Critical issues in ion implantation of silicon below 5 keV: Defects and diffusion
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-30-1998
Abstract
Continued use of ion implantation for doping of silicon integrated circuits will soon require implantation energies below 5 keV in order to form electrical junctions < 50 nm deep. At such low energies, dopant diffusion and formation of extended defects may be modified by both the proximity of the surface and by the large volume concentrations of point defects and dopant atoms that will arise from reduced range straggling. This brief review summarizes our recent experiments measuring defect formation and evolution, as well as transient enhanced diffusion (TED), in silicon implanted with Si+ and B+ ions < 10 nm deep. The results have demonstrated that {311}-type extended defects are generated from Si+ implants even within 3 nm of the surface. However, when these defects eventually dissolve, the surface acts as a perfect sink to efficiently annihilate the released interstitials. As a result, the amount of TED measured at epitaxially-grown B markers decreases approximately linearly with decreasing ion energy (at least, for Si+ implantation). For low energy B+ implants typical doses required for source-drain doping lead to the formation of a fine-grain polycrystalline silicon boride phase during activation annealing. © 1998 Elsevier Science S.A. All rights reserved.
Identifier
0038934466 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Materials Science and Engineering A
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0921-5093(98)00735-7
ISSN
09215093
First Page
269
Last Page
274
Issue
1-2
Volume
253
Grant
DE-AC05-96OR22464
Fund Ref
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Recommended Citation
Agarwal, Aditya; Gossmann, H. J.; Eaglesham, D. J.; Pelaz, L.; Jacobson, D. C.; Poate, J. M.; and Haynes, T. E., "Critical issues in ion implantation of silicon below 5 keV: Defects and diffusion" (1998). Faculty Publications. 16310.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/16310
