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Projects: Projects for Investigator
Reference Number EP/P015719/1
Title Quantitative non-destructive nanoscale characterisation of advanced materials
Status Completed
Energy Categories Renewable Energy Sources(Solar Energy, Photovoltaics) 4%;
Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial) 3%;
Not Energy Related 90%;
Other Power and Storage Technologies(Electricity transmission and distribution) 3%;
Research Types Basic and strategic applied research 100%
Science and Technology Fields PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Physics) 100%
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation Not Cross-cutting 100%
Principal Investigator Dr B Hourahine
No email address given
Physics
University of Strathclyde
Award Type Standard
Funding Source EPSRC
Start Date 01 June 2017
End Date 30 November 2021
Duration 54 months
Total Grant Value £846,921
Industrial Sectors Electronics
Region Scotland
Programme NC : Physical Sciences
 
Investigators Principal Investigator Dr B Hourahine , Physics, University of Strathclyde (99.997%)
  Other Investigator Dr C Trager-Cowan , Physics, University of Strathclyde (0.001%)
Dr PR Edwards , Physics, University of Strathclyde (0.001%)
Dr RMF Roper , Computer and Information Sciences, University of Strathclyde (0.001%)
  Industrial Collaborator Project Contact , University of Warwick (0.000%)
Project Contact , University of Glasgow (0.000%)
Project Contact , University of Cambridge (0.000%)
Project Contact , University of Nottingham (0.000%)
Project Contact , NXP Semiconductors (0.000%)
Project Contact , IQE Plc (0.000%)
Project Contact , University College Cork, Ireland (0.000%)
Project Contact , Bruker Corporation, USA (0.000%)
Project Contact , Université Paris 13, France (0.000%)
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract To satisfy the performance requirements for near term developments in electronic and optoelectronic devices will require pioneering materials growth, device fabrication and advances in characterisation techniques. The imminent arrival of devices a few atoms thick that are based on lighter materials such as graphene or boron nitride and also advanced silicon and diamond nano-structures. These devices pose new challenges to the currently available techniques for producing and understanding the resulting devices and how they fail. Optimising the performance of such devices will require a detailed understanding of extended structural defects and their influence on the properties of technologically relevant materials. These defects include threading dislocations and grain boundaries, and are often electrically active and so are strongly detrimental to the efficiency and lifetimes of nano-scale devices (a single badly-behaved defect can cause catastrophic device failure). These defects are especially problematic for devices such as silicon solar cells, advanced ultraviolet light emitting diodes, and advanced silicon carbide and gallium nitride based high power devices (used for efficient switching of large electrical currents or for high power microwave telecoms). For graphene and similar modern 2D materials, grain boundaries have significant impact on their properties as they easily span the whole size of devices.Resolving all of these problems requires new characterisation techniques for imaging of extended defects which are simultaneously rapid to use, are non-destructive and are structurally definitive on the nanoscale. Electron channelling contrast imaging (ECCI) is an effective structural characterisation tool which allows rapid non-destructive visualisation of extended crystal defects in the scanning electron microscope. However ECCI is usually applied as a qualitative method of investigating nano-scale materials, has limitations on the smallest size features that it can resolve, and suffers from difficulties in interpreting the resulting images. This limits this technique's ability to work out the nature of defects in these advanced materials. We will make use of new developments in energy resolving electron detectors, new advances in the modelling of electron beams with solids and the knowledge and experience of our research team and partners, to obtain a 6 fold improvement in the spatial resolution of the ECCI technique. This new energy-filtered way of making ECCI measurements will radically improve the quality of the information that can be obtained with this technique. We will couple our new capabilities to accurately measure and interpret images of defects to other advanced characterisation techniques. This will enable ECCI to be adopted as the technique of choice for non-destructive quantitative structural characterisation of defects in a wide range of important materials and provide a new technique to analyse the role of extended defects in electronic device failure
Publications (none)
Final Report (none)
Added to Database 05/02/19