Plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy has been shown to be a viable and practical method for producing high quality tin oxide,
SnO2. Phase-pure epitaxial single crystalline
SnO2 (101) thin films of
1 μm in thickness were reproducibly grown on
r-plane sapphire
Al2O3 (10
2) substrates. The
SnO2 epitaxy progressed in the Volmer–Weber growth mode. A minimum on-axis
ω-scan full width at half maximum of 0.22° for the
SnO2 (101) peak was measured indicating relatively low film mosaic. An epitaxial relationship of
[010]SnO2∥[
2
0]sapphire and
[
01]SnO2∥[
011]sapphire was determined between the film and substrate. A
SnO2 film tilt of 1.3° around the
[010]SnO2 toward
[0001]sapphire was measured. A dislocation density of
8×109 cm−2 was measured. Hall effect measurements quantified an unintentionally doped electron concentration for different samples in a range
(0.3–3.0)×1017 cm−3 with a corresponding electron mobility range of
20–100 cm2/V s. The
SnO2 growth behavior was determined to be in one of the two distinct growth regimes. An oxygen-rich regime was characterized by a linear increase in the film growth rate with increasing Sn flux; whereas, the films grown entirely in the Sn-rich regime showed a decrease in the growth rate with increased Sn flux.