Mechanistic reaction paths for the heteroepitaxial growth of 3C–SiC on carbonized Si(001) were investigated using a combination of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) experiments. The stable Si-terminated 3C–SiC(001) surface was found by MD to exhibit a 2×1 reconstruction similar to the Si(001)2×1. The addition of Si adatoms on SiC(001)2×1 results in the formation of a series of missing-dimer-row type reconstructions of h ×2 where h =···, 7, 5, 3 with increasing Si adatom coverage. The most stable surface structure is SiC(001)–Si3×2 with a dangling bond density of 0.67 per SiC(001)1×1 unit cell. Analyses by transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and electron spin resonance of 1000-Å-thick SiC(001) heteroepitaxial layers grown by MBE on miscut Si(001)–4°[110] at 1050° C as a function of incident C/Si flux ratio J C / J Si showed that the highest quality layers were obtained by surface-structure-controlled epitaxy in which in-situ reflection high-energy electron diffraction was used as a feedback signal to adjust J C / J Si , during growth to maintain a 3×2 surface reconstruction. A model involving asymmetric growth kinetics parallel and perpendicular to step edges is presented.
Makoto KitabatakeMasahiro DeguchiTakashi Hirao
Camilla ColettiM. HetzelC. VirojanadaraUlrich StarkeStephen E. Saddow
Hiroyuki NagasawaTakamitsu KawaharaKuniaki Yagi
Geetanjali DeokarM. D’AngeloD. DemailleC. Deville Cavellin