3.5.3 Local Properties

General

Local properties, if seen as complementary to the general properties discussed before and where a single number was all you wanted, give pictures or maps of what is going on locally.
Of course, a number like "average grain size" may be seen as a local property, too - but what the hell, you know what is meant here.
In essence, here we are discussing methods that produce a kind of picture - directly like an optical microscope, or indirectly like a STM.
Let's just enumerate the main techniques. Since they are covered in detail in other lecture courses, we will not go into any details here.
 
Optical Microscopy
   
You can see a lot by just looking through an optical microscope on your thin film or through your thin film (if substrate and thin film are transparent) - provided that the things you see are ³ 0.5 µm or so.
You have many different imaging modes at your disposal today. From classical microscopy, to all kinds of contrast enhancers (polarizers, phase or interference contrast, scanning, ...).
You also may prepare your specimen in such a ways that things are better visible. Etching the surface with special etchants may delineate defects, for example (and may etch off your layer completely, so be careful).
Solar cell composite image
The example here shows the microscope image (very low magnification) of a solar cell in the lower right hand corner blended electronically with a short-circuit current image, i.e. a property image of the pn junction formed because there is a thin n-type layer "on top" of the p-type substrate. The colors denote quantitatively the local photo-current (yellow - red: large currents; green - blue: low currents).
     
Electron Microscopy
   
There are two kinds of electron microscopes:
Scanning electron microscopes, (SEM). Using a SEM you look at the surface of your sample; in its analytical mode you may "see" to a depth of a fraction of a micron
Transmission electron microscopes (TEM). With a TEM, you look through a always thin sample. In one of the many imaging modes you can see and analyze what is inside your thin film at atomic resolution.
 
Scanning Probe Microscopy
   
We can scan all kinds of probes across the surface of our thin film. if we desire very high lateral resolution we have
Scanning tunneling microscopy, (STM). Using a STM you look at the electron density at the surface of your sample; this allows you to "see" single atoms
Atomic force microscope (AFM). With an AFM, you measure the force that surface atoms (or coarser structures) exert on a close by oscillating probe tip.
There are many more scanning probe instruments, e.g. for measuring surface charge (....) look it up!
 
Summary
   
The whole sub-chapter just served to make you aware of a few basic and rather simple truths:
1. Thin films have just as many properties as bulk materials, but they might be far more difficult to measure.

2. Thin films may have additional properties not defined for bulk materials with specific measurement techniques

3. A lot of measurement and characterization techniques have been developed just for thin films

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© H. Föll (Semiconductor Technology - Script)