bn compound
Release time:
2018-10-24
The generation of point defects in highly oriented pyrolytic boron nitride (HOPBN) after Ar+ion bombardment in ultrahigh vacuum and subsequent exposure to air was studied by angle-resolved x-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES). The pristine HOPBN showed well-oriented boron nitride (BN) basal planes parallel to the surface, with a negligible amount of defects. Amorphization of the BN structure took place after Ar+sputtering, as indicated by the broadening of the XANES spectra and significant decrease of the characteristicπ* states. Following air exposure, the XANES analysis revealed a spontaneous reorganization of the sample structure. The appearance of four new B1s π* excitonic peaks indicates an oxygen decoration process of the nitrogen vacancies
created by ion bombardment. A core-level shift model is presented to
support this statement. This model is successfully extended to the case
of oxygen substitutional defects in hexagonal BC3and BCxN (0 < x < 4) materials, which can be applied to any B-basedsp2-bonded honeycomb structure.
