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Dislocation-pipe diffusion in nitride superlattices observed in direct atomic resolution

Authors :
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Materials Science and Engineering (MSE)
Garbrecht, Magnus
Saha, Bivas
Schroeder, Jeremy L.
Hultman, Lars
Sands, Timothy D.
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Materials Science and Engineering (MSE)
Garbrecht, Magnus
Saha, Bivas
Schroeder, Jeremy L.
Hultman, Lars
Sands, Timothy D.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Device failure from diffusion short circuits in microelectronic components occurs via thermally induced migration of atoms along high-diffusivity paths: dislocations, grain boundaries, and free surfaces. Even well-annealed single-grain metallic films contain dislocation densities of about 1014 m-2; hence dislocation-pipe diffusion (DPD) becomes a major contribution at working temperatures. While its theoretical concept was established already in the 1950s and its contribution is commonly measured using indirect tracer, spectroscopy, or electrical methods, no direct observation of DPD at the atomic level has been reported. We present atomically-resolved electron microscopy images of the onset and progression of diffusion along threading dislocations in sequentially annealed nitride metal/semiconductor superlattices, and show that this type of diffusion can be independent of concentration gradients in the system but governed by the reduction of strain fields in the lattice.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1199304754
Document Type :
Electronic Resource