Thanks for that response. It is certainly possible that the P is being sputtered more than Ga. My initial thought was that if the GaP bonds are being dissociated by the Ar+ ions, then both Ga and P will be above their melting temperature at the target surface. Ga = 30C, P = 45C. GaP = 1540 C. So while GaP is being sputtered, any elemental remains of Ga and P will be evaporating, with Ga faster than P. That would result in a P-rich target and substrate. Let me know if that reasoning makes sense. Also, I noticed a distinct 'metallic' smell in the chamber which I am inclined to attribute to gallium. On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 11:57 AM, Edward Sebestawrote: > The GaP is certainly decomposing during sputtering. Sputtering is > knocking individual atoms off the target with Argon atoms. However the > relative vapor pressures aren't relevant to the problem here. If a Ga > atom is sputtered and its trajectory reaches your substrate there should > be deposition of the atom and not evaporation. > > The issue here is the different atomic weights of Ga and P, (69.72 and > 30.97 respectively) relative to Argon atom (39.95) which is used to > sputter. Also, heavier elements have more electrons to result in > inelastic collisions and reduce sputtering efficiency, if I remember > correctly. You may be getting a much lower flux of Ga than P upon > initial sputtering. I am guessing that the wafer you are using as a > target is Ga rich. Continued sputtering might make it Ga rich enough > that your depositions balance out. It would be interesting to see what > would be the composition after you ran some conditioning wafers and then > redeposited and remeasured your composition. Perhaps a higher power > might cause the Ga to sputter with higher relative flux to P, but you > would still have some imbalance. > > Evap methods for compound materials involve conditioning the alloy > target until the composition of the melted puddle is skewed so that its > relative rates of evaporation match the desired alloy composition. So if > you have A/B alloy. And A has twice the vapor pressure as B, then you > run the target until the e-beam puddle was 1/3 A and 2/3 B and the vapor > pressure was balanced and as the target melted the puddle would keep a > constant composition. Actually, it would be much more complicated if the > vapor species were not monoatomic but perhaps A2 or something and > include some AB. But the same principle would apply as conditioning the > target until a balanced flux. Russel J. Hill, in the 1976 Airco Temescal > book explains alloy deposition in detail. > > Ed