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- 1. Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 261102 (2006) , “Light-emitting defects and epitaxy in alkali-ion-implanted α quartz”, J. Keinonen, S. Gsiorek, P. K. Sahoo, S. Dhar, and K. P. LiebLight-emitting centers in alkali-ion-implanted quartz have been investigated with respect to the solid phase epitaxial growth of the ion irradiation induced amorphous zone. Cathodoluminescence was studied under the conditions of chemical epitaxy in annealing the samples, implanted with... (Read more)
- 2. J. Appl. Phys. 100, 093507 (2006) , “A view of the implanted SiC damage by Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy, spectroscopic ellipsometry, and transmission electron microscopy”, G. Battistig, N. Q. Khánh, P. Petrik, T. Lohner, L. Dobos, B. Pécz, J. García López, and Y. Morilla4H-SiC single crystalline substrates were implanted at room temperature with 150 keV Al+ ions using fluences of 4×1014, 1×1015, and 2×1015 cm−2 with current density of 2.5 µA cm−2.... (Read more)
- 3. J. Appl. Phys. 99, 043509 (2006) , “Influence of metal trapping on the shape of cavities induced by high energy He+ implantation”, R. El Bouayadi, G. Regula, M. Lancin, B. Pichaud, and M. DesvignesIn He implantation induced cavities highly contaminated with metals (Au, Ni, Pt) we found that, when no three-dimensional structure is observed, the shape of the cavities can be strongly modified depending on the nature of the metal and on its trapped quantity. The equilibrium shape of cavities is... (Read more)
- 4. Phys. Rev. B 72, 045219 (2005) , “Fluorine in Si: Native-defect complexes and the supression of impurity diffusion”, Giorgia M. Lopez, Vincenzo Fiorentini, Giuliana Impellizzeri, Salvatore Mirabella, Enrico NapolitaniThe transient enhanced diffusion of acceptor impurities severely affects the realization of ultrahigh doping regions in miniaturized Si-based devices. Fluorine codoping has been found to suppress this transient diffusion, but the mechanism underlying this effect is not understood. It has been proposed that fluorine-impurity or fluorine–native-defect interactions may be responsible. Here we clarify this mechanism combining first-principles theoretical studies of fluorine in Si and purposely designed experiments on Si structures containing boron and fluorine. The central interaction mechanism is the preferential binding of fluorine to Si-vacancy dangling bonds and the consequent formation of vacancy-fluorine complexes. The latter effectively act as traps for the excess self-interstitials that would normally cause boron transient enhanced diffusion. Instead, fluorine-boron interactions are marginal and do not play any significant role. Our results are also consistent with other observations such as native-defect trapping and bubble formation. (Read more)
- 5. Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 155901 (2003) , “Fluorine in Silicon: Diffusion, Trapping, and Precipitation”, X. D. Pi, C. P. Burrows, P. G. ColemanThe effect of vacancies on the behavior of F in crystalline Si has been elucidated experimentally for the first time. With positron annihilation spectroscopy and secondary ion mass spectroscopy, we find that F retards recombination between vacancies (V) and interstitials (I) because V and I trap F to form complexes. F diffuses in the V-rich region via a vacancy mechanism with an activation energy of 2.12±0.08 eV. After a long annealing time at 700ºC, F precipitates have been observed by cross-section transmission electron microscopy which are developed from the V-type defects around the implantation range and the I-type defects at the end of range. (Read more)
- 6. J. Appl. Phys. 91, 8919-8941 (2002) , “Transient Enhanced Diffusion of Boron in Si”, S. C. Jain, W. Schoenmaker, R. Lindsay, P. A. Stolk, S. Decoutere, M. Willander, H. E. Maes.On annealing a boron implanted Si sample at ~800 °C, boron in the tail of the implanted profile diffuses very fast, faster than the normal thermal diffusion by a factor 100 or more. After annealing for a sufficiently long time, the enhanced diffusion saturates. The enhanced diffusion is... (Read more)
- 7. J. Appl. Phys. 89, 5997-6001 (2001) , “Oxygen Recoil Implant from SiO2 Layers into Single-Crystalline Silicon”, G. Wang, Y. Chen, D. Li, S. Oak, G. Srivastav, S. Banerjee, A. Tasch, P. Merrill, R. Bleiler.It is important to understand the distribution of recoil-implanted atoms and the impact on device performance when ion implantation is performed at a high dose through surface materials into single crystalline silicon. For example, in ultralarge scale integration impurity ions are often implanted... (Read more)
- 8. Phys. Rev. B 31, 5525-5528 (1985) , “Mechanism for hydrogen compensation of shallow-acceptor impurities in single-crystal silicon”, N. M. JohnsonExperimental results are presented which identify the following chemical reaction as being responsible for compensation of shallow-acceptor impurities when single-crystal silicon is exposed to monatomic hydrogen: A-+h++H0↔(AH)0, where A-... (Read more)
- 9. J. Non-Cryst. Solids 32, 327-338 (1979) , “ELECTRON SPIN RESONANCE AND HOPPING CONDUCTIVITY OF a-SiOx”, E. Holzenkämpfer, F. -W. Richter, J. Stuke, U. Voget-GroteAmorphous SiOx-layers with O < x < 2 have been prepared by evaporation of Si at oxygen pressures of 10−6 … 10−3 mbar. The composition of the samples was determined by proton backscattering. The band gap, derived from optical measurements, increases with rising oxygen... (Read more)
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