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1.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 28(Pt 1): 301-308, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33399581

ABSTRACT

High-quality Hg1-xCdxTe (MCT) single crystals are essential for two-dimensional infrared detector arrays. Crystal quality plays an important role on the performance of these devices. Here, the dislocations present at the interface of CdZnTe (CZT) substrates and liquid-phase epitaxy grown MCT epilayers are investigated using X-ray Bragg diffraction imaging (XBDI). The diffraction contributions coming from the threading dislocations (TDs) of the CZT substrate and the MCT epilayers are separated using weak-beam conditions in projection topographs. The results clearly suggest that the lattice parameter of the growing MCT epilayer is, at the growth inception, very close to that of the CZT substrate and gradually departs from the substrate's lattice parameter as the growth advances. Moreover, the relative growth velocity of the MCT epilayer around the TDs is found to be faster by a factor of two to four compared with the matrix. In addition, a fast alternative method to the conventional characterization methods for probing crystals with low dislocation density such as atomic force microscopy and optical interferometry is introduced. A 1.5 mm × 1.5 mm area map of the epilayer defects with sub-micrometre spatial resolution is generated, using section XBDI, by blocking the diffraction contribution of the substrate and scanning the sample spatially.

2.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 50(Pt 2): 561-569, 2017 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28381981

ABSTRACT

Bragg diffraction imaging enables the quality of synthetic single-crystal diamond substrates and their overgrown, mostly doped, diamond layers to be characterized. This is very important for improving diamond-based devices produced for X-ray optics and power electronics applications. The usual first step for this characterization is white-beam X-ray diffraction topography, which is a simple and fast method to identify the extended defects (dislocations, growth sectors, boundaries, stacking faults, overall curvature etc.) within the crystal. This allows easy and quick comparison of the crystal quality of diamond plates available from various commercial suppliers. When needed, rocking curve imaging (RCI) is also employed, which is the quantitative counterpart of monochromatic Bragg diffraction imaging. RCI enables the local determination of both the effective misorientation, which results from lattice parameter variation and the local lattice tilt, and the local Bragg position. Maps derived from these parameters are used to measure the magnitude of the distortions associated with polishing damage and the depth of this damage within the volume of the crystal. For overgrown layers, these maps also reveal the distortion induced by the incorporation of impurities such as boron, or the lattice parameter variations associated with the presence of growth-incorporated nitrogen. These techniques are described, and their capabilities for studying the quality of diamond substrates and overgrown layers, and the surface damage caused by mechanical polishing, are illustrated by examples.

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