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Quantitative Cathodoluminescence

Quantitative Cathodoluminescence (q-CL): Developed by Attolight, q-CL enhances cathodoluminescence by using an aberration-corrected reflective objective instead of parabolic mirrors. This setup aligns optically with the SEM beam, allowing for precise, large-area luminescence mapping without intensity or resolution artifacts, enabling quantitative measurements across entire sample surfaces.
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Introduction

Quantitative cathodoluminescence (q-CL) is a technique pioneered by Attolight, derived from regular cathodoluminescence. It involves the use of a reflective objective instead of off-axis parabolic mirrors or other non-imaging optics to collect luminescence signal from samples. The objective is aberration corrected and its optical axis is colinear with the scanning electron beam. Not only does this eliminate intensity and resolution artefacts during CL data acquisition, but also makes tool alignment significantly faster and enables high efficiency CL mappings over much larger areas than using regular add-on technologies.

Principles

Using aberration-corrected collection optics enables one key advantage: Cathodoluminescence imaging over a large field of view, without degradation of the system’s optical performance (off-axis aberrations) or collection efficiency (vignetting).

Figure 1: Raytracing simulation made to illustrate the advantages of q-CL. Attolight’s aberration-corrected imaging optics is compared with a parabolic mirror. Achromatic refractive optics are used to simulate focusing of the signal on a spectrometer’s entrance slit where the spot size is measured. a) 3d rendering of simulation geometry, with test rays emitted from the sample and electron beam (in yellow). b) Spot size as a function of the radial distance from the collection system’s focal point. The horizontal line shows the pixel size of typical spectroscopy cameras. The parabolic mirror exhibits significant off axis aberrations compared to the aberration-corrected system.

Figure 1 shows simulation of image spot sizes produced by typical CL-SEM configurations: Attolight’s aberration-corrected CL objective or a parabolic mirror. Image formation is considered in both cases by focusing with an achromatic lens, which is commonly used to couple signals into a spectrograph. The horizontal line denotes limitation induced by the pixel size of a typical spectroscopy CCD camera. While a parabolic mirror offers diffraction-limited performance at the very center of its field of view, its image spot size increases rapidly away from its optical axis. An aberration-corrected objective, on the other hand, presents only minor spot size variation even at significant distances from its focal axis. Quickly, spot sizes generated by Attolight’s aberration-corrected technology offer more than an order of magnitude improvement over parabolic mirrors. This also makes sure that collection performance is maintained over large CL imaging areas. In comparison, parabolic mirrors lose coupling efficiency (to fibers or through the spectrometer slit), spectral resolution, or both.

The large-surface light collection capability of Attolight’s optical system eliminates the need for adding a lateral alignment system to position the optics with respect to the electron beam. This also means that the system can record large-field-of-view (100’s of µm) maps with constant collection efficiency, thus becoming truly quantitative. Figure 2 shows an actual example of data recorded using both q-CL and parabolic-mirror CL detection systems on the same field of view of the same sample (a piece of Nd:YAG showing bright, homogeneous emission). The parabolic system has a significantly reduced effective collection area and exhibits coupling efficiency artefacts due to coupling into a fibre bundle, used here to enhance collection efficiency. These artefacts result in an inhomogeneous signal that makes it impossible to quantitatively compare the luminescence from even a small region of the sample. While in principle it would be possible to improve the homogeneity by defocusing the parabolic mirror, this would come at the cost of a significant reduction in signal intensity and spatial resolution.

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Figure 2: Panchromatic CL maps acquired on an Nd:YAG sample. Data acquired using a) q-CL in an Allalin tool with an aberration-corrected objective, b) state-of-the-art parabolic mirror-based add-on coupled into an optical fiber bundle to improve collection efficiency and homogeneity. q-CL displays the real emission properties of the sample, without any local variation in collection efficiency, enabling excellent measurement repeatability and thereby enabling reliable quantification. 

Instrumentation

Figure 3: Example implementation of an aberration-corrected objective into an SEM column

Figure 3 shows an example implementation of a q-CL apparatus. To make the mechanical integration possible, the mirror is not a free-standing add on, but is integrated coaxially with the electron microscope column, meaning that the mirror is factory aligned once and doesn’t need further care.

Example results

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Figure 4: Full wafer map of microLED arrays acquired using a full-wafer q-CL tool (Säntis 300). The use of q-CL guarantees comparability of light intensity measurements within each device, between devices, between wafer areas and in between wafers and wafer batches, which is crucial for production monitoring.

Figure 4 shows a full wafer map of microLED array intensity measurements using q-CL. q-CL makes comparison possible within each device, between devices, as well as between regions across the full surface of the wafer. Such reliable, quantitative comparison is invaluable to identify process variations and potential failures. This allows for a smooth bridging between nm- and mm-scale properties of the devices, and allows for efficient characterization of deposition process homogeneity, as well as lithography process quality and fundamental emission properties of the devices.

Benefits and Further Reading

Over the years, q-CL has benefited many users in their scientific and industrial endeavours. Check the publication page of our website to stay up to date with the latest applications. Here are two selected, free-to-read scientific publications highlighting the benefits of q-CL. In [1], luminescence properties of a polycrystalline material are compared over large areas. In reference [2], q-CL is used to identify defect densities and light-emitting quantum dots over large areas of an epitaxial sample.

References

  • [1] J. Moseley et al., “Luminescence methodology to determine grain-boundary , grain-interior , and surface recombination in thin-film solar cells,” J. Appl. Phys., vol. 124, no. 113104, pp. 1–13, 2018.
  • [2] J. Selvidge, J. Norman, E. T. Hughes, J. Selvidge, J. Norman, and E. T. Hughes, “Defect filtering for thermal expansion induced dislocations in III – V lasers on silicon,” Appl. Phys. Lett., vol. 122101, no. July 2020, pp. 1–6, 2021.
References

Latest Scientific Publications

Quantitative assessment of selenium diffusion and passivation in CdSeTe solar cells probed by spatially resolved cathodoluminescence FROUIN, Bérengère, BIDAUD, Thomas, PIROTTA, Stefano, et al. APL Materials 2024
Quantitative Analysis of Carbon Impurity Concentrations in GaN Epilayers by Cathodoluminescence LOETO, K., KUSCH, G., GHOSH, S., et al. Micron, 2023, p. 103489 2023
Boron quantification, concentration mapping and picosecond excitons dynamics in High-Pressure-High-Temperature diamond by cathodoluminescence TAPPY, Nicolas, GALLO, Pascal, FONTcuberta i MORRAL, Anna, MONACHON, Christian Carbon, 2022, vol. 191, p. 48-54 2022
Quantitative Assessment of Carrier Density by Cathodoluminescence. I. GaAs Thin Films and Modeling CHEN, H.-L., SCACCABAROZZI, A., DE LEPINAU, R., OEHLER, F., LEMAITRE, A., HARMAND, J.-C., CATTONI, A., COLLINS, S. Physical Review Applied, 2021, vol. 15, p. 024006 2021
Applications

Quantitative Cathodoluminescence

Discover use cases involving Quantitative Cathodoluminescence.

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Process development
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Materials Science
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Micro/Nanowire
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GaN device
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Life Science
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Power electronics
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Optoelectronics
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CL from beam-sensitive optoelectronic materials - hybrid halide perovskites

Find out how CL quantify defects in optoelectronic materials
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Applications on Defect Visualization and Counting in Optoelectronic Materials

Find out how CL can quantify defects in optoelectronic materials
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Dislocation type determination by cathodoluminescence

Find out how CL can determine threading dislocation types
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Non-destructive quality control of micron-sized light emitting diodes

We will show how spectrally resolved quantitative CL can address this challenge.
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Comprehensive defect review and classification for SiC

We show how spectrally-resolved quantitative CL can be used to classify various defects in SiC
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Non-destructive control of epitaxial layer uniformity in GaN power devices

We will show how spectrally-resolved quantitative CL can address this challenge
Equipment

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