1994
DOI: 10.1016/0039-6028(94)91216-5
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Atomic hydrogen cleaning of GaAs and InP surfaces studied by photoemission spectroscopy

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Cited by 35 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…This method has previously been shown to be an efficient, relatively low temperature technique for obtaining clean, wellordered, damage-free GaAs and InP ͑001͒ surfaces. 6,7 In this letter, the removal of oxide and hydrocarbon contamination from the InAs͑110͒ surface by annealing under a flux of atomic hydrogen ͑H*͒ is reported. During AHC, the contaminant vibrational modes were identified and monitored by high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy ͑HREELS͒.…”
Section: Controlled Oxide Removal For the Preparation Of Damage-freementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This method has previously been shown to be an efficient, relatively low temperature technique for obtaining clean, wellordered, damage-free GaAs and InP ͑001͒ surfaces. 6,7 In this letter, the removal of oxide and hydrocarbon contamination from the InAs͑110͒ surface by annealing under a flux of atomic hydrogen ͑H*͒ is reported. During AHC, the contaminant vibrational modes were identified and monitored by high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy ͑HREELS͒.…”
Section: Controlled Oxide Removal For the Preparation Of Damage-freementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Atomic hydrogen (AH) cleaning has been shown in a number of studies [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] to be a viable alternative method for the preparation of clean, atomically flat surfaces on a variety of III-V semiconductor substrates. The technique has several advantages over conventional thermal cleaning-much lower temperatures (p400 1C) are required; impurities (in particular oxide residues) are removed more rapidly and selectively; the procedure can be performed under UHV conditions; and the presence of a group V source is not required.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of an H* beam was motivated by the recent study on cleaning GaAs surfaces by H*. 8,9 In the cleaning process, Ga 2 O 3 , whose chemical nature is expected to resemble that of Ga 2 Se 3 , is found to be removed from the surface at remarkably low substrate temperature.…”
Section: Shinichiro Takatani and Takeshi Kikawamentioning
confidence: 99%