Solid State Solutions, Phase Diagrams, and Phase Transitions Matt Highland
Second Workshop on Photocathodes: 300nm-500nmJune 29-30 at the University of Chicago
‣ Synthesis away from equilibrium
‣ Metastable Materials‣ Reactive Synthesis
2
Synthesis away from Equilibrium ‣ Typical thermodynamics gives us guide posts on synthesis near equilibrium‣ Engineering materials with specific properties often requires synthesis
away from equilibrium
‣ “Metastable” materials that demand non-equilibrium and kinetically controlled synthesis path ways
‣ Metastable synthesis requires additional stabilization during growth:
StrainEpitaxy Energetic ionsSputtering Chemical ActivityReactive Synthesis
SrRuO3 and Co3O4
3
Reactive Synthesis of Metastable Materials ‣ Reactive synthesis utilizes activity of chemical precursors to
stabilize desired phases‣ Practical example: (In,Ga)N solid solutions
‣ Band-gap tunable across solar spectrum by varying solid solution content
LEDs for solid state lighting
InGaN: The promise and truth
‣ The promise• Solid-state lighting has the potential
reduce U.S. energy consumption from 3.1 to 2.1 petawatt-hours/year*
• Roughly the output of 250 coal fired power plants
‣ The truth• External quantum efficiency drops as
InN content increases• Driven by problems with crystal
quality and the metastable nature of InN
V(
)
Tj =
25C
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
350 450 550 650
Peak Wavelength (nm)
InxGa1-xN(AlxGa1-x)0.52In0.48P
High-power (>1 Watt input) visible-spectrum LEDs
Ext
erna
l qua
ntum
eff
icie
ncy,
hext
Peak wavelength, p (nm)
V()
*“Energy Savings Potential of Solid State Lighting in General Illumination Applications”, http://www.netl.doe.gov/ssl
5
The Fundamental Problem
5
‣ At desirable growth temperatures required nitrogen activity is equivalent to kilobars (~104 psi) of N2
‣ During MOCVD growth nitrogen activity provided by cracking ammonia
‣ Reaction we want to avoid:
Ambacher et al., JVST B 14, 3532 (1996)
€
InN ⇒ In +1 2N2€
In CH3( )3
+NH3 ⇒ InN + 3CH4
6
Intermediate Chemical Species
6
‣ We know the overall reaction desired for growth
‣ However what are the intermediate chemical species that drive this growth ?• All we know is the precursors crack
somehow interact €
In CH3( )3
+NH3 ⇒ InN + 3CH4
€
In CH3( )3⇒ In?+ ?
NH3 ⇒ NHX + ?H2
7
Attacking a Problem on Multiply Fronts
7
‣ We’re employing multiply in-situ probes and computational techniques to understand the details of reactive synthesis
In-situ X-ray Analysis
In-situ IR spectroscopy
Theory & modeling
8
Probing the Growth Environment
8
‣ Synchrotron x-rays are capable to penetrating the MOCVD environment and yield structural and elemental details in real time• In-situ MOCVD reactor at sector 12ID-
D of the Advanced Photon Source ‣ Diffraction from GaN surfaces and InN
crystals‣ X-ray Fluorescence from deposited
Indium
‣ Measurements reveal a very complex growth behavior
8
FluorescenceDetector
Synchrotron x-rays
ScatteringDetector
Visible illumination
Moviecamera
In-InN Phase Boundaries
‣ By monitoring InN and In liquid formation we can map out an indium condensation phase diagram
‣ Upon increasing TMI flow• At higher temp, elemental In
liquid condenses• At lower T, relaxed InN solid
particles growBare GaNsurface
In liquiddroplets
pNH3= 27 Torr InN crystals
F. Jiang, et al. PRL 101, 086102 (2008)
10
Oscillatory Growth and Decomposition
‣ Near phase boundaries system can spontaneously oscillate • Inter-conversion between InN and
liquid In
‣ AFM of quenched samples shows microstructure of distinct surface species
Epitaxial InN islands Elemental In droplets
F. Jiang, et al. PRL 101, 086102 (2008)
11
Chemical Wave Patterns
11
‣ Spatial variation between InN and In can be resolved optically• Dark regions: InN• White regions: In liquid
‣ Waves of InN or In liquid• Sweep across the sample • Form concentric rings• Spiral patterns
F. Jiang, et al. PRL 101, 086102 (2008)
12
What Drives the Oscillatory Behavior ?
12
‣ The key to this complex growth behavior is local nitrogen activity
‣ NH3 impinges on the hot sample surface, cracks and forms some highly active chemical species (NHx)
‣ These active species either interact with In and form InN or react to eventually form N2 and leave the surface.
‣ The efficiency with which NH3 is cracked and the residence time of the intermediate species determines which material grows
Oscillatory Growth Mechanism
NH3 cracks on the GaN of InN surface and
forms the intermediate species
that allow InN to grow
Critical amount of liquid In metal
condenses which accelerates conversion
of NH3to N2 and InN starts to decompose
Liquid In metal evaporates to expose GaN surface and InN growth starts again
14
Intermediate Chemical Species
14
‣ The local intermediate chemical species dictate growth behavior ‣ Different surfaces catalytically crack NH3 differently and possibly change
residence time of intermediate species
‣ If we can understand which intermediate species enable InN growth, then we can better stabilize and encourage its formation
‣ What are the intermediate nitrogen species?• First principle calculations • Additional in-situ probes
First-principle Calculations ‣We can calculate the lowest energy
configurations of NH3, NH2, NH, N, and H on a GaN and InN surface
‣We can then create a phase diagram predicting the equilibrium coverage species for given conditions• “We” = Peter Zapol, Weronika Walkosz, and Xin
Tan
(2x2) surface unit cell- 4 H3 “hollow” sites- 4 T1 “on top” Ga sites- 4 T4 “on top” N sites- 12 br “bridge” site
fixed
Predicted Phase Diagram
‣Lowest energy surface species differ depending temperature and nitrogen activity
‣One of these configuration maybe be what enable InN growth
‣Can we find these phases experimentally ?
W. Walkosz, et al. PRB 85, 033308 (2012)
Predicted structures on GaN surface
N-rich Ga-rich
17
Surface and Crystal Truncation Rods
17
‣ An abrupt crystalline surface in real-space creates an extended rod of scattering in reciprocal space
‣ Scattering that occurs along this Crystal Truncation Rod (CTR) away from the Bragg peaks is very sensitive to surface changes
(00L) CTR
(10L) CTR
Predicted CTRs
‣First Principle can be used to predict CTRs for each phase
‣Can we see these changes with in-situ x-rays ?
Predicted structures on GaN surface
N-rich Ga-richW. Walkosz, et al. PRB 85, 033308 (2012)
19
Experimentally measured CTRs
19
‣ With different amounts of NH3, N2, and H2 in the sample environment we see large changes at anti-Bragg conditions
‣ Modeling shows that CTR changes are consistent with a number of predicted surface structures• Uniqueness problem: Modeling generates a number of structures that fit equally well.
Surface studies of GaN at 450°C as a function of chemical environment
20L Rod
In-situ Surface Chemistry ‣ How can we get information about the intermediate chemical species on the surface ?
• X-rays are great at looking at the In phases (the heavy stuff), but how about highly reactive surface species (the light stuff)?
‣ Photons of a different length: in-situ Reflection-Absorption IR Spectroscopy (RAIRS) • Can distinguish between NH3, NH2, and NH• Can penetrate MOCVD environment
X-ray beam
21
RAIRS: Challenges to Overcome
21
‣ Heater is IR Source• Solution: Bandpass filtering to
mask black body radiation
‣ Surface vs. Gas species• Solution: Polarize emitted
spectrum • Gas species are isotropic• Surface species show
polarization dependence
‣ Metallic Surface:• Solution: ZrN • 10% lattice mismatch to InN• 0.6% lattice mismatch to GaN• Stable in MOCVD
Environment
01L rod of ZrN
22
Future Plans
22
‣ By combining Reflection-Absorption IR Spectroscopy with grazing incidence surface x-ray scattering we correlate InN structure, surface chemical species, and theoretical surface structure predictions we will understand what are the intermediate chemical process the allow InN to form and grow
In-situ X-ray Analysis
In-situ IR spectroscopy
Theory & modeling
‣ We hope to use this knowledge to design new synthesis pathways and improve the quality of InN and InGaN alloys
Summary
‣ Synthesis of Metastable Materials requires we exploit kinetically limited and non-equilibrium pathways.
‣ We’ve shown that the synthesis of InN with highly reactive chemical species is a complex interplay of surface chemistry and structure
‣ Through a fundamental understanding of these metastable path ways we may be able to push the boundaries of the materials we synthesis and properties we can engineer
24
Acknowledgment
24
Edith Perret, Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory
Weronika Walkosz, Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division, Argonne National Laboratory
Xin Tan, Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division, Argonne National Laboratory
Kedar Manandhar , Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Chicago
Paul Fuoss, Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory
Carol Thompson, Department of Physics, Northern Illinois University
Peter Zapol, Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division, Argonne National Laboratory
Stephen Streiffer, Physical Sciences & Engineering, Argonne National Laboratory
Mike Trenary, Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Chicago
Brian Stephenson, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory
Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357