Introduction
Environmental transmission electron microscopy (ETEM) provides a powerful opportunity for studies within reactive environments, ranging from reduction, oxidation, and catalysis studies (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Wagner, Hansen, Dahl, Topsoe and Jacobsen2001; Toth et al., Reference Toth, Jacobsson, Ek and Wiinikka2019) to structural transformations and crystal growth (Hashimoto et al., Reference Hashimoto, Naiki, Eto and Fujiwara1968; Hammar et al., Reference Hammar, LeGoues, Tersoff, Reuter and Tromp1996; Oh et al., Reference Oh, Kauffmann, Scheu, Kaplan and Rühle2005). In particular, the technique has evolved to enable real-time investigations at the atomic level under realistic conditions, ideal for detailed studies of crystal growth. Such studies benefit from precise control, monitoring, and variability of the ambient gas, potentially including multiple independently controlled species to which a sample is exposed at the same time. Earlier in situ studies of crystal growth have been conducted by supplying gas species using gate valves (Ross et al., Reference Ross, Tersoff, Reuter, LeGoues and Tromp1998), Knudsen cells (Harmand et al., Reference Harmand, Patriarche, Glas, Panciera, Florea, Maurice, Travers and Ollivier2018), evaporation of solid materials mounted on the holder (Lenrick et al., Reference Lenrick, Ek, Deppert, Samuelson and Reine Wallenberg2014), or pre-mixing of a set volume of gas whose flow is controlled by mass flow controllers (Straubinger et al., Reference Straubinger, Beyer, Ochs, Stolz and Volz2017). The highly complex nature of the crystal growth process, however, means that extrapolation of any findings to ex situ or industrially relevant processes requires increasingly higher accuracy and precision with respect to variability and quantification of gas pressures and compositions throughout the experiments. This represents a particular challenge for ETEM analysis and has required the design of systems that integrate the capabilities of advanced crystal growth instrumentation with the specific requirements of TEM to allow elevated sample pressure and temperature, as well as a better understanding how the environment influences the analysis and vice versa.
To address these challenges, we developed an ETEM system based on a Hitachi HF3300S instrument [reported in Hetherington et al. (Reference Hetherington, Jacobsson, Dick and Wallenberg2020)], which is integrated with a metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) system designed for real-time investigation of crystal growth processes of semiconductor nanostructures. Chemical vapor deposition is a well-established technique for crystal growth with broad application in the electronics industry, with MOCVD being especially important for synthesis of compound semiconductors. This method allows for the extremely accurate control of gas composition and pressure which is required to meet the very high demands on structural and chemical purity for modern electronic devices. However, this process typically operates at relatively high pressures (compared to TEM) in order to achieve the large-scale synthesis requirements. Moreover, the process requires the use of metal-organic and hydride precursor species with complex handling requirements, and for which calibration data is limited. Our research in MOCVD is focused on the use of this technique for synthesis of semiconductor nanostructures, such as nanowires, with interesting properties not otherwise achievable in conventional semiconductors. Since the properties of these materials are dependent on specific morphologies, structural, and compositional control achievable only in nanoscale processes, real-time investigation by ETEM is an ideal tool for understanding and controlling their synthesis.
Here, we demonstrate how the design of the ETEM-MOCVD instrumentation enables independent control of the gas composition and flow that reaches the heated sample region, as well as rapid adjustments of the gas supply. Previously, we briefly reported on the overall construction, technical specification, and capabilities of the system, with a primary focus on the TEM instrument (Hetherington et al., Reference Hetherington, Jacobsson, Dick and Wallenberg2020). In the present work, we focus on the implemented solutions used for controlling gas concentration and pressures in the system and at the sample region. Solutions for calibration and monitoring partial pressures as well as total pressure in the microscope and at the sample are presented and evaluated, together with pressure correction factors of the pressure gauges for nitrogen (N2), arsine (AsH3), and phosphine (PH3). In addition, we explore the influence that the temperature and gas supply to the microscope itself have on imaging and analysis, and conversely, how the imaging via electron beam influences the experiment. Effects of temperature and gas environment on spatial resolution are quantified, and we also demonstrate and quantify how X-ray energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) analysis is influenced by the local reactive sample environment. Finally, the influence of the electron beam on the gas environment and on spectroscopic analysis is discussed.
Methods and Materials
The system described here is based on an image-corrected 300 keV cold-FEG equipped Hitachi HF3300S ETEM; detailed information of the TEM instrument and its capabilities are described in Hetherington et al. (Reference Hetherington, Jacobsson, Dick and Wallenberg2020). The standard microscope is modified with additional differential pumping using an additional aperture between the sample and the gun valve. This aperture creates an intermediate chamber between the objective pole-piece gap and the gun valve, which is supported by an additional ion pump to further increase the pressure difference between the sample region and the cold field-emission electron gun (cold-FEG). A visual representation of the microscope setup, including locations of pressure gauges and detectors, is presented in Supplementary material SI-1.
The ETEM is integrated with a custom chemical vapor deposition gas-handling system designed for use with metal-organic precursors as well as gas sources. The initial setup of the system is optimized for use with precursor species for III–V semiconductor growth, including trimethylgallium (TMGa), trimethylindium (TMIn), trimethylaluminum (TMAl), trimethylantimony (TMSb), arsine (AsH3), phosphine (PH3), hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen sources. However, the system can easily be modified for growth of other materials, taking advantage of its precision and flexibility of gas mixing, by changing the metal-organic or gas-phase precursors. Most of the experiments and calibration tests described in this paper are conducted using TMGa and AsH3 (precursor sources for growing GaAs). The setup is designed to operate with an open environment, often referred to as an open cell, which is evacuated using the constant pumping power of the microscope (Boyes & Gai, Reference Boyes and Gai1997). In turn, this allows for supply of multiple source gases in parallel, unrestricted access to a range of analysis techniques, holders with double tilt along with rapid replacement of gas concentrations. Gas flows and pressures are controlled by a series of mass flow controllers (MFC, HORIBA STEC Z500) and pressure transducers (PC, HORIBA STEC UR-Z71) between the source material and the microscope. Further details of the gas-handling apparatus are presented below together with the system design and calibrations of the gas species.
The system is additionally equipped with a mass spectrometer/residual gas analyzer (Stanford Research Systems RGA 300 amu) to quantify gas species after the sample, as well as an X-ray energy-dispersive spectrometer (Oxford Instruments XMax 80$^{N}$). Pressure calibrations and assessment of gas correction factors are determined using column pressure measured using magnetron Pirani gauges (Inficon MPG400) within the microscope as well as a gas invariant capacitance diaphragm pressure gauge (Inficon CDG045).
Experiments are conducted using specially designed micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) as heating chips. At present, two primary designs are used. The first type of chip, used for most of the results presented here, is provided by Norcada Inc. and consists of an electron transparent amorphous ${\rm SiN}_x$ film (Howe et al., Reference Howe, Thompson, Dogel, Ueda, Matsumoto, Kikuchi, Reynolds, Hossainkhannazer and Zega2017), which can be heated and operated to at least 700$^{\circ }$C. Some chips of this type are also prepared with 2.3 $\mu$m diameter holes in the thin ${\rm SiN}_x$, such that growing crystals can be imaged in vacuum. The second system is based on single-crystal silicon microcantilevers on which the same is grown directly (Kallesøe et al., Reference Kallesøe, Wen, Mølhave, Bøggild and Ross2010), allowing for a defined epitaxial relationship between the sample and the microcantilever.
Results
Design of an MOCVD-ETEM System for In Situ Experiments
The MOCVD system (Fig. 1) is designed with two primary gas lines connected directly to the microscope such that two different precursor species can be controllably supplied to the sample region without pre-mixing (which could otherwise lead to detrimental pre-reactions between, for instance, the group III and group V precursors). For liquid (and solid) metal-organic precursor species such as TMGa, H2 is used as a carrier gas. A controlled flow of H2 is bubbled through the metal-organic precursor bottle at a controlled temperature and pressure, so that the resulting gas mixture contains a known partial precursor flow. The fraction of precursor within the gas stream is determined by the ratio between the vapor pressure of the precursor and the pressure in the gas line (bubbler) and the absolute flow is scaled by the flow of carrier gas. The precursor concentration in the gas stream is continuously measured by the attached IR-300 vapor concentration measurement units (HORIBA STEC). In addition, the carrier gas flow through the bubbler is kept low to not alter the temperature of the precursor source due to the temperature difference between the carrier gas and the precursor source. As a result, we can rely on the controlled temperature of the bath in which the precursor bubbler rests to reflect the precursor temperature at these conditions. This particular gas-handling system can maintain a stable pressure between 5 and 200 kPa. Gas-phase sources, including the hydride precursors (AsH3 and PH3) as well as H2, N2, and O2, can be supplied directly using MFCs to control the flow. In addition to the extraction process, all precursor species can be further diluted with H2 to obtain a wide range of volume concentrations of individual precursors within the gas stream. Furthermore, the gas-handling design allow for more than one precursor material to be mixed in the gas stream of each of the two separate gas lines at any given time, which improves flexibility of the constituents of the gas.
The design of the gas-handling system and particularly the ability to dilute the precursor species with additional high flow of H2 allows for a very wide range of precursor flows and partial pressures to be achievable, spanning over four orders of magnitude (approximately $4\times 10^{-6}$ to 0.1 Pa of TMGa, or $7\times 10^{-5}$ to 2 Pa of AsH3). For the purpose of crystal growth of binary semiconductors, this allows us to achieve flows/partial pressures that are comparable to conventional MOCVD growth of semiconducting nanostructures (Joyce et al., Reference Joyce, Wong-Leung, Gao, Tan and Jagadish2010; Lehmann et al., Reference Lehmann, Wallentin, Jacobsson, Deppert and Dick2013; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Yuan, Zhang, Gao, Zhao, Li, Lockrey, Tan, Jagadish and Caroff2019). This allows us to directly compare the results achieved in situ with ex situ growth, and facilitates investigations of the effect of the electron beam on crystal growth.
Although the flows achievable in our system and the precursor partial pressures that can be achieved at the sample are comparable to conventional MOCVD growth, standard commercial reactors operate at much higher total pressure (typically within an order of magnitude of atmospheric pressure), mainly achieved by a high flow of H2 (or N2) carrier gas. Obviously, such high pressures are not suitable for electron microscopy unless the gas is completely isolated from the rest of the microscope, as in the case when using a closed environmental cell (Allard et al., Reference Allard, Overbury, Bigelow, Katz, Nackashi and Damiano2012; Garza et al., Reference Garza, Morsink, Xu, Sholkina, Pivak, Pen, Van Weperen and Xu2017). As noted above, however, a closed cell limits resolution, sample tilt, spectroscopic analysis and gas switching time, among other things. To improve the compatibility of the gas control system and the microscope, we utilize an additional mass flow controller to reduce the gas flow provided to the microscope, bypassing excess flow directly to the absorber/scrubber, as can be seen in Figure 1. As a result, this can reduce the flow to the microscope, down to 0.1% of the total flow of the gas-handling system while still maintaining the relative gas concentrations.
For interfacing the gas-handling system and the microscope, we opted for two solutions: supplying gas via capillary tubes passing through the sample holder, or through side-port mounted nozzle injectors directly into the objective pole-piece gap. The former pathway is similar to closed environmental cells since the gases are supplied via capillary tubes through the holder, but without the need for outlet capillary tubes since the gases flow directly into the microscope. It requires the gas-handling system to be directly attached to the holder which may cause propagation of vibrations between the gas-handling system and the stage (in particular, stainless steel tubes as used in conventional MOCVD systems were found to translate a significant amount of vibration). To limit this transference, we bridged the gas-handling system and the holder using thin (530 $\mu$m inner diameter) flexible polymer-coated (PolyEther Ether Ketone, PEEK) quartz capillary tubes. One benefit of supplying gas through the holder is the possibility to partially enclose the sample region to allow increased sample pressures. This is done by covering the sample region with a steel lid that has an orifice for the electron beam. It adds a differential pressure step from the sample region to the objective pole-piece gap by restricting the gas flow which in turn enables microscopy at sample pressures as up to 400 Pa, while still keeping the column pressure below 2 Pa. This can be considered a middle ground between the open environment and the closed cell design. Using this additional capillary tubing contributes to a pressure drop (3–4 orders of magnitude) between the gas-handling system and the holder, which provides an inherent delay in gas switching. As a result, changes of the gas concentration or flow can require up to a few minutes to reach a time invariant pressure within the microscope column. Such a delay can be detrimental to studies that depend on rapid gas flow changes, but is nevertheless on par if not faster than the reported delay in closed cell experiments (Tan et al., Reference Tan, Chee, Baraissov, Jin, Tan and Mirsaidov2019).
Our second approach for providing gas to the sample region, through a nozzle injector connected to a microscope side-port, delivers the gas directly to the microscope chamber without passing through the holder. This approach provides a separation between the holder and the gas supply, where the gas is provided from a stationary point at an angle above the sample holder itself. As a result, the length of the capillary tubing can be greatly reduced in comparison to when supplying through the holder, and thus reduces the pressure difference between the gas-handing system and the sample. Consequently, changes in material flow results in stabilization of partial pressures at the sample within typically 30 s, depending on the absolute pressure and if the flow is increased or decreased. The pressure data as a function of gas flow change is illustrated and provided in Supplementary material SI-2.
The two designs come with their own advantages. Supplying material through the holder allows for experimental conditions invariant to sample tilt, as the gas outlet moves with the holder along with the possibility of adding a lid to increase the sample pressure. Furthermore, it is less sensitive to fluctuations in gas flow due to the relatively longer time needed to stabilize pressure after flow changes. In contrast, supplying gas to the pole-piece gap via the nozzle injector allows simpler design of holders with double tilt possibilities, faster environment adjustments and a lower sensitivity to vibrations due to not having the gas-handling system connected to the holder.
Calibration and Evaluation of the Microscope Environment
To evaluate the environment within the microscope, we probe the gas flow and pressure both up- and downstream from the sample region as well as at the sample. We control and continuously monitor the upstream gas composition and flow using the designed gas-handling system presented in Figure 1 and the gas supplied to the sample is regulated by mass flow controllers and monitored using pressure transducers. To monitor and observe the environment at the sample and downstream toward the turbo pump acting on the pole-piece gap, we utilize the pressure calibrations based on the column pressure and mass spectrometry (residual gas analysis), respectively.
Gas analysis downstream from the sample holder using the residual gas analyser (RGA) does not directly reflect the gas composition at the sample region. This is due to that we have observed a lack of change in the RGA response as a result of increasing the sample temperature beyond onset of precursor decomposition. This may be a result if the change in gas composition is minor in comparison to the gas interaction with the heated RGA filament or that the interaction volume a the sample is small in comparison to the flux. However, the RGA responds readily to changes within the material flow, as seen for AsH3 in Figure 2. The residual gas analyzer thus complements the pressure measurement in the cases where the gas stream composition is changed; more than one species is supplied through the same gas line; or when the material is bypassed to the absorber after the final mass flow controller of the gas-handling system. However, we observe that it takes up to a minute for the pressure to stabilize even if the mass flow stabilizes instantaneously. When supplying more than one gas, we observe a co-dependence on the measured partial pressures by the RGA when altering the influx of one of the species. Although the dependence might not always be monotone, as can be seen in Supplementary material SI-2, it can be accounted for by calibrating the signal to a constant flow for the individual species (Maliakkal et al., Reference Maliakkal, Jacobsson, Tornberg, Persson, Johansson, Wallenberg and Dick2019).
Calibration of the Sample Partial Pressure
In contrast to a conventional MOCVD system, an ETEM-MOCVD operates at constant pumping power rather than at constant pressure, which makes the measurement of the sample pressure non-trivial. To evaluate the sample environment, we utilize gas-dependent pressure gauges (calibrated in air) of the microscope column to calibrate the pressure in the sample region. In addition, since the pressure readouts are gas-dependent, we determine the pressure correction factors of the pressure gauges for each individual species.
The calibration between the sample pressure and the microscope column pressure was performed in two steps. First, we use a MEMS device, normally used for heating of a ${\rm SiN}_x$ membrane (Howe et al., Reference Howe, Thompson, Dogel, Ueda, Matsumoto, Kikuchi, Reynolds, Hossainkhannazer and Zega2017), as a pulsed Pirani gauge for measuring the resistance through the heating coil (i.e., the temperature) at constant biasing. This is used to correlate the measured bias of the MEMS for known pressure for a set of resistances (temperatures), which were in turn measured in a closed ex situ environment as the one described in Hetherington et al. (Reference Hetherington, Jacobsson, Dick and Wallenberg2020). This initial correlation is then used to evaluate the cooling effect of a gas flow. Second, once the cooling behavior is known, we utilize this behavior to calibrate the sample pressure with respect to the microscope column pressure. In determining the sample pressure, we assume it to be homogeneous across the sample region, which is based on the measured pressure differences being less than 5% within the region of interest.
For the specific case of supplying gas through the holder, only one calibration was needed since the gas flow is fixed with respect to the holder. This provided a sample calibration factor of 2 with respect to the microscope pressure (i.e., sample pressure is determined to be approximately twice the microscope pressure). The higher pressure at the sample is a consequence of the sample being placed much closer to the gas supply (approximately 3 mm) than the microscope pressure gauge.
For gas supplied through the nozzle injector via the side-port of the microscope, sample pressure is also dependent on tilt, since this changes the distance between the sample and nozzles. Pressure calibration in this case was therefore performed using discrete measurements at intervals of 2.5$^{\circ }$ ($\alpha$) and 3$^{\circ }$ ($\beta$), starting from the origin (0, 0), for the stationary nozzle injector. The calibration of sample pressure for each orientation of the sample and for each gas inlet is shown as color maps in Figure 3. The changes in gas pressure at the sample can then be correlated with the physical positioning of the inlets with respect to the holder. These calibrations allow for more representative measurement of the ambient where the reaction is taking place along with the feedback on the relative positions and orientations of the two gas inlets.
To find the partial pressures at the sample from the pressure calibration presented above, we determined the pressure correction factors for the gas species of interest (AsH3, PH3, and N2). By parallel pressure measurements using magnetron Pirani gauge (Inficon MPG400) of the microscope and a gas-independent pressure gauge (capacitance diaphragm gauge, Inficon CDG045), we could directly correlate the pressure readouts shown in Figure 3. From the correlation, we extracted the individual correction factors (CFs) from the derivative (i.e., linear fit) of the pressure readings defined according to
In this case, we determine the uniform correction factor over the pressure range for N2 as 1.2, based on the data as presented in black in Figure 4. Using the experimental data presented for AsH3 (gray) and PH3 (magenta) we determined the gas correction factors for pressures between 0.001 and 10 Pa, which is the attainable pressure range within the microscope during for crystal growth (Maliakkal et al., Reference Maliakkal, Jacobsson, Tornberg, Persson, Johansson, Wallenberg and Dick2019; Tornberg et al., Reference Tornberg, Maliakkal, Jacobsson, Dick and Johansson2020; Persson et al., Reference Persson, Tornberg, Sjökvist and Jacobsson2021). As a result of the MPG400 being a dual pressure gauge, we extracted correction factors for both the cold-cathode filament (<0.06 Pa) and the Pirani element (1–10 Pa). Calibrations factors for PH3 were found to be $2.487\pm 0.003$ for the cold-cathode pressure range and $2.265\pm 0.038$ for the Pirani range, while for AsH3 the calibration factors were found to be $2.665\pm 0.003$ for cold-cathode and $0.861\pm 0.047$ for Pirani pressure ranges. Worth noting is that the extracted correction factor of PH3 compares well with the reported value for ionization vacuum gauges (Instruments, Reference Instruments2021). For completion, since we use H2 as a carrier gas, the gas correction factor of H2 (2.4 for cold-cathode and 0.5 for Pirani) has been provided as a reference from the manufacturer (Inficon, 2006). This reference calibration is used in place of a calibration of the metal-organic sources to determine the partial pressure of the metal-organic species at the sample. This is assumed to hold for typical low gas stream concentrations of the precursors (0–5%) where we can neglect the precursor contribution to the total pressure.
Effect of Heating and Reactive Environment on Spatial Resolution
The introduction of a region with elevated pressure by the sample may influence the imaging, in particular the achievable spatial resolution. Direct heating of the sample region may also introduce a small amount of sample drift that could limit achievable resolution. To determine the resolution limits during in situ experiments, we evaluate the spatial resolution of conventional TEM imaging using the sample holder and MEMS chips, with varied pressure and temperature. The spatial resolution is evaluated in frequency space using Young's fringes that arises from image shift during exposure of the ${\rm SiN}_x$ membrane. The resulting pattern (fast-Fourier transform) of the image is used to evaluate the information limit based on the vanishing fringes (Kisielowski et al., Reference Kisielowski, Freitag, Bischoff, Van Lin, Lazar, Knippels, Tiemeijer, Van Der Stam, Von Harrach, Stekelenburg, Haider, Uhlemann, Müller, Hartel, Kabius, Miller, Petrov, Olson, Donchev, Kenik, Lupini, Bentley, Pennycook, Anderson, Minor, Schmid, Duden, Radmilovic, Ramasse, Watanabe, Erni, Stach, Denes and Dahmen2008). This method is used to compare the information limit for both types of connections between the gas-handling system and the microscope in vacuum (<0.001 Pa), at high temperature and at elevated pressure of nitrogen (1 Pa), all while having the gas-handling system in operation. The gas-handling system itself may introduce vibrations that additionally limit the resolution; by keeping the system in operation through this experiment, we aim to separate temperature and pressure effects from these purely instrumental effects. We emphasize that the values obtained here do not represent the maximum achievable resolution of the microscope under optimized conditions [0.86 Å, as discussed in Hetherington et al. (Reference Hetherington, Jacobsson, Dick and Wallenberg2020)].
A typical interference pattern (fast-Fourier transform of the recorded image of amorphous ${\rm SiN}_x$ film) is shown in Figure 5. The figure includes the maximum achieved resolution for different combinations of temperature and column pressures while supplying the gas through the holder or via side-port injector. From the figure, we observe some vibrations along the vertical axis which stems from a slight instability around the rotational axis of the holder. We see that in both cases the measured resolution is slightly worse than the 0.86 Å achieved under optimized conditions (measured in vacuum using a single tilt holder, conventional carbon grid, full intensity from the cold-FEG, and the gas-handling system turned off). Supplying gas through the holder also results in marginally lower resolution than the side-port injectors. However, the reductions are relatively modest, and for instance sufficient for atomically resolved imaging of III–V semiconductors, for example, 1.41 Å for GaAs along the $[ 110]$ axis. Most importantly, we can see that the effect of heating (up to 600$^{\circ }$C) and gas pressure (up to 1 Pa) are negligible for both material pathways. Further details and measurements on the spatial resolution and the beam intensity as a result of having a relatively high pressure are presented in Supplementary material SI-4.
Effect of the Sample Heating on X-ray Characterization
One advantage of using an open sample environment is that it simplifies the acquisition and interpretation of X-ray spectra during in situ experiments. The small, heated area of MEMS-based sample chips is also important to minimize thermal emission. X-ray characterization at elevated temperatures has been reported to exhibit energy broadening of elemental peaks (Kamino et al., Reference Kamino, Sasaki and Saka1997) and occasionally shifts of the detected signal to higher energies (pile-up) (Eswaramoorthy et al., Reference Eswaramoorthy, Howe and Phillipp2007). The severity of these possible effects seems to vary with the design of the instrumentation (Kamino et al., Reference Kamino, Sasaki and Saka1997; Prestat et al., Reference Prestat, Smith, Janssen, Slater, Camargo, Kulzick, Grace Burke, Haigh and Zaluzec2015; Omme et al., Reference Omme, Zakhozheva, Spruit, Sholkina and Pérez2018). Of the two issues, the possible energy shift of elemental peaks would potentially be the most detrimental for an experiment since this would skew the quantification results significantly. Thermal energy broadening maintains the peak center of the elemental X-ray line, whereas an energy shift would, in the worst case, shift the entire peak away from the X-ray line (Kamino et al., Reference Kamino, Sasaki and Saka1997). Consequently, we evaluated the X-ray signal as a function of temperature for our specific chamber geometry.
For the ${\rm SiN}_x$ membrane MEMS devices, we observe that increasing temperature increases the thermal radiation and thus reduces the signal-to-noise ratio of the X-ray spectrum (Fig. 6a). This appears as an increase in the total intensity of the spectrum (or dead-time of the detector) with temperature of two orders of magnitude over the temperature range evaluated, and results in both energy broadening and shift of the signal for specific temperatures. The temperature effect on the strobe signal is presented in Figure 6b displaying the shift occurring from 400$^{\circ }$C.
The temperature effect observed here is not detrimental for quantification of elemental peaks (>1.74 keV) until reaching temperatures beyond 500$^{\circ }$C as can be seen from Figure 6c, where the energy shift relative to the elemental line is shown for silicon and tungsten. Since the shift's origin is high intensity, it can be counteracted by reducing the signal reaching the detector, either by reduction of the solid angle or by controlling the X-ray sampling. The influence of solid angle (by retracting the detector) and signal intensity is presented in Supplementary material SI-5. In addition, the severity of this effect may also be limited by reducing the heated area, as a smaller heated region would in turn generate fewer photons related to the heating and thus lower the total intensity of the spectrum.
Interaction of the Electron Beam with the Reactive Gases
We next consider the effect of the high-energy electron beam on the reactive molecules within the gas. We anticipate some degree of beam-gas interaction, although the extent may be limited by the relatively small interaction volume. Since the system is equipped with a residual gas analyzer (RGA) for measuring the chemical composition of the gas after it has passed through the sample region of the microscope, we measured the effect on the RGA spectrum of different electron beam doses. The results shown in Figure 7a show no effect on the measured signal even at very high electron beam fluxes. This indicates that the fraction of the gas that interacts with the electron beam is very small, and not visible compared to the much larger signal from the gas that does not interact with the beam. Note that the highest electron flux used in this experiment is the highest possible flux achievable in the microscope (with condenser aperture removed) and therefore an order of magnitude higher than would be used in a crystal growth experiment.
In addition, it is possible to investigate the effect of the electron beam on the reactive gas using X-ray energy-dispersive spectroscopy. This method is more suitable for detecting small effects, since we only see a signal from atoms that have interacted with the beam, and the effect is therefore not “drowned out” by the much larger volume of unreacted gas. For this, we quantified the signal that reaches the mounted XMax 80$^{N}$ detector (Oxford Instruments) shielded by a polymer-based Moxtek window, that normally is operated before, during and after in situ experiments. By collecting X-ray signal from the illuminated gas-phase inside the pole-piece gap, without the presence of a sample or holder, we observe elemental peaks that correspond to the supplied precursors (in this case Ga from TMGa and As from AsH3). Figure 7 shows how the signal from the scales with both pressure (source flow) and total beam flux (electrons/s), indicating that there is some interaction with the gas molecules and the electron beam. On the other hand, this does not tell us whether the ionization by the electron beam affects the decomposition of the molecules or the reactions that occur when they reach the sample.
It is also important to note that while we observe elemental information from the gas-phase, the magnitude of the signal is much smaller than that originating from the sample of interest. We also show in Figure 7b the signal from a 200-nm thick GaAs crystal acquired at low pressures (<0.001 Pa), with an electron flux of $1.37\times 10^{11}\, {\rm s}^{-1}$ (open circles). The relative signal from gas (AsH3 or TMGa) with respect to the sample at comparable flow rates is less than 0.1$\percnt$. Consequently, the gas-phase contribution to the X-ray spectroscopy is negligible for elemental analysis of the sample. Note that the electron doses are presented as total electrons per second rather than per areal unit as we are mainly interested by the interaction with the gas and not the area of a sample. We also note that the total gas-generated X-rays are comparable between the individual gases but are scaled by the partial pressure (or molar flow). It is also worth noting that the TMGa flows used in this experiment are significantly (more than 5 times) higher compared to those used during a typical crystal growth experiment within our system (Maliakkal et al., Reference Maliakkal, Jacobsson, Tornberg, Persson, Johansson, Wallenberg and Dick2019; Tornberg et al., Reference Tornberg, Maliakkal, Jacobsson, Dick and Johansson2020).
Beam Effect on Chemical Reactions
For any type of in situ experiments, it is of high interest to understand whether and how the measurement techniques affect the process of interest. For in situ experiments in TEM, the high-energy electron beam can affect the sample and chemical reactions in many ways, requiring a thorough analysis of the effects for the system of interest. Electron beam interaction and the electron dose-rate is well-understood to play an important role (Ek et al., Reference Ek, Jespersen, Damsgaard and Helveg2016; Mirsaidov et al., Reference Mirsaidov, Patterson and Zheng2020), as also shown above for EDS analysis, and many effects can be avoided by minimizing beam dose. However, well-understood and reproducible beam effects are not necessarily detrimental if they can be properly accounted for.
For a complex process like the semiconductor crystal growth experiments conducted in our system, a full understanding of the effects of the electron beam is very challenging, and will continue to be assessed for many years. Since we observed that the electron beam interacts with the precursor gas molecules, we first conduct a simple experiment to determine whether this affects the growth rate of GaAs crystals (which would be the case if the electron beam significantly changed the decomposition process of the precursors). Using GaAs nanowires as a model system, we evaluated the crystal growth rate (nm/min) both with and without illumination by the electron beam. For the dark experiments (conducted first, before the gas had been exposed to the electron beam for a significant time), we acquired a sequence of snapshots just before and after the gun valve had been closed/opened in order to measure the change in length during the “dark” period. For comparison, we next measured the growth rate by imaging in real time while exposing the sample to an electron dose-rate of 500–5000 e/Å$^{2}$ s). For these relatively low electron doses (typical for crystal growth experiments), there is no significant difference in growth rate ($5.6\pm 1.2$ nm/min under illumination versus $5.55\pm 1.2$ nm/min without beam).
Although we do not observe significant effects for these experiments, there are a variety of possible ways that the electron beam can affect experiments, particularly at high doses. As such, it is necessary to carefully consider beam effects for each new type of material and process. As an extreme example, we have observed that imaging a GaAs nanowire at extremely high electron dose-rates (43,500 e/Å$^{2}$ s) while performing crystal growth at low partial pressure of TMGa (${< }4\times 10^{-4}$ Pa) can result in a change in the density of stacking defects occurring during the growth. Although this observation is at present anecdotal, and we cannot yet deduce the mechanism, it highlights the need to further study these effects for different processing and imaging conditions.
Summary
We describe here the design of a custom system integrating an aberration-corrected environmental TEM with an MOCVD system designed for investigating crystal growth of semiconductor materials in real time. The system is designed with an open holder to facilitate a wider range of sample tilt, access to complementary analysis techniques and faster switching of process gases. The gas-handling system is designed for controlled experiments that mimic conventional MOCVD conditions as closely as possible, for instance including two separate gas lines that do not mix before reaching the sample. It is also designed to be flexible, allowing for a broad range of gas pressures and flows, and relatively easy changes of precursor types for studying a variety of different materials or different types of reactive processes. We demonstrate the solutions used to determine pressure around the sample regions and determine the gas correction factors for the AsH3 and PH3. We also evaluate the effects of the imaging and analysis on the experiments, and conversely how the experimental conditions (temperature and pressure) affect imaging and analysis. No effect of heating or gas pressure on spatial resolution is observed, and interaction of the electron beam with the gas is found to be small. For typical crystal growth conditions, we also do not observe a significant effect of the electron beam on the crystal growth rate. Potential effects of the electron beam on complex reactive processes are however numerous, and a full understanding of how the electron beam influences each process of interest will be a topic for continued study.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1431927622000769.
Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge financial support from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW), NanoLund, and the Swedish Research Council (VR). We acknowledge Hitachi High-Technologies Canada and Europe and CollabraTech Solutions LLV for their contribution to the development and assembly of the instrument. We also acknowledge Inficon for their contribution to the process of determining pressure calibration factors. Lastly, we acknowledge Dr. Sebastian Lehmann for his contribution to the initial design and continuous discussions.
Competing interests
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.