Journal of Materials Science, Vol.33, No.23, 5665-5669, 1998
Synthesis of germanium nanocrystals in SiO2
Germanium nanocrystals in SiO2 with an average diameter of 5-25 nm were fabricated by co-deposition and annealing at 700-1000 degrees C. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy were used to measure the nanocrystal growth as a function of anneal time and temperature. The precipitation of nanocrystals was found not to follow the theory for precipitation from a solid solution of Lifshitz-Slezov; nanocrystal growth appears instead to be determined primarily by anneal temperature with little anneal time dependence. This departure from theory is attributed to the high concentration (40 at %) of germanium in the deposited films. A modified log-normal distribution was found to describe the distribution of nanocrystal sizes best. Photoluminescence was observed from nanocrystal-containing films, with luminescence energy shifted from that of bulk germanium. The luminescence spectra are in agreement with the theory of Brus for quantum confined carriers in small semiconductor crystals.
Keywords:VISIBLE PHOTOLUMINESCENCE;QUANTUM-CONFINEMENT;OPTICAL-PROPERTIES;POROUS SILICON;GLASS-FILMS;MICROCRYSTALS;CRYSTALLITES;SIO2-FILMS;CLUSTERS;CENTERS