Title :
Damage evolution in implanted silicon by pulsed excimer laser annealing
Author :
Fisicaro, G. ; La Magna, A. ; Piccitto, G. ; Privitera, V. ; Huet, K. ; Venturini, J. ; Besaucele, H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys. & Astron., Univ. of Catania, Catania, Italy
fDate :
Sept. 29 2009-Oct. 2 2009
Abstract :
The evolution of the implantation damage during a Pulsed Laser thermal annealing process is investigated by means of an accurate modeling which could stimulates focused experimental analyses. The model is based on the simulation of the detailed kinetic of the defect system in the extremely far-from-equilibrium conditions caused by the laser irradiation in the non-melting, melting and partial melting regimes. It considers defect (interstitials Is and vacancies Vs) clustering and annihilation in presence of fast varying temperature, high thermal gradients and phase transition. Simulations allow a characterization of the residual damage (in terms of total residual defect´s density and cluster size distribution) as a function of the process conditions (i.e. laser fluence). The thermal budget supplied to the system in the submelting regime is not sufficient to drive a consistent defect evolution and the total defect´s density is slightly reduced with respect the initialization (i.e. the post-implants conditions, where B and P implantations have been considered: Boron 40 keV, 3e14 cm-2 and Phosphorus 350 keV, 1e14 cm-2). Residual damage after melting processes is considerably reduced when compared to the as implant case. In this cases a relevant portion of the I type defect resides in clusters (small and large) while for the simulated cases clustering does not take place for V type defects.
Keywords :
elemental semiconductors; excimer lasers; interstitials; ion implantation; laser beam annealing; silicon; vacancies (crystal); Si; annihilation; cluster size distribution; damage evolution; defect clustering; defect evolution; defect system; electron volt energy 350 keV; electron volt energy 40 keV; implantation damage; implanted silicon; laser irradiation; melting processes; phase transition; pulsed excimer laser annealing; pulsed laser thermal annealing process; residual damage; residual defect density; thermal budget; thermal gradients; Annealing; Impurities; Kinetic theory; Laser modes; Laser theory; Laser transitions; Optical pulses; Semiconductor process modeling; Silicon; Temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Thermal Processing of Semiconductors, 2009. RTP '09. 17th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Albany, NY
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3814-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1944-0251
DOI :
10.1109/RTP.2009.5373425