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Ion-beam-induced damage in silicon studied using variable-energy positrons, Rutherford backscattering, and infrared absorption
71
Citations
25
References
1991
Year
EngineeringIntegrated CircuitsVariable-energy PositronsSilicon On InsulatorSemiconductorsIon ImplantationInfrared AbsorptionSilicon IonsIon BeamIon EmissionRadiation ChemistryDefect AnnealingMaterials SciencePhysicsCrystalline DefectsAtomic PhysicsSingle Event EffectsDefect FormationPositron MethodsSilicon DebuggingIon-beam-induced DamageApplied Physics
Silicon (100) wafers have been irradiated at 300 K with silicon ions or helium ions at energies between 0.2 and 5.0 MeV. Fluences ranged from ${10}^{11}$ to ${10}^{16}$ ${\mathrm{cm}}^{\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}2}$. The associated defect profiles have been analyzed using variable-energy positron-beam methods. Displaced-atom distributions have been extracted from Rutherford-backscattering-channeling (RBSC) measurements and supplemented by infrared (1.8 \ensuremath{\mu}m) absorption measurements to yield divacancy concentrations. Defect annealing is observed through the divacancy anneal stage (\ensuremath{\sim}470 to 570 K), He-irradiated silicon returning to single-crystal quality as measured by infrared and positron methods. For the same anneal, Si-irradiated silicon shows partial restoration of crystallinity (RBSC), no change in positron-trapping characteristics, and removal of the optically active divacancies. Annealing to between 870 and 970 K restores the crystal to near preimplant characteristics.
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