Abstract:
The resonant Raman scattering in GeSi/Si structures with GeSi quantum dots has been analyzed. These structures were formed at various temperatures in the process of molecular-beam epitaxy. It has been shown that Raman scattering spectra recorded near resonances with the $E_0$ and $E_1$ electronic transitions exhibit the lines of Ge optical phonons whose frequencies differ significantly from the corresponding values in bulk germanium. In the structures grown at low temperatures ($300\div 400^\circ$C), the phonon frequency decreases with increasing excitation energy. This behavior is attributed to Raman scattering, which is sensitive to the size of quantum dots, and shows that quantum dots are inhomogeneous in size. In the structures grown at a higher temperature ($500^\circ$C), the opposite dependence of the frequency of Ge phonons on excitation energy is observed. This behavior is attributed to the competitive effect of internal mechanical stresses in quantum dots, the localization of optical photons, and the mixing of Ge and Si atoms in structures with a bimodal size distribution of quantum dots.