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Characterization Of Bulk, Polycrystalline Indium Nitride Grown At Sub-Atmospheric Pressures
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2011
Abstract
Polycrystalline, wurtzitic indium nitride was synthesized by saturating indium metal with atomic nitrogen from a microwave plasma source. Plasma synthesis avoids the high equilibrium pressures required when molecular nitrogen is used as the nitrogen source. Two types of growth were observed: 1) small amounts of indium nitride crystallized from the melt during cooling and 2) hexagonal platelets formed adjacent to the In metal source on the crucible sides. The mechanism of this latter growth is not established, but may involve transport of indium as a liquid film. The crystals were characterized by electron diffraction, X-ray diffraction, elemental analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. Lattice parameter and Raman active phonon modes are reported and compared with calculations based on the full-potential linear muffin-tin orbital method (FP-LMTO).
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1998
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