Publication | Closed Access
Chemical vapor deposition of aluminum and gallium nitride thin films from metalorganic precursors
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1996
Year
Materials ScienceAluminium NitrideEngineeringGrowth RateSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsMaterials CharacterizationMetalorganic PrecursorsAluminum Nitride FilmsThin Film Process TechnologyThin FilmsChemical DepositionChemical Vapor DepositionChemical VaporThin Film Processing
Nearly stoichiometric aluminum and gallium nitride thin films were prepared from hexakis(dimethylamido)dimetal complexes, M2[N(CH3)2]6 (M=Al,Ga), and ammonia at substrate temperatures as low as 200 °C by using low pressure thermal and plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Both processes gave films that showed little or no carbon (<5 at. %) and no oxygen (<few at. %) contamination, but in all cases there was hydrogen incorporation. The films were highly transparent in the ultraviolet and visible regions. The barrier properties of the aluminum nitride films in a Si/AlN/Au metallization scheme were examined by using backscattering spectrometry. The growth rate of the aluminum nitride films was as high as 1300 Å /min. Overall, the results suggest that M2[N(CH3)2]6 (M=Al,Ga) are promising precursors for low-temperature/low-pressure thermal and plasma-enhanced CVD of group III nitride thin films.