Journal of Physical Chemistry, Vol.100, No.8, 3144-3149, 1996
Spatially Confined Chemistry - Fabrication of Ge Quantum-Dot Arrays
We report a technique for investigating nucleation and growth confined to nanometer scale surfaces. Lithographic and etching processes were used to create arrays of 100 and 150 nm holes through a thin SiO2 layer onto Si(100). Ge dots were nucleated and grown to a few nanometers in diameter within the patterned wells. Transmission electron and atomic force microscopic analyses revealed the presence of 0-1 Ge quantum dots in each of the 100 nm wells and 2-4 dots in the 150 Mn wells. For the latter case, size-distance correlations indicated the effective radius of the diffusion field around a growing Ge particle was much larger than for growth on an infinite surface.