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Misfit strain anisotropy in partially relaxed lattice-mismatched InGaAs/GaAs heterostructures
39
Citations
15
References
2003
Year
EngineeringSemiconductorsRelaxed Ingaas/gaasQuantum MaterialsScanning Electron MicroscopeMolecular Beam EpitaxyEpitaxial GrowthCompound SemiconductorMaterials ScienceReciprocal Lattice MappingCrystalline DefectsPhysicsDefect FormationMicrostructureOptoelectronicsDislocation InteractionApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMultilayer HeterostructuresMisfit Strain Anisotropy
Partially relaxed InGaAs/GaAs heterostructures with a small lattice mismatch have been studied by means of atomic force microscopy and high-resolution x-ray diffractometry. Additionally, electron-beam induced current in a scanning electron microscope and transmission electron microscopy have been employed to investigate misfit dislocations formed at the (001) heterostructure interface. The measurements revealed a direct correlation between the surface cross-hatched morphology and the arrangement of interfacial misfit dislocations. The reciprocal lattice mapping and the rocking curve techniques employed for the samples aligned with either the or the [110] crystallographic direction perpendicular to the diffraction plane revealed anisotropic misfit strain relaxation of the InGaAs layers. This anisotropy results from an asymmetry in the formation of the α and β types of misfit dislocations oriented along the and [110] directions, respectively, which differ in their core structures. The misfit strain anisotropy causes a distortion of the unit cell of the layer and lowers its symmetry to orthorhombic.
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