The process of growing a crystal of a
particular orientation on top of another crystal, where the orientation is
determined by the underlying crystal. The creation of various layers in semiconductor wafers, such as those used in integrated circuits, is a typical application
for the process. In addition, epitaxy is often used to fabricate optoelectronic
devices.
The word epitaxy derives from the Greek prefix epi meaning “upon” or “over” and taxis meaning “arrangement” or “order.” The
atoms in an epitaxial layer have a particular registry (or location) relative
to the underlying crystal. The process results in the formation of crystalline
thin films that may be of the same or different chemical composition and
structure as the substrate and may be composed of only one or, through repeated
depositions, many distinct layers.
heteroepitaxy: the growth layers
are of a material different from the substrate. The commercial importance of
epitaxy comes mostly from its use in the growth of semiconductor materials for
forming layers and quantum wells in electronic and photonic devices—for
example, in computer, video display, and telecommunications applications. The
process of epitaxy is general, however, and so can occur for other classes of materials, such as metals and
oxides, which have been used since the 1980s to create materials that display
giantmagnetoresistance (a property that has been used to
produce higher-density digital storage devices).
In vapour phase epitaxy the deposition atoms
come from a vapour, so that growth occurs at the interface between gaseous and
solid phases of matter. Examples include growth from thermally vaporized
material such as silicon or
from gases such as silane (SiH4), which reacts with a hot surface to leave behind the silicon
atoms and to release the hydrogen back into the gaseous phase. In liquid phase epitaxy layers grow from a liquid source (such
as silicon doped with small amounts of another element) at a liquid-solid
interface. In solid
phase epitaxy a thin amorphous (noncrystalline) film layer is first deposited
on a crystalline substrate, which is then heated to convert the film into a
crystalline layer. The epitaxial growth then proceeds by a layer-by-layer
process in the solid phase through atomic motion during the recrystallization
at the crystal-amorphous interface.
There
are a number of approaches to vapour phase epitaxy, which is the most common
process for epitaxial layer growth. Molecular beam epitaxy provides a pure
stream of atomic vapour by thermally heating the constituent source materials.
For example, silicon can be placed in a crucible or cell for silicon epitaxy,
or gallium and arsenic can
be placed in separate cells for gallium arsenide epitaxy. In chemical vapour deposition the
atoms for epitaxial growth are supplied from a precursor gas source (e.g.,
silane). Metal-organic
chemical vapour deposition is similar, except that it uses metal-organic
species such as trimethyl gallium (which are usually liquid at room
temperature) as a source for one of the elements. For example, trimethyl
gallium and arsine are often used for epitaxial gallium arsenide growth.Chemical beam epitaxy uses a gas as one of its sources in a
system similar to molecular beam epitaxy. Atomic layer epitaxy is based on introducing one gas that
will absorb only a single atomic layer on the surface and following it with
another gas that reacts with the preceding layer.