Buy article online - an online subscription or single-article purchase is required to access this article.
Download citation
Download citation
link to html
In this work, self-assembled Ge quantum dot (QD) formation in a dielectric matrix is explored. Of particular interest were their structural and optical properties, in order to understand the stress build-up in such a process and its impact on the material properties during processing. To this end, thin films consisting of (Ge + SiO2)/SiO2 multilayers grown by RF magnetron sputtering were deposited at room temperature. Annealing of such films at 873 K in inert N2 atmosphere produced, at the position of the Ge-rich SiO2 layers, a high lateral density (about 1012 cm−2) of Ge QDs with a good crystallinity. SiO2 spacer layers separated the adjacent Ge-rich layers, where the Ge QDs were formed with a diameter of about the size of the (Ge + SiO2) as-deposited layer thickness, and created a good vertical repeatability, confirmed by the appearance of a Bragg sheet in two-dimensional small-angle X-ray scattering patterns. The structural analysis, by wide-angle X-ray diffraction, grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering and transmission electron microscopy, has shown that the described processing of the films induced large compressive stress on the formed QDs. Optical analysis by time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) revealed that the high density of crystalline Ge QDs embedded in the amorphous SiO2 matrix produced a strong luminescence in the visible part of the spectrum at 2–2.5 eV photon energy. It is shown that the decay dynamics in this energy range are very fast, and therefore the transitions that create such PL are attributed to matrix defects present in the shell surrounding the Ge QD surface (interface region with the matrix). The measured PL peak, though wide at its half-width, when analysed in consecutive short spectral segments showed the same decay dynamics, suggesting the same mechanism of relaxation.

Subscribe to Journal of Applied Crystallography

The full text of this article is available to subscribers to the journal.

If you have already registered and are using a computer listed in your registration details, please email support@iucr.org for assistance.

Buy online

You may purchase this article in PDF and/or HTML formats. For purchasers in the European Community who do not have a VAT number, VAT will be added at the local rate. Payments to the IUCr are handled by WorldPay, who will accept payment by credit card in several currencies. To purchase the article, please complete the form below (fields marked * are required), and then click on `Continue'.
E-mail address* 
Repeat e-mail address* 
(for error checking) 

Format*   PDF (US $40)
   HTML (US $40)
   PDF+HTML (US $50)
In order for VAT to be shown for your country javascript needs to be enabled.

VAT number 
(non-UK EC countries only) 
Country* 
 

Terms and conditions of use
Contact us

Follow J. Appl. Cryst.
Sign up for e-alerts
Follow J. Appl. Cryst. on Twitter
Follow us on facebook
Sign up for RSS feeds