Publication | Closed Access
Electroless Silver Deposition in 100 nm Silicon Structures
39
Citations
19
References
2001
Year
Materials ScienceWafer Scale ProcessingEngineeringMetallic SilverMicrofabricationNanotechnologySurface ScienceApplied PhysicsNanomanufacturingSemiconductor Device FabricationNanofabricationSilver DepositionChemical DepositionSilicon On InsulatorElectroless Silver DepositionSilver IonsSurface NanoengineeringElectrochemical Surface Science
A new and simple method is described to plate silicon structures with metallic silver for ultralarge-scale integration in dimensions down to 100 nm at an aspect ratio of 4.25. The silver deposition is initiated by an exchange reaction of silicon with silver ions, and the subsequent layer growth of the activated wafers occurs by electroless plating from supersaturated aqueous silver salt solutions at pH ∼11. No extra reducing agents are needed since silver ions are reduced at the catalytic silver surface by hydroxyl ions. The "spontaneous" ion-metal transition only proceeds at pH ∼11 and is likely mediated by the formation of subnanometer-sized clusters. The silver plating proceeds more easily in smaller structures and yields void-free, crystallized deposits. © 2000 The Electrochemical Society. All rights reserved.
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