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Engineering of boron-induced dislocation loops for efficient room-temperature silicon light-emitting diodes
Author(s) -
M. Milosavljević,
Guosheng Shao,
M. A. Lourenço,
R. Gwilliam,
K.P. Homewood
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of applied physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1089-7550
pISSN - 0021-8979
DOI - 10.1063/1.1866492
Subject(s) - materials science , boron , ion implantation , silicon , ion , diode , transmission electron microscopy , dislocation , annealing (glass) , molecular physics , burgers vector , analytical chemistry (journal) , condensed matter physics , atomic physics , optoelectronics , chemistry , nanotechnology , physics , composite material , chromatography , organic chemistry
We have studied the role of boron ion energy in the engineering of dislocation loops for silicon light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Boron ions from 10to80keV were implanted in (100) Si at ambient temperature, to a constant fluence of 1×1015ions∕cm2. After irradiation the samples were annealed for 20min at 950°C by rapid thermal annealing. The samples were analyzed by transmission electron microscopy and Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy. It was found that the applied ion implantation∕thermal processing induces interstitial perfect and faulted dislocation loops in {111} habit planes, with Burgers vectors a∕2⟨110⟩ and a∕3⟨111⟩, respectively. The loops are located around the projected ion range, but stretch in depth approximately to the end of range. Their size and distribution depend strongly on the applied ion energy. In the 10keV boron-implanted samples the loops are shallow, with a mean size of ∼30nm for faulted loops and ∼75nm for perfect loops. Higher energies yield buried, large, and irregularly shape...

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