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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Surface chemistry of a Cu(I) beta-diketonate precursor and the atomic layer deposition of Cu2O on SiO2 studied by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy

Dhakal, Dileep, Waechtler, Thomas, E. Schulz, Stefan, Gessner, Thomas, Lang, Heinrich, Mothes, Robert, Tuchscherer, Andre 07 July 2014 (has links) (PDF)
This article has been published online on 21st May 2014, in Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A: Vac (Vol.32, Issue 4): http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/32/4/10.1116/1.4878815?aemail=author DOI: 10.1116/1.4878815 This article may be accessed via the issue's table of contents at this link: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/32/4?aemail=author The surface chemistry of the bis(tri-n-butylphosphane) copper(I) acetylacetonate, [(nBu3P)2Cu(acac)], and the thermal atomic layer deposition (ALD) of Cu2O using this Cu precursor as reactant and wet oxygen as co-reactant on SiO2 substrates are studied by in-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The Cu precursor was evaporated and exposed to the substrates kept at temperatures between 22 °C and 300 °C. The measured phosphorus and carbon concentration on the substrates indicated that most of the [nBu3P] ligands were released either in the gas phase or during adsorption. No disproportionation was observed for the Cu precursor in the temperature range between 22 °C and 145 °C. However, disproportionation of the Cu precursor was observed at 200 °C, since C/Cu concentration ratio decreased and substantial amounts of metallic Cu were present on the substrate. The amount of metallic Cu increased, when the substrate was kept at 300 °C, indicating stronger disproportionation of the Cu precursor. Hence, the upper limit for the ALD of Cu2O from this precursor lies in the temperature range between 145 °C and 200 °C, as the precursor must not alter its chemical and physical state after chemisorption on the substrate. 500 ALD cycles with the probed Cu precursor and wet O2 as co reactant were carried out on SiO2 at 145 °C. After ALD, in situ XPS analysis confirmed the presence of Cu2O on the substrate. Ex-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry indicated an average film thickness of 2.5 nm of Cu2O deposited with a growth per cycle of 0.05 Å/cycle. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) investigations depicted a homogeneous, fine, and granular morphology of the Cu2O ALD film on SiO2. AFM investigations suggest that the deposited Cu2O film is continuous on the SiO2 substrate.
32

Thermal Oxidation Strategies for the Synthesis of Binary Oxides and their Applications

Shinde, Satish Laxman January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Binary oxides constitute an outstanding class of functional materials with potential applications in many fields such as catalysis, gas sensing, field emission, solar cells, photodetection, etc. Due to the difference in their physical/chemical properties, different oxides have been explored for different applications. For examples, SnO2, Cr2O3 and ZnO are being explored for gas sensing due to their high adsorption capacity for volatile gases, ZnO, Cu2O etc. are being explored in solar cells because of high adsorption coefficient in UV/visible region and so on. Various techniques are available for synthesis of binary oxides and tuning their properties. Most of the physical or chemical synthesis techniques are expensive, need high cost instruments and produces hazardous chemical waste. We need a simple, cost effective and ecofriendly techniques for the synthesis of binary oxides. In present work, a simple and facile thermal oxidation strategy has been employed for the synthesis of various binary oxides (Cu2O, GeO2 and ZnO). For example, CuO nanorods are obtained when Cu is heated around ~ 500 oC, which then heated in Ar atmosphere to obtain a film of porous Cu2O. Similarly, GeO2 with different morphologies and green-luminescent ZnO are obtained by controlling the reaction parameters. These oxides have then been explored for various applications including white light phosphors, catalysis for the degradation of dyes and non-contact thermometry. Overall, we present a thermal oxidation strategy for the synthesis of various binary oxides and explore potential applications in various fields.
33

In-situ XPS Investigation of ALD Cu2O and Cu Thin Films after Successive Reduction

Dhakal, Dileep, Waechtler, Thomas, E. Schulz, Stefan, Mothes, Robert, Moeckel, Stefan, Lang, Heinrich, Gessner, Thomas 07 July 2014 (has links)
This talk was presented in the 14th International Conference on Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD 2014) in Kyoto, Japan on 18th June 2014. Abstract Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) is emerging as a ubiquitous method for the deposition of conformal and homogeneous ultra-thin films on complex topographies and large substrates in microelectronics. Electrochemical deposition (ECD) is the first choice for the deposition of copper (Cu) into the trenches and vias of the interconnect system for ULSI circuits. The ECD of Cu necessitates an electrically conductive seed layer for filling the interconnect structures. ALD is now considered as a solution for conformal deposition of Cu seed layers on very high aspect ratio (AR) structures also for technology nodes below 20 nm, since physical vapor deposition is not applicable for structures with high AR. Cu seed layer deposition by the reduction of Cu2O, which has been deposited from the Cu(I) β-diketonate [(nBu3P)2Cu(acac)] (1) used as Cu precursor, has been successfully carried out on different substrates like Ta, TaN, SiO2, and Ru [1, 2]. It was found that the subsequent gas-phase reduction of the Cu2O films can be aided by introducing catalytic amounts of a Ru precursor into the Cu precursor, so that metallic copper films could potentially obtained also on non-catalytic substrates [3, 4]. In this work, in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) investigation of the surface chemistry during Cu2O ALD from the mixture of 99 mol % of 1 and 1 mol % of [Ru(η5 C5H4SiMe3)(η5-C7H11)] (2) as ruthenium precursor, and the reduction of Cu2O to metallic Cu by formic acid carried out on SiO2 substrate are demonstrated. Oxidation states of the Cu in the film are identified by comparing the Cu Auger parameter (α) [5] with literature data. α calculated after ALD equals 362.2 eV and after reduction equals 363.8 eV, comparable to the Cu2O and metallic Cu in thin-films [6] respectively. In addition, <10 % of Cu(I), Cu(II), and Cu(OH)2 species are identified from the Cu 2p3/2 and Cu L3VV Auger spectrum after reduction. Consequently, the ALD Cu2O is successfully reduced to metallic copper by in-situ thermal reduction using formic acid. [1] T. Waechtler et al., J. Electrochem. Soc., 156 (6), H453 (2009). [2] T. Waechtler et al., Microelectron. Eng., 88, 684 (2011). [3] S. Mueller et al., Conference Proceedings SCD 2011, Semiconductor Conference Dresden, pp. 1-4. [4] T. Waechtler et al., US Patent Application Publication, US 2013/0062768. [5] C. D. Wagner, Faraday Discuss. Chem. Soc., 60, 291 (1975). [6] J. P. Espinós et al., J. Phys. Chem. B, 106, 6921 (2002).
34

Etude ab initio des propriétés physiques des matériaux

Vast, Nathalie 13 July 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Mon activité de recherche fondamentale dans le groupe de théorie du Laboratoire des Solides Irradiés concerne l'étude des propriétés des matériaux d'intérêt pour le CEA, dans les domaines du nucléaire ou de la nanoélectronique. Elle a pour objectif d'atteindre une description théorique -sans paramètre ajustable- des processus contrôlant l'excitation électronique, ainsi que la relaxation -ou désexcitation- électronique, et couvre: - Les propriétés de la matière hors excitation - l'état fondamental; - Les propriétés de l'état excité, abordées sous l'angle de la spectroscopie pour les électrons de valence; - Les vibrations collectives des atomes, leur couplage avec les électrons, et leurs effets sur le transport électronique ou la relaxation électronique. Ces études requièrent un environnement de calcul intensif et l'accès aux ordinateurs du Grand Equipement National de Calcul Intensif GENCI. Dans ce manuscrit, est d'abord rappelé comment calculer la fonction diélectrique inverse en théorie de la fonctionnelle de la densité dépendante du temps, et quel est le lien avec la fonction de perte électronique observée. Des résultats théoriques sur la fonction diélectrique inverse dans des oxydes non corrélés représentés par le dioxyde de titane TiO$_2$ et la zircone ZrO$_2$ sont décrits. Ensuite sont donnés les principaux résultats théoriques pour les calculs de spectres d'absorption optique pour l'oxyde de cuivre Cu$_2$O et la zircone ZrO$_2$. J'y présente une nouvelle interprétation de travail sur le noyau permettant de modéliser les effets excitoniques en théorie de la fonctionnelle de la densité dépendante du temps. Enfin, les derniers calculs menés sur les carbures de bore sont rappelés.
35

Surface chemistry of a Cu(I) beta-diketonate precursor and the atomic layer deposition of Cu2O on SiO2 studied by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy

Dhakal, Dileep, Waechtler, Thomas, E. Schulz, Stefan, Gessner, Thomas, Lang, Heinrich, Mothes, Robert, Tuchscherer, Andre January 2014 (has links)
This article has been published online on 21st May 2014, in Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A: Vac (Vol.32, Issue 4): http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/32/4/10.1116/1.4878815?aemail=author DOI: 10.1116/1.4878815 This article may be accessed via the issue's table of contents at this link: http://scitation.aip.org/content/avs/journal/jvsta/32/4?aemail=author The surface chemistry of the bis(tri-n-butylphosphane) copper(I) acetylacetonate, [(nBu3P)2Cu(acac)], and the thermal atomic layer deposition (ALD) of Cu2O using this Cu precursor as reactant and wet oxygen as co-reactant on SiO2 substrates are studied by in-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The Cu precursor was evaporated and exposed to the substrates kept at temperatures between 22 °C and 300 °C. The measured phosphorus and carbon concentration on the substrates indicated that most of the [nBu3P] ligands were released either in the gas phase or during adsorption. No disproportionation was observed for the Cu precursor in the temperature range between 22 °C and 145 °C. However, disproportionation of the Cu precursor was observed at 200 °C, since C/Cu concentration ratio decreased and substantial amounts of metallic Cu were present on the substrate. The amount of metallic Cu increased, when the substrate was kept at 300 °C, indicating stronger disproportionation of the Cu precursor. Hence, the upper limit for the ALD of Cu2O from this precursor lies in the temperature range between 145 °C and 200 °C, as the precursor must not alter its chemical and physical state after chemisorption on the substrate. 500 ALD cycles with the probed Cu precursor and wet O2 as co reactant were carried out on SiO2 at 145 °C. After ALD, in situ XPS analysis confirmed the presence of Cu2O on the substrate. Ex-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry indicated an average film thickness of 2.5 nm of Cu2O deposited with a growth per cycle of 0.05 Å/cycle. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) investigations depicted a homogeneous, fine, and granular morphology of the Cu2O ALD film on SiO2. AFM investigations suggest that the deposited Cu2O film is continuous on the SiO2 substrate.

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