DocumentCode :
789126
Title :
Electrical Properties of Neutron-Irradiated Silicon at 76°K: Hall Effect and Electrical Conductivtty
Author :
Stein, Herman J.
Author_Institution :
Sandia Laboratories Albuquerque, New Mexico 87115
Volume :
15
Issue :
6
fYear :
1968
Firstpage :
69
Lastpage :
76
Abstract :
Defects produced in p-type silicon by neutron irradiation have been investigated using electrical conductivity and Hall effect measurements at 76°K. Samples from crucible-grown (1, 10, and 50 ohm-cm) and float-zone (10 ohm-cm) boron-doped silicon were irradiated at 76°K with nearly fission spectrum neutrons and annealed isochronally between 76° and 700°K. The electrical properties of neutron-irradiated p-type silicon exhibit an illumination dependence similar to that observed previously in n-type silicon and attributed to the presence of defect clusters. Therefore, neutron-produced changes in the electrical properties of p-type silicon also are attributed to defect clusters. The sensitivity to illumination was observed for all resistivities and for both crucible and float-zone p-type silicon. The illumination-induced conductivity decays slowly with time at 76°K and influences the thermally produced changes in the electrical properties upon annealing for temperatures up to 150°K. Neutron-produced changes in the electrical properties measured after annealing to 150° K are found to be qualitatively consistent with an insulating void model for cluster-space-charge regions. The best modeling of the experimentally observed changes is for the 50 ohm-cm (large void volume) silicon. The annealing loss of the light sensitive defects occurs in diffuse stages between 150° and 550°K with the largest stage between 150° and 240°K. A major fraction of the hole mobility annealing parallels that for the light sensitive defects and suggests that the mobility change is caused primarily by defect clusters.
Keywords :
Annealing; Conductivity measurement; Dielectrics and electrical insulation; Electric variables measurement; Hall effect; Lighting; Neutrons; Silicon; Temperature sensors; Thermal conductivity;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.1968.4325033
Filename :
4325033
Link To Document :
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