Author:
Lin T. L.,Sadwick L.,Wang K. L.,Rhee S. S.,Kao Y. C,Hull R.,Nieh C.W.,Jamieson D. N.,Liu J. K.,Nicolet M-A.
Abstract
ABSTRACTGaAs layers have been grown on porous silicon (PS) substrates by molecular beam epitaxyNo surface morphology deterioration was observed onGaAs-on-PS layers in spite of the roughness of PS. A 10% Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy (RBS) channeling minimum yield for GaAs-on-PS layers as compared to 16% for GaAs-on-Si layers grown under the same condition indicates a possible improvement of crystallinity when GaAs is grown on PS. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) reveals that the dominant defects in the GaAs-on-PS layers are microtwins and stacking faults, which originate from the GaAs/PS interface. GaAs is found to penetrate into the PS layers.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC