Title :
Electrically active defects in surface preamorphized and subsequently RTP-annealed Si and the effect of titanium silicidation
Author :
Chi, D.Z. ; Ashok, S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng. Sci., Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA
Abstract :
Thermal evolution of ion implantation-induced defects and the influence of concurrent titanium silicidation in pre-amorphized p-type Si (implanted with 25 keV, 1016 cm-2 Si+) under rapid thermal processing (RTP) have been studied. Ion implantation-induced electrically active defects have been detected by deep level transient spectroscopy (DLTS), capacitance-temperature (C-T), and spreading resistance measurements. DLTS characterization results show that the thermal evolution of electrically active defects in self-ion (Si+) implanted Si depends critically on the post-implantation thermal anneal: Hole traps H1(0.33 eV) and H4(0.47 eV) appear after the highest temperature (950°C) RTP anneal, while a single trap H3(0.26 eV) level shows up at lower anneal temperatures (⩽900°C). The thermal signature of H 4 defect is very similar to that of iron interstitial while those of H1 and H3 levels appear to originate from some interstitial-related defects, possibly complexes. A complete elimination of the above interstitial-related defects with concurrent RTP Ti silicidation has been observed, apparently a result of vacancy injection. The paper will present details of defect evolution under various conditions of RTP for samples with and without the silicidation
Keywords :
deep level transient spectroscopy; deep levels; elemental semiconductors; ion implantation; rapid thermal annealing; silicon; surface states; 0.26 eV; 0.33 eV; 0.47 eV; 25 keV; 900 C; 950 C; DLTS; RTP-annealed; Si; deep level transient spectroscopy; electrically active defects; hole traps; interstitial-related defects; ion implantation-induced defects; preamorphized surface; spreading resistance; thermal evolution; titanium silicidation; Amorphous materials; Annealing; Crystallization; Rapid thermal processing; Silicidation; Solids; Temperature dependence; Thermal engineering; Thermal resistance; Titanium;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State and Integrated Circuit Technology, 1998. Proceedings. 1998 5th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Beijing
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4306-9
DOI :
10.1109/ICSICT.1998.785886