Showing
10, 25, 50, 100, 500, 1000, all papers per page.
Sort by:
last publication date,
older publication date,
last update date.
- 151. Appl. Phys. Lett. 85, 1538 (2004) , “Observation of fluorine-vacancy complexes in silicon”, P. J. Simpson, Z. Jenei, P. Asoka-Kumar, R. R. Robison, M. E. LawWe show direct evidence, obtained by positron annihilation spectroscopy, for the complexing of fluorine with vacancies in silicon. Both float zone and Czochralski silicon wafers were implanted with 30 keV fluorine ions to a fluence of 2×1014 ions/cm2, and studied in the... (Read more)
- 152. Eur. Phys. J. Appl. Phys. 27, 13-19 (2004) , “Measurement of process-induced defects in Si sub-micron devices by combination of EDMR and TEM”, T. Umeda, A. Toda, Y. MochizukiProcess-induced defects are a serious issue for modern sub-micron Si LSIs. To characterize such defects, two different techniques are useful: electrically detected magnetic resonance (EDMR) and transmission electron microscope (TEM), which can detect small (point) and extended defects, respectively. We applied EDMR and TEM to the issue of defect-induced leakage currents in dynamic-random-access memory (DRAM) cells. For our DRAM samples (a 0.25- μm-rule series), although TEM showed no extended defects, EDMR successfully detected two types of point defects: V2+O x (Si divacancy-oxygen complexes) and larger Si vacancies (at least larger than V6). We confirmed that these defects are the source of DRAM leakage currents. The observed defects were formed by ion implantation processes, but were more thermally stable than those in bulk Si crystals. The origins of this enhanced stability are attributed to the presence of oxygen atoms and a strong mechanical strain in LSIs. To clarify the origin of the complicated strain in LSI structures, we can directly measure the local-strain distribution in DRAM samples by means of convergent-beam electron diffraction (CBED) using TEM, which provides us with a valuable hint for understanding the formation mechanism of process-induced defects. (Read more)
- 153. IEEE Electron Device Lett. 25, 153 (2004) , “Evaluation of NBTI in HfO2 Gate-Dielectric Stacks With Tungsten Gates”,
- 154. J. Appl. Phys. 96, 3721 (2004) , “Fluorine-enhanced boron deffusion induced by fluorine postimplantation in silicon”, Taiji NodaIn this article, the postimplanted fluorine effect on boron transient-enhanced diffusion (TED) and dose loss during a 750°C annealing is shown. 19F implants at 2 keV, after 11B implant at an energy of 1 keV,3×1014/cm2, have been investigated in... (Read more)
- 155. J. Appl. Phys. 95, 4096 (2004) , “Nitridation effects on Pb center structures at SiO2/Si(100) interfaces ”,Interfacial defect structures of NO-nitride oxide on Si(100) were characterized by electron spin resonance spectroscopy. We confirmed that the effective g values of the Pb1 center are affected by interfacial nitridation even at a small nitrogen concentration of 5 at. %, while those of the Pb0 center proved to be unchanged. We observed that the shifted Pb1 line appeared gradually with interfacial nitrogen concentration, which suggests that the nitrogen-induced modified structure substitutes for the original Pb1 structure. Angular variations of the shifted Pb1 lines were also significantly different from those of pure oxide. Based on our analysis, we attributed the g value shift of the Pb1 center to dangling bond tilting, caused by the displacement of nearest-neighbor Si atoms. (Read more)
- 156. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 255502 (2004) , “Formation of Thermal Vacancies in Highly As and P Doped Si”, V. Ranki and K. SaarinenUsing positron annihilation measurements we observed the formation of thermal vacancies in highly As and P doped Si. The vacancies start to form at temperatures as low as 650 K and are mainly undecorated at high temperatures. Upon cooling the vacancies form stable vacancy-impurity complexes such as... (Read more)
- 157. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 245901 (2004) , “Ab Initio Calculations to Model Anomalous Fluorine Behavior”, Milan Diebel, Scott T. Dunhammplanted fluorine is observed to behave unusually in silicon, manifesting apparent uphill diffusion and reducing diffusion and enhancing activation of boron. In order to investigate fluorine behavior, we calculate the energy of fluorine defect structures in the framework of density functional theory. In addition to identifying the ground-state configuration and diffusion migration barrier of a single fluorine atom in silicon, a set of energetically favorable fluorine defect structures were found (FnVm). The decoration of vacancies and dangling silicon bonds by fluorine suggests that fluorine accumulates in vacancy-rich regions, which explains the fluorine redistribution behavior reported experimentally. (Read more)
- 158. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 086102 (2004) , “Reaction of the Oxygen Molecule at the Si(100)–SiO2 Interface During Silicon Oxidation”, Angelo Bongiorno and Alfredo PasquarelloUsing constrained ab initio molecular dynamics, we investigate the reaction of the O2 molecule at the Si(100)SiO2 interface during Si oxidation. The reaction proceeds sequentially through the incorporation of the O2 molecule in a Si-Si bond and the... (Read more)
- 159. Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 105505 (2004) , “In situ ESR Observation of Interface Dangling Bond Formation Processes During Ultrathin SiO2 Growth on Si(111)”, W. Futako, N. Mizuochi, and S. YamasakiWe report the formation processes of interface dangling bonds (Pb centers) during initial oxidation of a clean Si(111) surface using an ultrahigh-vacuum electron-spin-resonance technique. At the oxidation of one or two Si layer(s), the Pb center... (Read more)
- 160. Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 087601 (2004) , “Hydrogen-Release Mechanisms in the Breakdown of Thin SiO2 Films”, J. Suñé and E. Y. WuThe mechanism of hydrogen release from the anode Si/SiO2 interface that triggers defect generation and finally the dielectric breakdown of the oxide in metal-oxide-semiconductor structures is investigated. Extensive experimental charge-to-breakdown statistics are used to derive the defect... (Read more)
- 161. Solid State Commun. 132, 545 (2004) , Pergamon Press , “Pressure-induced phase transitions in Si observed by thermoelectric power measurements”, S.V. Ovsyannikov, V.V. Shchennikov, A. Misiuk, V.V. Shchennikov JrFor the first time the phase transitions under high pressure P up to 20 GPa have been observed in Czochralski-grown Si single crystals by thermoelectric power S measurements. Values of S≈+8±3 μV/K have been determined for tetragonal, orthorhombic and simple hexagonal high-pressure phases. The behaviour of S(P) was found to be rather different for different Si samples—initial and pre-treated by high temperatures 450–650ºC under hydrostatic pressure 0–1.5 GPa. (Read more)
- 162. Appl. Phys. Lett. 83, 3407-3409 (2003) , “Electron spin resonance observation of trapped electron centers in atomic-layer-deposited hafnium oxide on Si”, A. Y. Kang, P. M. Lenahan, J. F. Conley Jr.We observed two paramagnetic defects in thin films of HfO2 on silicon with electron spin resonance. Both appear after photoinjecting electrons into the dielectric. Strong spectroscopic evidence links one spectrum to an O2-" align="middle"> defect. A second spectrum is... (Read more)
- 163. Appl. Phys. Lett. 83, 1647 (2003) , “Dynamic recovery of negative bias temperature instability in p-type metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors”,An unexpected physical phenomenondynamic recovery of negative bias temperature instability (NBTI)is reported. NBTI degradation in p-type metaloxidesemiconductor field-effect transistors is significantly (by ~40%) reduced after stress interruption. NBTI recovery... (Read more)
- 164. Appl. Phys. Lett. 82, 3677-3679 (2003) , “Interface defects responsible for negative-bias temperature instability in plasma-nitrided SiON/Si(100) systems”, Shinji Fujieda, Yoshinao Miura, and Motofumi SaitohInterface defects generated by negative-bias temperature stress (NBTS) in an ultrathin plasma- nitrided SiON/Si(100) system were characterized by using D2 annealing, conductance-frequency measurements, and electron-spin resonance measurements. D2 annealing was shown to lower... (Read more)
- 165. Appl. Phys. Lett. 82, 269 (2003) , “Relationship between interfacial nitrogen concentration and activation energies of fixed-charge trapping and interface state generation under bias-temperature stress condition”,The influence of nitrogen concentration at a nitrided oxide/silicon interface on the activation energies of both near-interface fixed-charge trapping and interface state generation caused by negative bias temperature instability stress has been studied quantitatively. It is observed that the charge... (Read more)
- 166. J. Appl. Phys. 94, 7105-7111 (2003) , “Electrically detected magnetic resonance of ion-implantation damage centers in silicon large-scale integrated circuits”, T. Umeda, Y. Mochizuki, K. Okonogi, K. HamadaWe used electrically detected magnetic resonance to study the microscopic structure of ion-implantation-induced point defects that remained in large-scale Si integrated circuits (Si LSIs). Two types of defects were detected in the source/drain (n+-type) region of... (Read more)
- 167. J. Appl. Phys. 94, 1 (2003) , “Negative bias temperature instability: Road to cross in deep submicron silicon semiconductor manufacturing”,We present an overview of negative bias temperature instability (NBTI) commonly observed in p-channel metaloxidesemiconductor field-effect transistors when stressed with negative gate voltages at elevated temperatures. We discuss the results of such stress on device and circuit... (Read more)
- 168. Phys. Rev. B 68, 245105 (2003) , “Theory of time-domain measurement of spin-dependent recombination with pulsed electrically detected magnetic resonance”, Christoph Boehme and Klaus LipsThe theoretical foundations of the time domain measurement of spin-dependent charge carrier recombination by means of pulsed electrically detected magnetic resonance (EDMR) are outlined. Pulsed EDMR is based on the transient measurement of electrical currents in semiconductors after a coherent... (Read more)
- 169. Phys. Rev. B 67, 195338 (2003) , “Layer-resolved kinetics of Si oxidation investigated using the reflectance difference oscillation method”, T. Yasuda, N. Kumagai, M. Nishizawa, S. Yamasaki, H. Oheda, and K. YamabeDry oxidation kinetics of the Si(001) surface has been investigated using reflectance difference oscillation to resolve atomic-scale phenomena. The activation energy for oxidation has been found to increase as the oxide-Si interface moves in the depth direction, reaching the value for bulk... (Read more)
- 170. Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 246603 (2003) , “Electrical Detection of Spin Coherence in Silicon”, Christoph Boehme and Klaus LipsExperimental evidence is presented showing that photocurrents in silicon can be used as highly sensitive readout probes for coherent spin states of localized electrons, the prime candidates for quantum bits in various semiconductor based quantum computer concepts. Conduction electrons are subjected... (Read more)
- 171. 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)
- 172. Appl. Phys. Lett. 81, 3488 (2002) , “On–off switching of edge direct tunneling currents in metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors”, Ming-Jer Chen and Ming-Pei LuOnoff switching behaviors or two-level random telegraph signals (RTS) are measured in the low voltage (1.40 V<VG<0.88 V) edge direct tunneling currents in ultrathin gate stack (10 Å oxide + 10 Å nitride) n-channel... (Read more)
- 173. Appl. Phys. Lett. 81, 2397-2399 (2002) , “Hydrogen redistribution induced by negative-bias-temperature stress in metal–oxide–silicon diodes”, Ziyuan LiuPoly-Si/SiO2/Si diodes in which oxides were grown thermally under wet oxidation conditions and subsequently treated by a post-oxidation anneal (POA) have been characterized electrically and chemically before and after applying negative-bias-temperature stress (NBTS). It was confirmed that... (Read more)
- 174. Appl. Phys. Lett. 81, 1839 (2002) , “Dual behavior of H+ at Si–SiO2 interfaces: Mobility versus trapping”, S. N. Rashkeev, D. M. Fleetwood, R. D. Schrimpf, S. T. PantelidesWe report first-principles calculations showing that protons in the vicinity of a SiSiO2 interface can behave in two different ways. At an abrupt interface without suboxide bonds (SiSi bonds at the oxide side of the interface) H+ does not become trapped but migrates... (Read more)
- 175. Appl. Phys. Lett. 81, 1818 (2002) , “Interface structures generated by negative-bias temperature instability in Si/SiO2 and Si/SiOxNy interfaces”, J. Ushio, T. Maruizumi, K. Kushida-AbdelghafarWe used a density functional method to investigate the mechanism of negative-bias temperature instability (NBTI) and resultant structural changes of Si/SiO2 and Si/SiOxNy interfaces. The reaction energies for the water- and hydrogen-originated... (Read more)
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)