Optical band gaps and composition dependence of hafnium–aluminate thin films grown by atomic layer chemical vapor deposition
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We report the optical properties of unannealed hafnium–aluminate HfAlO films grown by atomic layer chemical vapor deposition ALCVD and correlate them with the aluminum contents in the films. Vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopic ellipsometry VUV-SE , high-resolution transmission electron microscopy HRTEM , channeling Rutherford backscattering spectrometry RBS , and resonant nuclear reaction analysis NRA were employed to characterize these films. In the analyses of ellipsometry data, a double Tauc–Lo ...
We report the optical properties of unannealed hafnium–aluminate HfAlO films grown by atomic layer chemical vapor deposition ALCVD and correlate them with the aluminum contents in the films. Vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopic ellipsometry VUV-SE , high-resolution transmission electron microscopy HRTEM , channeling Rutherford backscattering spectrometry RBS , and resonant nuclear reaction analysis NRA were employed to characterize these films. In the analyses of ellipsometry data, a double Tauc–Lorentz dispersion produces a best fit to the experimental VUV-SE data. As a result, the determined complex pseudodielectric functions of the films clearly exhibit a dependency on the aluminum densities measured by RBS and NRA. We show that the optical fundamental band gap Eg shifts from 5.56±0.05 eV for HfO2 to 5.92±0.05 eV for HfAlO. The latter was grown by using an equal number of pulses of H2O/HfCl4 and H2O/TMA trimethylaluminum precursors in each deposition cycle for HfO2 and Al2O3, respectively. The shift of Eg to higher photon energies with increasing aluminum content indicates that intermixing of HfO2 and Al2O3 occurred during the ALCVD growth process. We found that Eg varies linearly with the mole fraction x of Al2O3 in the alloy HfO2 x Al2O3 1−x, but has a parabolic dependency with the aluminum density. We also observed a consistent decrease in the magnitudes of the real 1 and imaginary 2 part of of HfAlO films with respect to those of HfO2 as the Al density increased. The absence of the 5.7 eV peak in the spectrum, which was previously reported for polycrystalline HfO2 films, indicates that these films are amorphous as confirmed by their HRTEM images. ...
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Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology a : Vacuum, Surfaces and Films. New York. Vol. 23, no. 6 (Nov./Dec. 2005), p. 1706-1713
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