Sophisticated thin film growth techniques increasingly rely on the addition of a plasma component to open or widen a processing window, particularly at low temperatures. Taking advantage of continued increases in accelerator-based X-ray source brilliance, this real-time study uses X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) to elucidate the nanoscale surface dynamics during Plasma-Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition (PE-ALD) of an epitaxial indium nitride film. Ultrathin films are synthesized from repeated cycles of alternating self-limited surface reactions induced by temporally separated pulses of the material precursor and plasma reactant, allowing the influence of each on the evolving morphology to be examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndium nitride (InN) is a low-band-gap semiconductor with unusually high electron mobility, making it suitable for IR-range optoelectronics and high-frequency transistors. However, the development of InN-based electronics is hampered by the metastable nature of InN. The decomposition temperature of InN is lower than the required growth temperature for most crystal growth techniques.
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