Advantage of rapid thermal annealing over furnace annealing for P-implanted metastable Si/Ge0.12Si0.88
Lie, D. Y. C. ; Song, J. H. ; Nicolet, M.-A. ; Theodore, N. D.
Woodbury, NY : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 1995
Woodbury, NY : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 1995
ISSN: |
1077-3118
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Source: |
AIP Digital Archive
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Topics: |
Physics
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Notes: |
Metastable pseudomorphic Ge0.12Si0.88 films were grown by molecular beam epitaxy on Si(100) substrates and then implanted with 100 keV 31P at room temperature for a dose of 5×1013/cm2. Samples were subsequently annealed by rapid thermal annealing (RTA) in nitrogen and by steady-state furnace annealing in vacuum. Both damage and strain introduced by implantation can be completely removed, within instrumental sensitivity, by RTA at 700 °C for 10–40 s. Vacuum annealing for 30 min at 500–550 °C removes most of the damage and strain induced by the implantation but the activation of the P is poor. At 700 °C, the activation is nearly 100%, but the crystallinity worsens and the pseudomorphic strain begins to relax. We conclude that for a lightly implanted metastable and pseudomorphic GeSi epilayer on Si, steady-state vacuum annealing cannot achieve good dopant activation without introducing significant strain relaxation to the heterostructure, while RTA can. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
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Type of Medium: |
Electronic Resource
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URL: |