We used deep level transient spectroscopy to determine the concentration and depth profile of the defects introduced by MeV He and Si implants in n-type crystalline Si. We have found that only similar to 16% of the Frenkel pairs generated by the ion escapes recombination and is stored into room temperature stable defects such as divacancies and oxygen vacancy complexes. For a light ion (He), the depth distribution of these defect complexes is strongly dependent on the O content of the substrate: it mirrors the initial distribution of I-V pairs, as calculated by TRIM (a Monte Carlo Code) when the O content is high (similar to 10(18)/cm(3)) while it can be much wider (up to 2 mu m) in a highly pure (low O content) epitaxial substrate. This effect is due to a long range migration of vacancies before clustering or trapping at impurities. This migration is strongly inhibited for an ion of higher mass (such as Si) since in a denser collision cascade direct clustering is strongly favoured with respect to agglomeration of migrating defects.
The effect of impurity content and ion mass on the depth profiles of vacancy-type defects in MeV implanted Si
S Libertino;V Privitera;
1997
Abstract
We used deep level transient spectroscopy to determine the concentration and depth profile of the defects introduced by MeV He and Si implants in n-type crystalline Si. We have found that only similar to 16% of the Frenkel pairs generated by the ion escapes recombination and is stored into room temperature stable defects such as divacancies and oxygen vacancy complexes. For a light ion (He), the depth distribution of these defect complexes is strongly dependent on the O content of the substrate: it mirrors the initial distribution of I-V pairs, as calculated by TRIM (a Monte Carlo Code) when the O content is high (similar to 10(18)/cm(3)) while it can be much wider (up to 2 mu m) in a highly pure (low O content) epitaxial substrate. This effect is due to a long range migration of vacancies before clustering or trapping at impurities. This migration is strongly inhibited for an ion of higher mass (such as Si) since in a denser collision cascade direct clustering is strongly favoured with respect to agglomeration of migrating defects.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


