Abstract

Crystalline silicon carbon nitrides were synthesized on quartz glass substrates by microwave plasma chemical vapor deposition,using precursors produced from a pulsed nitrogen ion beam sputtering dicyandiamide target. The effects of deposition temperature on the morphology,composition and structure of the samples were investigated by scanning electron microscopy,energy dispersive X-ray,X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. It is found that the surface morphologies of the deposits change from well crystallized hexagonal crystals at 800 ℃ to semi-developed multi-sheet crystals at 700 ℃ and to an amorphous solid with small grains at 550 ℃. The intensity of the diffraction peaks decreases and the values of the cell parameters a and c increase with the deposition temperature. The as-prepared crystalline films are silicon carbonitride with the crystalline structure of Si3N4 modified by replacing some of the Si atoms with C atoms. The N atoms are mainly bonded to Si,and C atoms are in the form of sp3C—N,sp2CN and sp2CC bonds. Decreasing deposition temperature favors an increase of C atom content and sp3C—N bond fraction.

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