STEM–EELS analysis reveals stable high-density He in nanopores of amorphous silicon coatings deposited by magnetron sputtering
Description
A broad interest has been showed recently on the study of nanostructuring of thin films and surfaces obtained by low‐energy He plasma treatments and He incorporation via magnetron sputtering. In this paper spatially resolved electron energy‐loss spectroscopy (EELS) in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) is used to locate and characterize the He state in nanoporous amorphous silicon coatings deposited by magnetron sputtering. A dedicated MATLAB program was developed to quantify the helium density inside individual pores based on the energy position shift or peak intensity of the He K‐edge. A good agreement was observed between the high density (~35‐60 at/nm3) and pressure (0.3‐1.0 GPa) values obtained in nanoscale analysis and the values derived from macroscopic measurements (the composition obtained by proton backscattering spectroscopy coupled to the macroscopic porosity estimated from ellipsometry). This work provides new insights into these novel porous coatings, providing evidence of highdensity He located inside the pores and validating the methodology applied here to characterize the formation of pores filled with the helium process gas during deposition. A similar stabilization of condensed He bubbles has been previously demonstrated by high‐energy He ion implantation in metals and is newly demonstrated here using a widely employed methodology, magnetron sputtering, for achieving coatings with a high density of homogeneously distributed pores and He storage capacities as high as 21 at%.
Abstract
European Union CT‐REGPOT‐2011‐1‐285895
Abstract
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas PIE 201060E102, PIE 201460E018
Abstract
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad CSD2008–00023, CTQ2012‐32519
Abstract
Junta de Andalucía TEP217, PE2012‐TEP862
Additional details
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/80948
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/80948
- Origin repository
- USE