Field dependent study on the impact of co-evaporated multihits and ion pile-up for the apparent stoichiometric quantification of GaN and AlN
Journal article, 2022

For atom probe tomography, multihits and any associated ion pile-up are viewed as an “Achilles” heel when trying to establish accurate stoichiometric quantification. A significant reason for multihits and ion pile-up is credited to co-evaporation events. The impact is the underestimation of one or more elements present due to detector inadequacies when the field evaporated ions are spatially and temporally close. Nitride materials, especially GaN and AlN, have been shown to suffer a strong field dependent compositional bias, with N having the characteristics for being a species prone to ion pile-up. In this paper we have explored through field dependent measurements on GaN and AlN the associated impact of co-evaporated multihits and ion pile-up. To achieve this a normal CAMECA electrode along with a specially modified GRID electrode, which was designed to manipulate co-evaporated ions and hence ion pile-up, were employed. From our results and in-depth analysis, any co-evaporation and associated ion pile-up is found to be either very small, or not species dependent. Thus, ion pile-up cannot be attributed as the cause for the significant N underestimation observed in these materials.

Multihits

GaN and AlN

Atom probe tomography

Ion pile-up

Quantification

Author

Richard J.H. Morris

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

Ramya Cuduvally

KU Leuven

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

McMaster University

Jhao Rong Lin

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

Ming Zhao

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

Wilfried Vandervorst

KU Leuven

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

Mattias Thuvander

Chalmers, Physics, Microstructure Physics

Claudia Fleischmann

Interuniversity Micro-Electronics Center at Leuven

KU Leuven

Ultramicroscopy

0304-3991 (ISSN) 1879-2723 (eISSN)

Vol. 241 113592

Subject Categories

Materials Chemistry

DOI

10.1016/j.ultramic.2022.113592

PubMed

35988476

More information

Latest update

9/2/2022 1