Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9595210 Surface Science 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis during the oxygen plasma assisted molecular beam epitaxy, combined with atomic force microscopy and scanning Auger microscopy have been used to evaluate the mechanism of single-phase Cu2O nanodot formation on the SrTiO3(1 0 0) surface. Formation of pure crystalline Cu2O nanodots occurs rather in a narrow growth parameter window, outside which a coexistence of the multiple phases has been observed. Cuprous oxide nanodots on the SrTiO3(1 0 0) substrate follow a growth mechanism which differs significantly from the growth modes observed for the majority of semiconductor quantum dots. Growth starts without wetting layer formation with appearance of well-ordered truncated square-based nanodots at submonolayer coverages. At the initial stages of growth, the nanodot size is only weakly changes with coverage and exponentially scales with temperature. After reaching a critical, temperature dependent dot density (∼1013 cm−2 for 760 K growth temperature), growth of mid-sized nanoclusters starts through coalescence, which is eventually followed by large dome-shaped cluster formation at higher coverages. The coexistence of the different types of the clusters at high coverages results in a multimodal distribution of sizes and shapes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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