| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1788472 | Current Applied Physics | 2008 | 4 Pages | 
Abstract
												Germanium nanostructures have been fabricated on silicon substrates using ion-beam sputtering growth followed by an ex-situ annealing step. The substrates are not heated during growth, resulting in a post-growth deposited layer â¼225 nm thick with a surface which has no evidence of nanostructure formation. Following annealing at temperatures of 400-700 °C dramatic nanostructuring is observed at the surface. For temperatures below 600 °C atomic force microscopy analysis reveals dense arrays of nanostructures with heights typically around 5-30 nm. Increased feature size and surface roughening is observed for samples annealed above 600 °C, with a broadened size distribution centred at 450 nm. This is assigned to intermixing at the Si/Ge interface, which reduces the stress in the layer, allowing larger features to form.
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											Authors
												D.A. Carder, A. Markwitz, H. Baumann, J. Kennedy, 
											