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- Phase mapping of aging process in InN nanostructures: oxygen incorporation and the role of the zinc blende phase doi link

Auteur(s): Gonzalez D., Lozano J. G., Herrera M., Morales F. M., Ruffenach S., Briot O., Garcia R.

(Article) Publié: Nanotechnology, vol. 21 p.185706 (2010)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arxiv


Ref HAL: hal-00539809_v1
PMID 20388966
DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/21/18/185706
WoS: 000276672100027
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
7 Citations
Résumé:

Uncapped InN nanostructures undergo a deleterious natural aging process at ambient conditions by oxygen incorporation. The phases involved in this process and their localization is mapped by transmission electron microscopy (TEM)-related techniques. The parent wurtzite InN (InN-w) phase disappears from the surface and gradually forms a highly textured cubic layer that completely wraps up a InN-w nucleus which still remains from the original single-crystalline quantum dots. The good reticular relationships between the different crystals generate low misfit strains and explain the apparent easiness for phase transformations at room temperature and pressure conditions, but also disable the classical methods to identify phases and grains from TEM images. The application of the geometrical phase algorithm in order to form numerical moire mappings and RGB multilayered image reconstructions allows us to discern among the different phases and grains formed inside these nanostructures. Samples aged for shorter times reveal the presence of metastable InN:O zinc blende (zb) volumes, which act as the intermediate phase between the initial InN-w and the most stable cubic In2O3 end phase. These cubic phases are highly twinned with a proportion of 50:50 between both orientations. We suggest that the existence of the intermediate InN: O-zb phase should be seriously considered to understand the reason for the widely scattered reported fundamental properties of thought to be InN-w, as its bandgap or superconductivity.