In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy Analysis of Aluminum-Germanium Nanowire Solid-State Reaction

被引:40
|
作者
El Hajraoui, Khalil [1 ,2 ]
Minh Anh Luong [1 ,3 ]
Robin, Eric [1 ,3 ]
Brunbauer, Florian [4 ]
Zeiner, Clemens [4 ]
Lugstein, Alois [4 ]
Gentile, Pascal [1 ,3 ]
Rouviere, Jean-Luc [1 ,3 ]
Den Hertog, Martien [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Grenoble Alpes, F-38000 Grenoble, France
[2] Inst NEEL, CNRS, F-38000 Grenoble, France
[3] CEA, INAC, F-38000 Grenoble, France
[4] Vienna Univ Technol, Inst Solid State Elect, Floragasse 7, A-1040 Vienna, Austria
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Ge nanowire; solid state reaction; in situ transmission electron microscopy; energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy; aluminum contact; diffusion; TEM OBSERVATION; REAL-TIME; GROWTH; HETEROSTRUCTURES; SPINTRONICS; DIFFUSION;
D O I
10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b05171
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
To fully exploit the potential of semiconducting nanowires for devices, high quality electrical contacts are of paramount importance. This work presents a detailed in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) study of a very promising type of NW contact where aluminum metal enters the germanium semiconducting nanowire to form an extremely abrupt and clean axial metal-semiconductor interface. We study this solid-state reaction between the aluminum contact and germanium nanowire in situ in the TEM using two different local heating methods. Following the reaction interface of the intrusion of Al in the Ge nanowire shows that at temperatures between 250 and 330 degrees C the position of the interface as a function of time is well fitted by a square root function, indicating that the reaction rate is limited by a diffusion process. Combining both chemical analysis and electron diffraction we find that the Ge of the nanowire core is completely exchanged by the entering Al atoms that form a monocrystalline nanowire with the usual face-centered cubic structure of Al, where the nanowire dimensions are inherited from the initial Ge nanowire. Model-based chemical mapping by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) characterization reveals the three-dimensional chemical cross-section of the transformed nanowire with an Al core, surrounded by a thin pure Ge (similar to 2 nm), Al2O3 (similar to 3 nm), and Ge containing Al2O3 (similar to 1 nm) layer, respectively. The presence of Ge containing shells around the Al core indicates that Ge diffuses back into the metal reservoir by surface diffusion, which was confirmed by the detection of Ge atoms in the Al metal line by EDX analysis. Fitting a diffusion equation to the kinetic data allows the extraction of the diffusion coefficient at two different temperatures, which shows a good agreement with diffusion coefficients from literature for self diffusion of Al.
引用
收藏
页码:2897 / 2904
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Straight and kinked InAs nanowire growth observed in situ by transmission electron microscopy
    Lenrick, Filip
    Ek, Martin
    Deppert, Knut
    Samuelson, Lars
    Wallenberg, L. Reine
    NANO RESEARCH, 2014, 7 (08) : 1188 - 1194
  • [22] Screening of Coatings for an All-Solid-State Battery using In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy
    Basak, Shibarata
    Park, Junbeom
    Jo, Janghyun
    Camara, Osmane
    Tavabi, Amir H.
    Tempel, Hermann
    Kungl, Hans
    George, Chandramohan
    Dunin-Borkowski, Rafal E.
    Mayer, Joachim
    Elchel, Ruediger-A
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2023, (191):
  • [23] Straight and kinked InAs nanowire growth observed in situ by transmission electron microscopy
    Filip Lenrick
    Martin Ek
    Knut Deppert
    Lars Samuelson
    L. Reine Wallenberg
    Nano Research, 2014, 7 : 1188 - 1194
  • [24] ANALYSIS OF SOLID-STATE REACTIONS AT FILM SUBSTRATE INTERFACES BY ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY
    HESSE, D
    HEYDENREICH, J
    FRESENIUS JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1994, 349 (1-3): : 117 - 121
  • [25] In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy Studies of the Solid–Liquid Interface
    James M. Howe
    Hiroyasu Saka
    MRS Bulletin, 2004, 29 : 951 - 957
  • [26] In situ observation of solid–liquid interfaces by transmission electron microscopy
    H. Saka
    K. Sasaki
    S. Tsukimoto
    S. Arai
    Journal of Materials Research, 2005, 20 : 1629 - 1640
  • [27] In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy Observation of Melted Germanium Encapsulated in Multilayer Graphene
    Suzuki, Seiya
    Nemoto, Yoshihiro
    Shiiki, Natsumi
    Nakayama, Yoshiko
    Takeguchi, Masaki
    ANNALEN DER PHYSIK, 2023, 535 (09)
  • [28] HIGH-RESOLUTION TRANSMISSION ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY REEXAMINED AS A TOOL IN SOLID-STATE CHEMISTRY
    GRUEHN, R
    MERTIN, W
    ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 1980, 19 (07) : 505 - 520
  • [29] Multiscale strain alleviation of Ni-rich cathode guided by in situ environmental transmission electron microscopy during the solid-state synthesis
    Zhang, Fengyu
    Guo, Yunna
    Li, Chenxi
    Tan, Tiening
    Zhang, Xuedong
    Zhao, Jun
    Qiu, Ping
    Zhang, Hongbing
    Rong, Zhaoyu
    Zhu, Dingding
    Deng, Lei
    Ye, Zhangran
    Yu, Zhixuan
    Jia, Peng
    Liu, Xiang
    Huang, Jianyu
    Zhang, Liqiang
    JOURNAL OF ENERGY CHEMISTRY, 2023, 84 : 467 - 475
  • [30] Microstructure analysis of solid-state reaction in synthesis of BaTiO3 powder using transmission electron microscope
    Kobayashi, Keisuke
    Suzuki, Toshimasa
    Mizuno, Youichi
    APPLIED PHYSICS EXPRESS, 2008, 1 (04) : 0416021 - 0416023