2003
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.67.195301
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Control of strain-mediated growth kinetics of self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots

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Cited by 70 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…This presents an especially acute challenge for most theoretical methods because of the relaxation of misfit strain, which introduces long-range elastic interactions and pre-empts purely local estimates of kinetic barriers. Nevertheless, KMC simulations that incorporate elastic effects to various levels of sophistication [104][105][106] suggest that including a contribution from the local elastic energy to the kinetic barriers for detachment and migration provides a useful starting point for understanding strain-induced morphologies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This presents an especially acute challenge for most theoretical methods because of the relaxation of misfit strain, which introduces long-range elastic interactions and pre-empts purely local estimates of kinetic barriers. Nevertheless, KMC simulations that incorporate elastic effects to various levels of sophistication [104][105][106] suggest that including a contribution from the local elastic energy to the kinetic barriers for detachment and migration provides a useful starting point for understanding strain-induced morphologies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the identification of a set of optimal growth parameters would be most useful to experimentalists. The kinetic Monte Carlo ͑KMC͒ has been proposed recently to study QD island self-organization by many researchers [19][20][21][22][23][24] where the growth parameters are directly involved in the simulation. 25 It has been shown that the main growth parameters affecting QD island distribution patterns are the temperature T, flux rate F to the surface during deposition, surface coverage c, and growth interruption time t i .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dobbs et al theoretically estimated the variation in the QD density with increasing coverage θ using the MFREs and obtained a dog-leg curve, which was experimentally supported by experimental data on metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy growth of InP islands on the GaP-stabilized GaAs(001) substrate. 4) In addition, Meixner et al [301] simulated QD formation using the KMC simulation method and found rather good agreement between their simulation results for the island density and experimental results for both Ge/Si(001) and InAs/GaAs(001). 5) In comparison with the theoretical works of Chen and Washburn [82] and Dobbs et al [81], Wang et al [302,303], suggested an entirely different scenario.…”
Section: A Large Variety Of Experimental Data In the Literature On Thmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6) As described in Section 3.1.2, Osipov et al [69,70] suggested a kinetic model on the basis of the CNGT for QD formation in terms of the first-order phase transformations. It is intrinsically different in nature from either the adatom aggregation model used by Chen and Washburn [82] and Meixner et al [301] and the model of Wang et al [302,303]; in the kinetic model of Osipov et al [69,70], QD nucleation occurs in a well-developed uniformly elastically strained film of thickness h trapped in a thermodynamic metastable state characterized by a "supersaturation" ζ ≡ h/h eq − 1. In this model, the QD nucleation rate, QD growth rate, and evolution of the island size distribution with increasing coverage can be calculated theoretically using the mathematical formula established for the kinetics of the first-order phase transformation.…”
Section: A Large Variety Of Experimental Data In the Literature On Thmentioning
confidence: 99%