Evidence of palladium-defect pairing in intrinsic germanium

H. Timmers, W. Kemp, A. Byrne, M. Ridgway, R. Vianden, P. Kessler and M. Steffens

Hyperfine Interactions (2010), Published online, 26 November 2010

DOI Link: 10.1007/s10751-010-0206-3

Abstract:

Time Differential Perturbed Angular Correlation measurements were performed in intrinsic germanium with the 100Pd/100Rh probe. The probe was produced via 92Zr(12C, 4n)100Pd and recoil-implanted into samples. Parallel measurements with the 111In/111Cd probe confirmed the quality of the germanium studied. The measurements with the 100Pd/100Rh probe show a modulation pattern in the ratio function with a quadrupole interaction frequency of 8.3(2) Mrad/s. The pattern depends on sample orientation and it is most pronounced after annealing at 500°C. After annealing at 700°C the effect vanishes due to strong damping of the ratio function. The pattern may be caused, similar to what has been observed for highly doped n-type silicon, by the pairing of the Pd-atom with a vacancy located in the ⟨111⟩ direction. The disappearance of the pattern would indicate the dissociation of this pair. Pair formation and dissociation may be relevant to palladium-induced-crystallization processing of germanium.