Substrate-controlled nucleation and growth kinetics in ultrathin Bi$_2$Te$_3$ films
Damian Brzozowski, Sander R. H{\o}nn{\aa}s, Egil Y. Tokle, J{\o}rgen A. Arnesen, Ingrid G. Hallsteinsen

TL;DR
This study explores how substrate properties influence the nucleation, growth, and defect formation in ultrathin Bi2Te3 films, revealing pathways to enhance their topological surface conduction.
Contribution
It demonstrates substrate-dependent growth mechanisms and defect control strategies to improve electronic transport in Bi2Te3 thin films.
Findings
Layered growth varies with substrate roughness.
Higher surface energy substrates increase defect density.
Phase-coherent transport confirmed in certain substrates.
Abstract
Metal chalcogenides are promising layered topological materials, yet their electronic performance is often limited by parasitic bulk conduction arising from defects that introduce excess carriers and shift the Fermi level out of the topological regime. Controlling early-stage growth and defect formation is therefore essential for suppressing bulk transport and enhancing surface-state conduction. Here we investigate ultrathin Bi2Te3 films grown by pulsed laser deposition on substrates spanning van der Waals, lattice-matched, and amorphous regimes to determine how substrate-dependent nucleation pathways influence defect formation and electronic transport. Phase-pure, c-axis-oriented Bi2Te3 forms on all substrates, but the growth morphology varies strongly. Layered growth with well-defined quintuple-layer terraces is governed primarily by substrate roughness rather than lattice match:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Advanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices
