Abstract :
Carbon ions at 40 keV were implanted into (1 0 0) high-purity p-type silicon wafers at 400 8C to a fluence of 6.5 1017 ions/cm2. Subsequent
thermal annealing of the implanted samples was performed in a diffusion furnace at atmospheric pressure with inert nitrogen ambient at 1100 8C.
Time-of-flight energy elastic recoil detection analysis (ToF-E ERDA) was used to investigate depth distributions of the implanted ions. Infrared
transmittance (IR) and Raman scattering measurements were used to characterize the formation of SiC in the implanted Si substrate. X-ray
diffraction analysis (XRD) was used to characterize the crystalline quality in the surface layer of the sample. The formation of 3C-SiC and its
crystalline structure obtained from the above mentioned techniques was finally confirmed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results
show that 3C-SiC is directly formed during implantation, and that the subsequent high-temperature annealing enhances the quality of the polycrystalline
SiC.
Keywords :
Silicon , Silicon carbide (SiC) , Raman spectroscopy , Time-of-flight energy elastic recoildetection analysis (ToF-E ERDA) , Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) , X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis , Infrared spectroscopy (IR) , Ion beam synthesis (IBS)