Delille D, Pantel R, Vincent G, Van Cappellen E
FEI France, Limeil-Brevannes.
Ultramicroscopy. 2002 Oct;93(1):1-9. doi: 10.1016/s0304-3991(02)00124-9.
A new method to determine the concentration of germanium in Si(1-x) Ge(x) single crystals is presented. It is based on extinction distance measurements by means of convergent beam electron diffraction (CBED). The two-beam condition CBED intensity oscillation (the so-called rocking curve) is measured for the 004 diffracted beam and compared with a numerical simulation. Using the two-beam dynamical diffraction approximation theory, this approach yields very precise values for both specimen thickness and effective extinction distance (Ultramicroscopy 87 (2001) 5). First a theoretical extinction distance zetag(x) for strain relaxed Si(1-x)Ge(x) is calculated assuming a solid solution and using tabulated atomic scattering factors of silicon and germanium atoms. It is found that for single crystals zetag(x) decreases from 156 nm in pure silicon to 90 nm in pure germanium. Measurements on calibrated strain relaxed SiGe layers with variable germanium concentrations show an excellent agreement between experimental and calculated extinction distances zetag(x). As a consequence the experimental extinction distance zetag(x) becomes an indirect measure of the germanium concentration with a 1-2 at % sensitivity. The method turns out to be insensitive to strain as experimental zetag(x) values obtained on strained SiGe layers fit the theoretical extinction distance curve calculated for strain relaxed SiGe.