To investigate the early stages of nucleation and growth of As precipitates in GaAs grown at low substrate temperature, we make use of a self-consistent-charge density-functional based tight-binding method. Since a pair of As antisites already shows a significant binding energy which increases when more As antisites are attached, there is no critical nucleus size. Provided that all excess As has precipitated, the clusters may grow in size since the binding energies increase with increasing agglomeration size. These findings close the gap between experimental investigation of point defects and the detection of nanometer-size precipitates in transmission electron microscopy.Peer reviewe
We use positron annihilation to study vacancy defects in GaAs grown at low temperatures (LT-GaAs). T...
Molecular‐beam‐epitaxial GaAs grown at 200 °C has an extremely high (≳1019 cm−3) concentration of As...
Precipitation processes in the p-type, n-type, and intrinsic GaAs layers grown by molecular beam epi...
To investigate the early stages of nucleation and growth of As precipitates in GaAs grown at low sub...
To investigate the early stages of nucleation and growth of As precipitates in GaAs grown at low sub...
To investigate the lattice distortion caused by point defects in As-rich GaAs, we make use of a self...
We investigate the antisite formation in GaAs by molecular dynamics simulation with a realistic many...
International audienceWe have designed a GaAs based structure in which the influence of the initial ...
We have studied the metastability of the antistructure (arsenic-antisite gallium-antisite) pair in G...
A technique is demonstrated to control the incorporation of excess arsenic and subsequent positionin...
We have investigated the effects of post-growth annealing on Al–Ga interdiffusion and As precipitate...
The precipitation of arsenic in GaAs epitaxially grown at low temperature (LT GaAs) has been studied...
A novel theoretical investigation is employed to study the influence of surface dynamics in low temp...
A self-consistent-charge density-functional based tight binding method was used to investigate the l...
A novel theoretical investigation is employed to study the influence of surface dynamics in low temp...
We use positron annihilation to study vacancy defects in GaAs grown at low temperatures (LT-GaAs). T...
Molecular‐beam‐epitaxial GaAs grown at 200 °C has an extremely high (≳1019 cm−3) concentration of As...
Precipitation processes in the p-type, n-type, and intrinsic GaAs layers grown by molecular beam epi...
To investigate the early stages of nucleation and growth of As precipitates in GaAs grown at low sub...
To investigate the early stages of nucleation and growth of As precipitates in GaAs grown at low sub...
To investigate the lattice distortion caused by point defects in As-rich GaAs, we make use of a self...
We investigate the antisite formation in GaAs by molecular dynamics simulation with a realistic many...
International audienceWe have designed a GaAs based structure in which the influence of the initial ...
We have studied the metastability of the antistructure (arsenic-antisite gallium-antisite) pair in G...
A technique is demonstrated to control the incorporation of excess arsenic and subsequent positionin...
We have investigated the effects of post-growth annealing on Al–Ga interdiffusion and As precipitate...
The precipitation of arsenic in GaAs epitaxially grown at low temperature (LT GaAs) has been studied...
A novel theoretical investigation is employed to study the influence of surface dynamics in low temp...
A self-consistent-charge density-functional based tight binding method was used to investigate the l...
A novel theoretical investigation is employed to study the influence of surface dynamics in low temp...
We use positron annihilation to study vacancy defects in GaAs grown at low temperatures (LT-GaAs). T...
Molecular‐beam‐epitaxial GaAs grown at 200 °C has an extremely high (≳1019 cm−3) concentration of As...
Precipitation processes in the p-type, n-type, and intrinsic GaAs layers grown by molecular beam epi...