JOURNAL ARTICLE

Elastic relaxation in transmission electron microscopy of strained-layer superlattices

J. M. GibsonR. HullJ. C. BeanM.M.J. Treacy

Year: 1985 Journal:   Applied Physics Letters Vol: 46 (7)Pages: 649-651   Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Abstract

We demonstrate that thin, cross-sectioned transmission electron microscopy samples from strained-layer superlattices undergo elastic relaxation such that the local lattice parameter modulation amplitude can be reduced by a large fraction. Relaxation is dependent on the ratio of the superlattice wavelength to the local sample thickness and is demonstrated experimentally for molecular beam expitaxially grown GexSi1−x superlattices both by selected-area diffraction and high-resolution electron microscopy. The results can be qualitatively explained by a simple linear elasticity theory model. Reports of anomalies in the elastic properties of semiconductor superlattices from electron microscopy can be resolved. Evidence is also presented for expected lattice plane bending due to relaxation which can cause strong diffraction contrast. This thin-sample ‘‘artefact’’ allows unexpectedly weak strain fields to be imaged and permits probing of local elastic properties of individual layers within a superlattice. Similar relaxation effects occur for more general, nonperiodic, elastically strained thin samples, such as the important case of single interfaces.

Keywords:
Superlattice Transmission electron microscopy Condensed matter physics Materials science Electron diffraction Relaxation (psychology) Thin film Molecular beam epitaxy Scanning transmission electron microscopy Elasticity (physics) Diffraction Microscopy High-resolution transmission electron microscopy Electron holography Optics Layer (electronics) Epitaxy Nanotechnology Physics Composite material

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0.99
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Structural Biology
Electron and X-Ray Spectroscopy Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Surfaces, Coatings and Films
Semiconductor materials and interfaces
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
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