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arxiv: 1504.07759 · v2 · pith:EJMAHWSWnew · submitted 2015-04-29 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall

Light emission from silicon with tin-containing nanocrystals

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords emissionlightnanocrystalsannealingdegreessilicontin-containingannealed
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Tin-containing nanocrystals, embedded in silicon, have been fabricated by growing an epitaxial layer of Si_{1-x-y}Sn_{x}C_{y}, where x = 1.6 % and y = 0.04 %, followed by annealing at various temperatures ranging from 650 to 900 degrees C. The nanocrystal density and average diameters are determined by scanning transmission-electron microscopy to ~ 10^{17} cm^{-3} and ~ 5 nm, respectively. Photoluminescence spectroscopy demonstrates that the light emission is very pronounced for samples annealed at 725 degrees C, and Rutherford back-scattering spectrometry shows that the nanocrystals are predominantly in the diamond-structured phase at this particular annealing temperature. The origin of the light emission is discussed.

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