Atomic-scale simulation of 50 keV Si displacement cascades in β-SiC
Abstract
Molecular dynamics (MD) methods with a modified Tersoff potential have been used to simulate high-energy (50 keV) displacement cascades in β-SiC. The results show that the cascade lifetime is very short, 10 times shorter than that in metals, and the surviving defects are dominated by C interstitials and vacancies, which is similar to behavior for 10 keV cascades in SiC. Antisite defects are generated on both sublattices. Although the total number of antisite defects remaining at the end of the cascade is smaller than that of Frenkel pairs, the number of Si antisites is larger than the number of Si interstitials. Most surviving defects are single interstitials and vacancies, and only 19% of the interstitial population is contained in clusters. The size of the interstitial clusters is small, and the largest cluster found, among all the cascades considered, contained only four interstitial atoms, which is significantly different behavior than obtained by MD simulations in metals. It is observed that all clusters are created by a quenched-in mechanism directly from the collisional phase of the cascade to their final arrangements. The initial Si recoil traveled about 65 nm on average, generating multiple subcascades and forming a dispersed arrangement in the cascade geometry. These results suggest that in-cascade or direct-impact amorphization in SiC does not occur with any high degree of probability during the cascade lifetime of Si cascades, even with high-energy recoils, consistent with previous experimental and MD observations.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review B
- Pub Date:
- February 2001
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevB.63.054101
- Bibcode:
- 2001PhRvB..63e4101G
- Keywords:
-
- 61.80.-x;
- 61.72.Ji;
- 71.15.Pd;
- 61.82.Fk;
- Physical radiation effects radiation damage;
- Point defects and defect clusters;
- Molecular dynamics calculations and other numerical simulations;
- Semiconductors