Abstract

Surface topography of the {0 0 0 1} facet plane of as-grown 6H- and 4H-SiC crystals was studied ex situ by Nomarski optical microscopy (NOM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The surface polarity and the polytype of grown crystals largely affect the growth surface morphology of SiC{0 0 0 1} via differences in several thermodynamic and kinetic parameters. NOM observations revealed giant steps of a few micrometers in height on the {0 0 0 1} growth facet, and it was found that a morphological transition of the growth facet occurred when the growth conditions were changed. AFM imaging of the stepped structure of SiC{0 0 0 1} detected steps of height equal to the unit c-lattice parameter ( c=1.512 nm for 6H-SiC and 1.005 nm for 4H-SiC). They are fairly straight and very regularly arranged, giving rise to equidistant step trains. Upon nitrogen doping, these regular step trains on the 6H-SiC(0 0 0 1 ̄ )C and 4H-SiC(0 0 0 1 ̄ )C surfaces became unstable: the equidistant step trains were transformed into meandering macrosteps of height greater than 10 nm. In this paper, we discuss the mechanism of macrostep formation (step bunching) on the SiC{0 0 0 1} surfaces through the consideration of the interplay between step energetics (repulsive step interaction) and kinetics (asymmetric step kinetics) on the growing crystal surface and elucidate how they affect the growth surface morphology of the SiC{0 0 0 1} facet.

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