Defects in silicon afterimplantation: A study using a positron-beam technique, Rutherford backscattering, secondary neutral mass spectroscopy, and infrared absorption spectroscopy
Open Access
- 15 July 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 56 (3) , 1393-1403
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.56.1393
Abstract
The distribution of defects in Si (100), (110), and (111) after boron implantation and annealing processes was measured by means of different methods. Boron implantation was carried out at 300 K with three energies (50, 150, and 300 keV or 30, 90, and 180 keV) in multiple mode to obtain a homogeneously damaged layer. Ion fluences ranged from to The profile of vacancy-type defects was detected by variable-energy positron annihilation spectroscopy (VEPAS). The defect concentration increases proportionally to where Φ is the ion fluence. It was found that the line-shape parameter of the positron-electron annihilation peak in the implanted layer increases with Φ. The divacancy concentration observed by infrared absorption spectroscopy (IRAS) was nearly constant in all samples (about ). It can be concluded that divacancies are not the main vacancy-type defect and the increasing parameter must be attributed to additional defects of larger open volume. A value was fitted for the dominating defect, where Rutherford backscattering (RBS) measurements were carried out to detect the distribution of displaced lattice atoms. The defect-production rate was proportional to again. The concentration profiles of implanted ions were measured with sputtered neutral mass spectrometry (SNMS). In addition, Monte Carlo calculations were done with the TRIM code. The nearly homogenous defect distributions up to a depth of 1 μm found by VEPAS, TRIM, and RBS are in very good accordance. The samples were annealed up to 1150 K. It was found that the annealing behavior of vacancylike defects depends on the implantation dose and on the sample material under investigation. The divacancies are annealed at 470 K as measured by IRAS. An annealing stage of vacancy clusters at 725 K was observed in all samples by VEPAS. In Czochralski material, a decrease of the parameter below the value of defect-free Si was observed after annealing at about 750 K. This can only be explained by the appearance of a different defect type, most likely an oxygen-vacancy complex. At high ion fluences an increase of the parameter above the defect value at room temperature was observed after annealing at 700 K in a region 100 nm below the surface. This high parameter is caused by the creation of larger vacancy clusters. These defects remain stable after annealing at 850 K. Correlated RBS and SNMS measurements were done at identically implanted samples for all annealing stages.
Keywords
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