3C-SiC
layers (7 and 15 μm thick), epitaxially grown on silicon,
were covered with gold nanoparticles by immersion in a solution containing
HF and KAuCl4. The surface of the layers played a crucial
role in the morphology of the deposited metal network and large gold
agglomerates developed on the pronounced antiphase domain boundaries
of the thinner layer. Preferential growth was not observed on the
smooth surface of the 15 μm thick layer. Rutherford backscattering
spectrometry and electron microscopy outlined a progressive nucleation
that takes place for less than 60 s immersion times under a kinetic
control process. For longer deposition time each cluster grows under
a diffusion control process, resulting in flower-like gold particles.
However, the nucleation and growth processes can be strongly modified
by multiple immersions in solution after rinsing in water. The adopted
procedure allows the tailoring of the particles size and avoids the
aggregation, therefore improving by about 1 order of magnitude the
particle density (from 2 to 9 × 109 cm–2) while keeping their size systematically smaller (20 nm radius)
than that obtained by a single immersion for the same total time (about
50 nm radius). Reflectivity measurements and micro Raman analyses
evidenced the plasmonic effects produced by the clusters.