Reinvestigation of the Ni/Si interface: Spectromicroscopic evidence for multiple silicide phases

Abstract
Using photoelectron spectromicroscopy we identified the chemical composition of several phases on a morphologically complex interface formed after segregation of dissolved Ni onto the Si(111) surface. Unexpectedly, coexistence of two types of micrometer-sized silicide islands with composition and electronic structure close to NiSi2 and NiSi phases was found. This finding revises some of the previous schemes about the evolution of the Ni/Si(111) system at high temperatures, which were based exclusively on structural analyses. A formation mechanism supposing anisotropy of the nucleation barrier for disilicide formation is suggested in order to explain the presence of NiSi islands and the preferred 〈110〉 orientation of the NiSi2 islands.