Air and UV/ozone exposure have been used for growing sacrificial thin oxide layers on HCl etched GaAs (100) surfaces. Passive films have been then desorbed by vacuum thermal cleaning in order to prepare suitable surfaces for molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth. Structure, thickness and chemical composition of passive films and desorbed surfaces have been studied by ellipsometry and angle dependent X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (ADXPS). The results have indicated an increased chemical reactivity of both arsenic and gallium during UV/ozone exposure, compared to that of air exposure, that produces Ga (III) oxide enriched films. Furthermore, XPS results have also shown that the thermal desorption behavior are different. In particular, GaAs (100) after short term UV/ozone exposure and oxide film desorption, has an As/Ga surface atomic ratio close to unity and a level of carbon contamination below the XPS detectability. On the contrary, air exposed surfaces never have a stoichiometric composition and carbon is not completely removed by a vacuum heating.

Comparison between air and UV/ozone surfaces passivation methods of GaAs (100) substrates

GM Ingo;G Padeletti;
1992

Abstract

Air and UV/ozone exposure have been used for growing sacrificial thin oxide layers on HCl etched GaAs (100) surfaces. Passive films have been then desorbed by vacuum thermal cleaning in order to prepare suitable surfaces for molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth. Structure, thickness and chemical composition of passive films and desorbed surfaces have been studied by ellipsometry and angle dependent X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (ADXPS). The results have indicated an increased chemical reactivity of both arsenic and gallium during UV/ozone exposure, compared to that of air exposure, that produces Ga (III) oxide enriched films. Furthermore, XPS results have also shown that the thermal desorption behavior are different. In particular, GaAs (100) after short term UV/ozone exposure and oxide film desorption, has an As/Ga surface atomic ratio close to unity and a level of carbon contamination below the XPS detectability. On the contrary, air exposed surfaces never have a stoichiometric composition and carbon is not completely removed by a vacuum heating.
1992
Istituto per lo Studio dei Materiali Nanostrutturati - ISMN
Inglese
C. Robert Helms, Masataka Hirose, Robert J. Nemanich, Gary W. Rubloff
Symposium Chemical Surface Preparation, Passivation and Cleaning for Semiconductor Growth and Processing - Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings Volume 259
Symposium Chemical Surface Preparation, Passivation and Cleaning for Semiconductor Growth and Processing
Volume unico
255
260
6
9781617389214
Materials Research Society
Pittsburg
STATI UNITI D'AMERICA
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
27 April-1 May 1992
San Francisco, CA, USA
UV/Ozone passivation
oxides
GaAs
cleaning
2
none
G.M. Ingo; G. Padeletti; G. Mattogno; N. Scandurra
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/129189
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