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Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy

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Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy. / Trevisan, Aurelia; Hodgson, Peter D.; Alvarado-César, Francisco et al.
In: Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 137, No. 19, 196702, 21.05.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Trevisan, A, Hodgson, PD, Alvarado-César, F, Hayne, M, Beanland, R & Koenraad, PM 2025, 'Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy', Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 137, no. 19, 196702. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0263956

APA

Trevisan, A., Hodgson, P. D., Alvarado-César, F., Hayne, M., Beanland, R., & Koenraad, P. M. (2025). Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy. Journal of Applied Physics, 137(19), Article 196702. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0263956

Vancouver

Trevisan A, Hodgson PD, Alvarado-César F, Hayne M, Beanland R, Koenraad PM. Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy. Journal of Applied Physics. 2025 May 21;137(19):196702. Epub 2025 May 16. doi: 10.1063/5.0263956

Author

Trevisan, Aurelia ; Hodgson, Peter D. ; Alvarado-César, Francisco et al. / Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy. In: Journal of Applied Physics. 2025 ; Vol. 137, No. 19.

Bibtex

@article{81c5b039b7b946cc95ba63e84d6e3bb6,
title = "Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy",
abstract = "Highly mismatched III/V alloys, such as GaAsN and GaAsSb, are known to suffer from segregation and clustering effects, which often limit their application in devices. In this cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy (X-STM) study, we explore the atomic-scale behavior of iso-electronic Sb doping atoms in MBE-grown dilute GaAs1-xSbx (0.01 < x < 0.03). We found that Sb atoms up to four layers below the cleavage surface can be identified in filled-state X-STM images. They appear with diverse anisotropic contrasts, depending on the depth of the Sb atom. These features are classified and are related to their depth below the cleavage surface through careful symmetry considerations. We show that the depth-dependent contrast of Sb atoms in filled-state imaging is determined by both topographic effects (lattice deformation due to the large Sb atom) and electronic effects (resonances of Sb atoms in the valence band). This study shows that in MBE-grown GaAsSb alloys, the Sb atoms can be rapidly incorporated, in which case the GaAsSb layers suffer little from segregation and sharp interfaces can be obtained. Additionally, short-range ordering of Sb, which can be uniquely studied by X-STM, has been analyzed in terms of nearest-neighbor-pair formation, and we find that in MBE-grown GaAsSb materials, a tendency to form Sb pairs or clusters can be suppressed. This opens the route to create high-quality devices based on the highly mismatched GaAsSb alloy.",
author = "Aurelia Trevisan and Hodgson, {Peter D.} and Francisco Alvarado-C{\'e}sar and Manus Hayne and Richard Beanland and Koenraad, {Paul M.}",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1063/5.0263956",
language = "English",
volume = "137",
journal = "Journal of Applied Physics",
issn = "0021-8979",
publisher = "AMER INST PHYSICS",
number = "19",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Iso-electronic Sb impurities in GaAs studied by cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy

AU - Trevisan, Aurelia

AU - Hodgson, Peter D.

AU - Alvarado-César, Francisco

AU - Hayne, Manus

AU - Beanland, Richard

AU - Koenraad, Paul M.

PY - 2025/5/21

Y1 - 2025/5/21

N2 - Highly mismatched III/V alloys, such as GaAsN and GaAsSb, are known to suffer from segregation and clustering effects, which often limit their application in devices. In this cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy (X-STM) study, we explore the atomic-scale behavior of iso-electronic Sb doping atoms in MBE-grown dilute GaAs1-xSbx (0.01 < x < 0.03). We found that Sb atoms up to four layers below the cleavage surface can be identified in filled-state X-STM images. They appear with diverse anisotropic contrasts, depending on the depth of the Sb atom. These features are classified and are related to their depth below the cleavage surface through careful symmetry considerations. We show that the depth-dependent contrast of Sb atoms in filled-state imaging is determined by both topographic effects (lattice deformation due to the large Sb atom) and electronic effects (resonances of Sb atoms in the valence band). This study shows that in MBE-grown GaAsSb alloys, the Sb atoms can be rapidly incorporated, in which case the GaAsSb layers suffer little from segregation and sharp interfaces can be obtained. Additionally, short-range ordering of Sb, which can be uniquely studied by X-STM, has been analyzed in terms of nearest-neighbor-pair formation, and we find that in MBE-grown GaAsSb materials, a tendency to form Sb pairs or clusters can be suppressed. This opens the route to create high-quality devices based on the highly mismatched GaAsSb alloy.

AB - Highly mismatched III/V alloys, such as GaAsN and GaAsSb, are known to suffer from segregation and clustering effects, which often limit their application in devices. In this cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy (X-STM) study, we explore the atomic-scale behavior of iso-electronic Sb doping atoms in MBE-grown dilute GaAs1-xSbx (0.01 < x < 0.03). We found that Sb atoms up to four layers below the cleavage surface can be identified in filled-state X-STM images. They appear with diverse anisotropic contrasts, depending on the depth of the Sb atom. These features are classified and are related to their depth below the cleavage surface through careful symmetry considerations. We show that the depth-dependent contrast of Sb atoms in filled-state imaging is determined by both topographic effects (lattice deformation due to the large Sb atom) and electronic effects (resonances of Sb atoms in the valence band). This study shows that in MBE-grown GaAsSb alloys, the Sb atoms can be rapidly incorporated, in which case the GaAsSb layers suffer little from segregation and sharp interfaces can be obtained. Additionally, short-range ordering of Sb, which can be uniquely studied by X-STM, has been analyzed in terms of nearest-neighbor-pair formation, and we find that in MBE-grown GaAsSb materials, a tendency to form Sb pairs or clusters can be suppressed. This opens the route to create high-quality devices based on the highly mismatched GaAsSb alloy.

U2 - 10.1063/5.0263956

DO - 10.1063/5.0263956

M3 - Journal article

VL - 137

JO - Journal of Applied Physics

JF - Journal of Applied Physics

SN - 0021-8979

IS - 19

M1 - 196702

ER -