Thin Solid Films, Vol.517, No.20, 5867-5871, 2009
Thickness effect on the formation of SiC nanoparticles in sandwiched Si/C/Si and C/Si multilayers
The effect of carbon (C) and amorphous silicon (a-Si) thicknesses on the formation of SiC nanoparticles (np-SiC) in sandwiched Si/C/Si and C/Si multilayers on Si(100) substrates were investigated using ultra-high-vacuum ion beam sputtering system and vacuum thermal annealing at 500, 700, 900 degrees C for 1.0 h. Three-layer a-Si/C/a-Si structures with thicknesses of 50/200/50 nm and 75/150/75 nm and a two-layer C/a-Si structure of 200/50 nm were examined in this study. The size and density of np-SiC were strongly influenced by the annealing temperature, a-Si thickness and layer number. Many np-SiC appeared at 900 degrees C at a density order about 10(8) cm(-2) in both three-layer structures while no particles formed in the two-layer structure. The thick a-Si structure (75/150/75 nm) produces a particle density approximately 1.8 times higher than thin structure (50/200/50 nm). This implies that thick a-Si structure had a lower activation energy of SiC formation compared to the thin a-Si structure. Few particles were found at 700 degrees C and no particles at 500 degrees C in both three-layer structures. The np-SiC formation is a thermally activated reaction. The higher temperature leads to higher particle density. A mechanism of np-SiC formation in thermodynamic and kinetic viewpoints is proposed. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.