Microstructure of highly oriented, hexagonal, boron nitride thin films grown on crystalline silicon by radio frequency plasma-assisted chemical vapor deposition

Publication date

2012-10-09T09:48:57Z

2012-10-09T09:48:57Z

1996

2012-10-09T09:48:57Z

Abstract

We present a high‐resolution electron microscopy study of the microstructure of boron nitride thin films grown on silicon (100) by radio‐frequency plasma‐assisted chemical vapor deposition using B2H6 (1% in H2) and NH3 gases. Well‐adhered boron nitride films grown on the grounded electrode show a highly oriented hexagonal structure with the c‐axis parallel to the substrate surface throughout the film, without any interfacial amorphous layer. We ascribed this textured growth to an etching effect of atomic hydrogen present in the gas discharge. In contrast, films grown on the powered electrode, with compressive stress induced by ion bombardment, show a multilayered structure as observed by other authors, composed of an amorphous layer, a hexagonal layer with the c‐axis parallel to the substrate surface and another layer oriented at random

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

American Institute of Physics

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Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.363677

Journal of Applied Physics, 1996, vol. 80, num. 10, p. 6553-6555

http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.363677

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(c) American Institute of Physics , 1996

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