The average electrical behaviour of transrotational NiSi layers used as contacts in diode structures on n-type Si was correlated to the local structure and conduction paths inside each domain by using conductive-atomic force microscopy. It was found that, independently of the domain orientation, the central portion of the domain (core $ 20 nm) possesses a Schottky barrier lower than in the rest of the structure. This was ascribed to an effect of the structural coupling between the NiSi lattice and the silicon substrate as realised at the interface in virtue of the pseudoepitaxial relationship established since the early stages of the reaction. V C 2012 American Institute of Physics.It is well assessed that the use of nickel silicide on source and drain contacts of microelectronic devices has a significant impact to reduce series and contact resistances. 1,2 The drastic scaling down of devices and also the recent interest to use plastic substrates, which have low critical temperatures (e.g., Tc polyimide 200 C), pose more and more the need to optimize the material properties, and particularly, the interfaces quality on the nanoscale. It is thus mandatory to know in more detail the process of silicide formation since the very early stages of the reaction process to control the structure and the stoichiometry of the silicide, especially on very thin layers.The pioneering studies on the very early stages of Ni-Si reaction date from 1980. It was observed that, on a perfectly cleaned Si surface, a Ni-Si precursor layer is formed even at room temperature (RT) after deposition of a very thin nickel layer (<2 nm). 3 The precursor layer (or diffusion layer) is formed once nickel atoms come in contact with silicon, and reasonably maintained also after subsequent reaction: its presence is thus adduced as the reason why all the Ni-silicide phases have comparable Schottky barrier height (e.g., 0.66 eV on n-type Si). 4 The precursor layer has a disordered structure with Ni atoms having the short range environment similar to that encountered in the NiSi 2 lattice 3 and originates from the diffusion process of Ni atoms into the Si lattice by means of tetrahedral interstitial sites. Due to the similarity of the diffusion layer structure to that of the NiSi 2 lattice, an epitaxial silicide layer is formed upsetting the usual sequence of phases encountered in thick layers, without significant transport of matter, 3 by annealing at relatively low temperature ($450 C). A different scenario is instead observed by depositing at RT a supply of Ni atoms on top of the interfacial diffusion layer. When a supply of Ni is then present, the role of the diffusion layer, as precursor to the reaction process, is shadowed by the fast diffusion of nickel atoms, and a conventional phase sequence is observed with NiSi 2 formed at the end, at the NiSi-Si interface. 1 We have recently 5 shown that the direct transition to NiSi 2 can be assured even in the presence of a nickel supply ($7 nm) by using a $2 nm-thick precursor layer and by reducing anneali...