Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
The diffusion of indium in silicon has been investigated in the temperature
range of 800 to 1000 °C by using secondary ion mass spectroscopy and
transmission electron microscopy. Our data indicate that, for implants at
150 keV through a thin oxide layer (19 nm), the amount of dopant that
leaves the silicon is only controlled by the flow of indium that reaches
the surface, being both the segregation coefficient at the interface SiO2
/Si and the indium diffusion coefficient in the oxide favorable to the
out-diffusion. Comparison between experimental and simulated profiles has
evidenced that, besides the expected transient enhanced diffusion occurring
in the early phases of the annealing, a heavy loss of dopant by
out-diffusion was associated with a high In diffusivity near the surface.
Measurements of the hole concentration in uniformly doped silicon on
insulator samples performed in the temperature range of 700 to 1100 °C
indicate that indium solubility is equal or greater than 1.8E18 cm-3; this
value is higher than those previously proposed in literature.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
TED; Simulation; Silicon; Indium
List of contributors:
Solmi, Sandro; Parisini, Andrea
Published in: