4.7 Article

Phase-Selective Epitaxy of Trigonal and Orthorhombic Bismuth Thin Films on Si (111)

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13142143

Keywords

topological thin films; phase-change materials; structural transformation; phase-selective growth; molecular beam epitaxy; neuromorphic platform

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The growth of high-quality Bi thin-film allotropes on various substrates has been a challenge despite significant research efforts. This study presents a systematic growth investigation using molecular beam epitaxy to achieve high-quality Bi epilayers on Bi-terminated Si (111) 1 x 1 surfaces. The study provides a phase map of trigonal, orthorhombic, and pseudocubic thin-film allotropes of Bi and offers insights into phase segregation, stability, transformation, and thickness limitations through X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy analysis.
Over the past three decades, the growth of Bi thin films has been extensively explored due to their potential applications in various fields such as thermoelectrics, ferroelectrics, and recently for topological and neuromorphic applications, too. Despite significant research efforts in these areas, achieving reliable and controllable growth of high-quality Bi thin-film allotropes has remained a challenge. Previous studies have reported the growth of trigonal and orthorhombic phases on various substrates yielding low-quality epilayers characterized by surface morphology. In this study, we present a systematic growth investigation, enabling the high-quality growth of Bi epilayers on Bi-terminated Si (111) 1 x 1 surfaces using molecular beam epitaxy. Our work yields a phase map that demonstrates the realization of trigonal, orthorhombic, and pseudocubic thin-film allotropes of Bi. In-depth characterization through X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques and scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) analysis provides a comprehensive understanding of phase segregation, phase stability, phase transformation, and phase-dependent thickness limitations in various Bi thin-film allotropes. Our study provides recipes for the realization of high-quality Bi thin films with desired phases, offering opportunities for the scalable refinement of Bi into quantum and neuromorphic devices and for revisiting technological proposals for this versatile material platform from the past 30 years.

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