New publication in APL Materials!

23.01.2025

A structural analysis of ordered Cs3Sb films grown on single crystal graphene and silicon carbide substrates

C. A. Pennington, M. Gaowei, E. M. Echeverria, K. Evans-Lutterodt, A. Galdi, T. Juffmann, S. Karkare, J. Maxson, S. J. van der Molen, P. Saha, J. Smedley, W. G. Stam and R. M. Tromp
APL Materials (2024), DOI: 10.1063/5.0229850

 

Abstract:

Alkali antimonides are well established as high efficiency, low intrinsic emittance photocathodes for accelerators and photon detectors. However, conventionally grown alkali antimonide films are polycrystalline with surface disorder and roughness that can limit achievable beam brightness. Ordering the crystalline structure of alkali antimonides has the potential to deliver higher brightness electron beams by reducing surface disorder and enabling the engineering of material properties at the level of atomic layers. In this report, we demonstrate the growth of ordered Cs3Sb films on single crystal substrates 3C-SiC and graphene-coated 4H-SiC using pulsed laser deposition and conventional thermal evaporation growth techniques. The crystalline structures of the Cs3Sb films were examined using reflection high energy electron diffraction and x-ray diffraction diagnostics, while film thickness and roughness estimates were made using x-ray reflectivity. With these tools, we observed ordered domains in less than 10 nm thick films with quantum efficiencies greater than 1% at 530 nm. Moreover, we identify structural features such as Laue oscillations indicative of highly ordered films. We found that Cs3Sb films grew with flat, fiber-textured surfaces on 3C-SiC and with multiple ordered domains and sub-nanometer surface roughness on graphene-coated 4H-SiC under our growth conditions. We identify the crystallographic orientations of Cs3Sb grown on graphene-coated 4H-SiC substrates and discuss the significance of examining the crystal structure of these films for growing epitaxial heterostructures in future experiments.

(a) The XRD diffraction peaks as a function of angle ϕ as the Cs3Sb film on Gr/4H-SiC is rotated about the azimuth. Rotational dependence of the XRD peaks implies the growth of ordered domains, which are identified by the Miller indices (400), (422), and (620). (b) The azimuth scan of the film with RHEED identifies the same surface azimuths as in (a) in addition to others. (c) XRD captures small modulations in the film on 3C-SiC. (d) RHEED finds no modulations on the surface of the films grown on 3C-SiC, indicating smooth and fiber textured surfaces.