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Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic properties and chemistry of Ti/GaAs and Pd/GaAs interfaces.

R. Ludeke, +1 more
- 15 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 8, pp 5526-5535
TLDR
Several refinements of the photoemission technique and data analysis are discussed and shown to be relevant to both the accurate determination of band bending and the chemical characterization of the interface.
Abstract
Photoemission experiments have shown that strong chemical reactions occur at clean Pd/GaAs(110) and Ti/GaAs(110) interfaces formed at room temperature in ultrahigh vacuum. In both cases elemental Ga was found dispersed in the metal film, which also had a metal-As compound segregated to its surface. In addition, what appears to be elemental As was observed on the Pd-covered surfaces. Subsurface reactions were identified well below monolayer (ML) coverages. The evolution of band bending with increasing metal coverage starting near 0.001 ML is strongly dependent on the metal and results in Schottky-barrier heights of 0.73 (0.70)\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.05 eV for Ti and 1.01 (0.42)\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.05 eV for Pd on n-type (p-type) GaAs(110). Strong emission from the transition-metal d orbitals in the band-gap region of the GaAs was observed for coverages \ensuremath{\gtrsim}0.01 ML and represents the first direct spectroscopic identification of occupied interface states responsible for Fermi-level pinning. The latter observation together with differing coverage dependences for the final pinning positions for Pd and Ti indicate a new mechanism for the formation of a Schottky barrier. It is suggested that rebonding between the transition metal and the GaAs at the interface produces partially occupied d orbitals which lie in the semiconductor band gap. In addition, several refinements of the photoemission technique and data analysis are discussed and shown to be relevant to both the accurate determination of band bending and the chemical characterization of the interface.

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Journal ArticleDOI

On the physics of metal-semiconductor interfaces

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the continuum of metal-induced gap states (MIGS) which are derived from the virtual gap states of the complex semiconductor band structure, and the physical mechanism primarily determining barrier height is provided by the decay of the metal's electron wavefunctions into the semiconductor in the energy range between the top of the valence band and the Fermi level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Schottky contacts to cleaved GaAs (110) surfaces. I. Electrical properties and microscopic theories

TL;DR: The transport properties of over 400 Schottky diodes, fabricated on cleaved, atomically clean and on cleaving, air-exposed GaAs (110) surfaces, have been examined for a diverse range of metallisations using the conventional currentvoltage and capacitance-voltage techniques as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tight-Binding Model of Surface Donor-States Induced by Metal Adatoms on GaAs(110) Surfaces

W. Mönch
- 01 Oct 1988 - 
Abstract: Metals deposited on clean GaAs(llO) surfaces held at low temperatures are inducing extrinsic surface states of donor type. For metals with an outer s-electron the energy levels of such surface donors are calculated in a tight-binding model. The approach used describes the adatom-substrate bonding as a diatomic, heteropolar «surface-molecule» in which the metal s- electrons are forming bonds with dangling sp 3-hybrids of surface Ga-atoms. The chemical trend of the calculated energy of the bonding: states as a function of the atomic term values of the metal s-electrons is in agreement with experimental data002E
Journal ArticleDOI

Epitaxial silicide formation in the Mg/Si(111) system

TL;DR: In this article, it has been found that an epitaxial Mg 2 Si silicide is responsible for the ( 2 3 √3 × 2 3 * √ 3)R30° reconstrucer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-dimensional electron gas formed in a back-gated undoped heterostructure

TL;DR: In this paper, the relation between electron density and mobility is studied for samples both with and without a surface gate, and the results indicate that background impurities and an inhomogeneity of the electric field coming from the surface govern the mobility in a low-electron-density region and that the interface inhomogeneous becomes important at a high electron density.