Abstract:
The process of formation of cobalt silicides near the graphene-silicon carbide interface by intercalation of single-layer graphene grown on the
4$H$- and 6$H$-SiC(0001) polytypes with cobalt and silicon is studied. The experiments were carried out in situ in ultrahigh vacuum. The analysis of the samples is performed by high-energy-resolution photoelectron spectroscopy using synchrotron radiation, low-energy electron diffraction, and also Raman spectroscopy, atomic-force and kelvin-probe microscopies. The thicknesses of the deposited cobalt and silicon layers is varied to 2 nm, and the sample temperature, from room temperature to 1000$^{\circ}$C. Co and Si atoms deposited on heated samples is found to penetrate under graphene and are localized between the buffer layer and the substrate, which leads to a transformation of the buffer layer into additional graphene layer. It is shown that the result of intercalation of the system with cobalt and silicon is the formation under two-layer graphene of a Co–Si solid solution and silicide CoSi coated by the surface Co$_3$Si phase. It is shown that the thickness and the composition of the formed silicide films can be changed by varying the amount of the intercalated material and the order of their depositions.
Keywords:graphene on silicon carbide, cobalt, intercalation, silicides, photoelectron spectroscopy.