Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
73278 Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The effect of porosity on the electronic structure of materials has been examined.•We examined the impact of doping and porosity in terms of dielectric function.•We presented a robust method for electronic band structure calculation through EELS.•Both theoretical and experimental studies were performed to verify the results.

In this study, the dielectric response of low-k dielectric materials has been characterized by electron energy loss spectroscopy. A widely accepted fast Fourier transform based Kramers–Kronig method (Johnson, 1975) [3] has been used to derive the high-frequency response of these materials. We used three different low-k dielectric materials to find out the effect of porosity and carbon content on the dielectric response of materials. Amorphous SiO2 and SiC:H samples are used for comparison. All samples were deposited by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition technique. A Lorentzian-based oscillator model has been used to determine the eigen-energy of excitations by fitting the measured loss function. The model is specially designed to let all oscillator parameters move freely and find their most probable position by using a least square fitting analysis procedure. The band gap for amorphous SiO2 which corresponds to the first absorption peak in the imaginary part of dielectric function is found to be at around 9 eV. We observed that in the case of dense low-k material, there appears a finite density of states (DOS) inside the band gap of SiO2, whereas the inclusion of porosity into dense low-k network diminishes the in-gap DOS and widens the band gap to around 10 eV.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Catalysis
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