Thomas H. Baum, Carl E. Larson, et al.
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry
Self-assembled and coherently strained Ge dots were grown on a Si/SiGe superlattice, which was deposited on a flat Si(001) substrate surface patterned with a regular array of straight trenches. The superlattice translates the surface modulation of the substrate into a strain-field modulation, which causes the Ge dots on its surface to form along straight lines above the buried trenches. This approach provides self-assembled Ge dots with excellent lateral periodicity, which might be useful for fabricating dot-based field-effect-transistors (DotFETs). Here, we propose the concept of a modulation-doped p-channel DotFET (p-MOD-DotFET). The p-MOD-DotFET relies on embedded Ge-rich nanostructures, which provide p-channels through the Ge-rich dots. A high Ge concentration in the dots is desirable in order to exploit the high hole mobility of Ge-rich material. We show that the commonly observed Si-Ge intermixing during Si capping of Ge dots can be suppressed by overgrowing the islands at low temperature. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Thomas H. Baum, Carl E. Larson, et al.
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry
William Hinsberg, Joy Cheng, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2010
A. Krol, C.J. Sher, et al.
Surface Science
D.D. Awschalom, J.-M. Halbout
Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials