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Phys. Rev. B 70, 205337 (2004) [7 pages]

Surface energetics and structure of the Ge wetting layer on Si(100)

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M. J. Beck*, A. van de Walle, and M. Asta
Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA

Received 27 January 2004; revised 2 July 2004; published 23 November 2004

Ge deposited on Si(100) initially forms heteroepitaxial layers, which grow to a critical thickness of ∼3 MLs before the appearance of three-dimensional strain relieving structures. Experimental observations reveal that the surface structure of this Ge wetting layer is a dimer vacancy line (DVL) superstructure of the unstrained Ge(100) dimer reconstruction. In the following, the results of first-principles calculations of the thickness dependence of the wetting layer surface excess energy for the c(4×2) and 4×6 DVL surface reconstructions are reported. These results predict a wetting layer critical thickness of ∼3 MLs, which is largely unaffected by the presence of dimer vacancy lines. The 4×6 DVL reconstruction is found to be thermodynamically stable with respect to the c(4×2) structure for wetting layers at least 2 ML thick. A strong correlation between the fraction of total surface induced deformation present in the substrate and the thickness dependence of wetting layer surface energy is also shown.

© 2004 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.70.205337
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.70.205337
PACS:
68.35.Md, 68.47.Fg, 81.15.Aa, 68.35.Bs

*Electronic address: beckm@northwestern.edu; URL: http://cms.northwestern.edu/