Understanding the growth mechanisms of nanowires is essential for their successful implementation in advanced devices applications. In situ ultrahigh-vacuum transmission electron microscopy has been applied to elucidate the interaction mechanisms of titanium disilicide nanowires (TiSi2 NWs) on Si(111) substrate. Two phenomena were observed: merging of the two NWs in the same direction, and collapse of one NW on a competing NW in a different direction when they meet at the ends. On the other hand, as one NW encounters the midsection of the other NW in a different direction, it recedes in favor of bulging of the other NW at the midsection. Since crystallographically the nanowires are favored to grow on Si(110) only in the [1 -1 0] direction, this crucial information has been fruitfully exploited to focus on the growth of a high density of long and high-aspect-ratio Ti silicide NWs parallel to the surface on Si(110) in a single direction. The achievement in growth of high-density NWs in a single direction represents a significant advance in realizing the vast potential for applications of silicide NWs in nanoelectronics devices.
This work develops a method for growing Ni-silicide/Si heterostructured nanowire arrays by glancing angle Ni deposition and solid state reaction on ordered Si nanowire arrays. Samples of ordered Si nanowire arrays were fabricated by nanosphere lithography and metal-induced catalytic etching. Glancing angle Ni deposition deposited Ni only on the top of Si nanowires. When the annealing temperature was 500°C, a Ni3Si2 phase was formed at the apex of the nanowires. The phase of silicide at the Ni-silicide/Si interface depended on the diameter of the Si nanowires, such that epitaxial NiSi2 with a {111} facet was formed at the Ni-silicide/Si interface in Si nanowires with large diameter, and NiSi was formed in Si nanowires with small diameter. A mechanism that is based on flux divergence and a nucleation-limited reaction is proposed to explain this phenomenon of size-dependent phase formation.
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