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Implantation processing of Si: A unified approach to understanding ion-induced defects and their impact
Author(s) -
O. W. Holland,
E. G. Roth
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/537366
Subject(s) - ion implantation , dopant , ion , annealing (glass) , materials science , boron , diffusion , crystallographic defect , optoelectronics , chemical physics , crystallography , doping , chemistry , physics , thermodynamics , metallurgy , organic chemistry
A model is presented to account for the effects of ion-induced defects during implantation processing of Si. It will be shown that processing is quite generally affected by the presence of defect excesses rather than the total number of defects. a defect is considered excess if it represents a surplus locally of one defect type over its compliment. Processing spanning a wide range of implantation conditions will be presented to demonstrate that the majority of the total defects played little or no role in the process. This is a direct result of the ease with which the spatially correlated Frenkel pairs recombine either dynamically or during a post-implantation annealing. Based upon this model, a method will be demonstrated for manipulating or engineering the excess defects to modify their effects. In particular high-energy, self-ions are shown to inject vacancies into a boron implanted region resulting in suppression of transient enhanced diffusion of the dopant

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