Abstract

We demonstrate two distinct experimental processes involving the large-area growth of ordered and disordered silicon nanowire arrays (SiNWs) on a p-type silicon substrate using the metal-assisted chemical etching method. The two processes are based on the etching of monocrystalline silicon wafers by randomly distributed Ag films and ultra-thin Au films with ordered nano-mesh arrays, respectively, wherein the growth of SiNWs is implemented using a specific proportion of a HF-containing solution at room temperature. In this study, the microstructural change mechanisms for the two morphologically different arrays before and after annealing were investigated using Raman spectra. The effects of various mechanisms on the observed Raman scattering peak’s deviation from symmetry, redshift and broadening were analyzed. The evolution of the unstable amorphous structures of nanoscale materials during the high-temperature annealing process was observed via high-resolution scanning electron microscope (SEM) observations. The scattering peak parameters determined from the Raman spectra led to conclusions concerning the various mechanisms by which high-temperature annealing influences the microstructures of the two morphologically different SiNWs fabricated on the p-type silicon substrate. Therefore, the deviation of SiNWs from the monocrystalline silicon scattering peak at 520.05 cm−1 when changing the diameter of the nanowire columns was calculated to further analyze the effect of thermal annealing on Raman characteristics.

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