« Previous
1
Next »
(12 hits, 1/1)
Showing
10, 25, 50, 100, 500, 1000, all papers per page.
Sort by:
last publication date,
older publication date,
last update date.
- 1. Phys. Rev. B 77, 195203 (2008) , “Creation and identification of the two spin states of dicarbon antisite defects in 4H-SiC”, J. W. Steeds, W. Sullivan, S. A. Furkert, G. A. Evans, P. J. WellmannThis paper deals with the positive identification by low-temperature photoluminescence microspectroscopy of the two spin states of the dicarbon antisites in 4H-SiC. The defects are created by high-dose electron irradiation at room temperature or by subsequent exposure to intense 325 nm radiation at... (Read more)
- 2. Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 253504 (2006) , “Single silicon vacancy-oxygen complex defect and variable retention time phenomenon in dynamic random access memories”, T. Umeda, K. Okonogi, K. Ohyu, S. Tsukada, K. Hamada, S. Fujieda, and Y. MochizukiThe variable retention time phenomenon has recently been highlighted as an important issue in dynamic random access memory (DRAM) technology. Based on electrically detected magnetic resonance and simulation studies, we suggest that a single Si vacancy-oxygen complex defect is responsible for this... (Read more)
- 3. Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 182903 (2006) , “Effects of Al addition on the native defects in hafnia”, Q. Li, K. M. Koo, W. M. Lau, P. F. Lee, J. Y. Dai, Z. F. Hou, X. G. GongTwo occupied native defect bands are experimentally detected in pure HfO2. The density of states of band one in the middle of the band gap reduces drastically with the Al addition, while that of band two slightly above the valence-band maximum remains rather unaffected. We attribute the... (Read more)
- 4. Appl. Phys. Lett. 87, 062105 (2005) , “Negative-U property of oxygen vacancy in cubic HfO2”, Y. P. Feng, A. T. L. Lim, M. F. LiOxygen vacancy in cubic HfO2 was investigated using first-principles calculation based on density functional theory and generalized gradient approximation. Five different charge states (V++, V+, V0, V, and... (Read more)
- 5. Phys. Rev. B 66, 161202(R) (2002) , “Phosphorus and sulphur doping of diamond”, L. G. Wang and Alex ZungerPrevious calculations on n-type doping of diamond by P and S predicted that S has a shallower level and a higher solubility than P. Our first-principles calculations show that the opposite is true: Phosphorus impurity in diamond gives rise to a shallower donor level, and has a higher bulk solid... (Read more)
- 6. Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 135507 (2002) , “Diffusion and Reactions of Hydrogen in F2-Laser-Irradiated SiO2 Glass”, Koichi Kajihara, Linards Skuja, Masahiro Hirano, and Hideo HosonoThe diffusion and reactions of hydrogenous species generated by single-pulsed F2 laser photolysis of SiO-H bond in SiO2 glass were studied in situ between 10 and 330 K. Experimental evidence indicates that atomic hydrogen (H0) becomes mobile even at temperatures as... (Read more)
- 7. Phys. Rev. B 59, 12900 (1999) , “Electron-paramagnetic-resonance measurements on the divacancy defect center R4/W6 in diamond”, D. J. Twitchen, M. E. Newton, J. M. Baker, T. R. Anthony, W. F. BanholzerElectron-paramagnetic-resonance (EPR) studies in radiation damaged diamond enriched to 5% 13C have resulted in the identification of the nearest-neighbor divacancy center. It is the isotopic enrichment, and consequent observation of 13C hyperfine lines, that has permitted the... (Read more)
- 8. Proc. symp. on the degradation od electronic devices due to device operation as well as crystalline and process-induced defects 94-1, 221-234 (1994) , ECS (ISBN:1-56677-037-8) , “Spin dependent recombination in Si p-n junctions”, B. K. Meyer , P. Christmann , W. Stadler, H. Overhof, J.-M. Spaeth, S. Greulich-Weber, B. Stich
- 9. J. Appl. Phys. 72, 520-524 (1992) , “Deep levels of vanadium and vanadium-hydrogen complex in silicon”, T. Sadoh, H. Nakashima, and T. TsurushimaDeep levels in vanadium-doped n- and p-type silicon have been investigated using deep level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) and concentration profile measurements. The DLTS measurement reveals two electron traps of EC−0.20 eV and... (Read more)
- 10. Phys. Rev. B 37, 7268 (1988) , “Electron-nuclear double resonance of titanium in silicon: 47Ti and 49Ti ENDOR”, D. A. van Wezep, C. A. J. AmmerlaanThe electron-nuclear double-resonance spectra of interstitial 47Ti+ and 49Ti+ in silicon have been measured at 4.2 K. Spin Hamiltonians for these systems were determined and had to include hyperfine contributions of the type S3I and... (Read more)
- 11. Appl. Phys. A 30, 1 (1983) , “Transition Metals in Silicon”, E. R. Weber.A review is given on the diffusion, solubility and electrical activity of 3d transition metals in silicon. Transition elements (especially, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu) diffuse interstitially and stay in the interstitial site in thermal equilibrium at the diffusion temperature. The parameters of the liquidus curves are identical for the Si:Ti — Si:Ni melts, indicating comparable silicon-metal interaction for all these elements. Only Cr, Mn, and Fe could be identified in undisturbed interstitial sites after quenching, the others precipitated or formed complexes. The 3d elements can be divided into two groups according to the respective enthalpy of formation of the solid solution. The distinction can arise from different charge states of these impurities at the diffusion temperature. For the interstitial 3d atoms remaining after quenching, reliable energy levels are established from the literature and compared with recent calculations. (Read more)
- 12. Lattice Defects in Semiconductors 23, 1-22 (1975) , Institute of Physics, London , “EPR Studies of the Lattice Vacancy and Low-Temperature Damage Processes in Silocon”, G. D. Watkins.EPR studies of silicon irradiated at 20.4 K and 4.2 K by 1.5 MeV and 46 MeV electrons are described. In 46 MeV irradiations the dominant defects formed appear to be divavancies and other multiple defect aggregates which liberate vacancies throughout the anneal to room temperature as they reorder, recombine, etc. For 1.5 MeV irradiations group III atoms play a vital role in p- and n-type materials in trapping interstitials and stabilizing damage. Carbon and oxygen are not effective interstitial traps at these temperatures. Evidence of limited vacancy migration during irradiation is also cited. Two distinct excited configurations of vacancy-oxygen pairs are identified as precursors to A-centre formation in n-type silicon. The kinetics for their conversion to A-centres depends strongly upon the Fermi level as does the isolated vacancy migration energy whhich is measured to be 0.18 ± 0.02 eV for the V= charge state. The vacancy has four charge states, V+, V0, V- and V=. Kinetics for hole release from V+ reveals an activation barrier of 0.057 eV. The concentration of V+ at 20.4 K in boron-doped material indicates the corresponding donor level even closer to the band edge, approximately EV + 0.039 eV. Jahn-Teller energies for V0, V+, and V- are estimated from stress-alignment studies and confirmed to be large. Kinetics studies for reorientation from one Jahn-Teller distortion to another are also described for each charge state.
« Previous
1
Next »
(12 hits, 1/1)
Showing
10, 25, 50, 100, 500, 1000, all papers per page.
Sort by:
last publication date,
older publication date,
last update date.
All papers (3399)
Updated at 2010-07-20 16:50:39
Updated at 2010-07-20 16:50:39
(view as: tree
,
cloud
)
1329 | untagged |
Materials
(111 tags)
Others(101 tags)
Technique
(46 tags)
Details
(591 tags)
Bond(35 tags)
Defect(interstitial)(18 tags)
Defect(vacancy)(15 tags)
Defect-type(19 tags)
Element(65 tags)
Energy(8 tags)
Isotope(56 tags)
Label(303 tags)
Sample(17 tags)
Spin(8 tags)
Symmetry(15 tags)