that there is a threshold angle smaller than 40 degrees for the formation of ripple patterns, which is definitely lower than those frequently reported for noble gas ion beams. We compare our observations with estimates of the value of the critical angle and of additional basic properties of the patterning process, which are based on a continuum model whose parameters are obtained from binary collision simulations. We have further studied experimentally the ripple structures and measured how the surface slopes change with the ion incidence angle. We explore in particular detail the fluence dependence of the pattern for an incidence angle value (40 degrees) close to the threshold. Initially, rimmed holes appear randomly scattered on the surface, which evolve into large, bug-like structures. Further increasing the ion fluence induces a smooth, rippled background morphology. By means of microscopy techniques, a correlation between the morphology of these structures and their metal content can be unambiguously established.
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Description:
This paper is part of: Special Issue on Surfaces Patterned by Ion Sputtering
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