Title: PORE FORMING PROCESS IN ANODICALLY OXIDIZED SILICON WAFERS
1PORE FORMING PROCESS IN ANODICALLY OXIDIZED
SILICON WAFERS
- Basics of electrochemical cell - p-Si wafer
anode in contact with aqueous HF electrolyte - Mechanism of natural self-limiting process for
regular pore formation based on wider band gap of
PS compared to bulk Si and respective redox
potentials for anodic oxidation
2KEY ISSUES ORIGIN OF PHOTO- AND
ELECTROLUMINESCENE OF POROUS SILICON
- Origin of luminescence key point- as bulk Si is
indirect band gap semiconductor with very weak
light emission - Models for light emission include quantum-spatial
confinement, siloxenes, and SiOH - Luminsecent nc-Si structure requires SiO, SiH
surface bonds - caps dangling bonds -removes
killer traps in band gap - Size dependence of k, m selection rules, scaling
laws determine light emission properties - Mechanical, photochemical, chemical stability are
key factors for devices - Efficient e-h charge-injection required for
practical LED
3MAKING NANOCRYSTALLINE SILICON LUMINESCENT
CAPPING
4THERMAL OXIDATION FORMATION OF METAL OXIDE AND
NITRIDE THIN FILMS
- Anodic layers, metal exposed to a glow discharge
- Ti O2 ? TiO2 thickness 3-4 nm
- Similar method applicable to other metals, Al, V,
W, Zr - Not restricted to oxides, nitrides too,
exceptionally hard, high temperature protective
coating - Ti NH3 ? TiN
- Al NH3 ? AlN
5CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION
- Pyrolysis, photolysis, chemical reaction,
discharges, RF, microwave facilitated deposition
processes - Epitaxial films, correct matching to substrate
lattice - CH4 H2 (RadioF, MicroW) ? C, diamond films
- Et4Si (thermal, air) ? SiO2
- SiCl4 or SiH4 (thermal T, H2) ? a-HSi or nc-HSi
- SiH4 PH3 (RF) ? n-Si
6CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION
- Si2H6 B2H6 (RF) ? p-Si
- SiH3SiH2SiH2PH2 (RF)? n-Si
- Me3Ga (laser photolysis, heating) ? Ga
- Me3Ga AsH3 H2 ? GaAs CH4
- Si (laser evaporation, supersonic jet) Sin (size
selected cluster deposition) ? Si
7Amorphous hydrogenated silicon a-HSi, easy to
form thin film by CVD Hydrogen capping of
dangling surface sp3 bonds Reduces surface
electron killer traps Enhances electrical
conductivity compared to a-Si but less than bulk
Si Poly-domain texture Useful for solar cell
large area devices
8METAL ORGANIC CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION, MOCVD
- Invented by Mansevit in 1968
- Recognized high volatility of metal organic
compounds as sources for semiconductor thin film
preparations - Enabling chemistry for electronic and optical
quantum devices - Quantum wells and superlattices
- Occurs for 5-500 angstrom layers
- Known as artificial superlattices
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11METAL ORGANIC CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION, MOCVD
- Quantum confined electrons and holes when
thickness of quantum well L is comparable to the
wavelength of an electron or hole at the Fermi
level of the material, band diagram shows
confined particle states and quantization effects
for electrical and optical properties - Discrete electronic energy states rather than
continuous bands, given by solution to the simple
particle in a box equation, assuming infinite
barriers for the wells, m is the effective mass
of electrons and holes - En n2p2h2/2mL2
- Tunable thickness, tailorable composition
materials, do it yourself quantum mechanics
materials for the semiconductor industry
12METAL ORGANIC CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION, MOCVD
- Quantum well structure synthesized by depositing
a controlled thickness superlattice of a narrow
band gap GaAs layer sandwiched by two wide band
gap GaxAl1-xAs layers using MOCVD - Ga(Al)Me3 AsH3 (H2, T) ? Ga(Al)As CH4
- Known as artificial superlattices, designer
periodicity of layers, quantum confined lattices,
thin layers, epitaxially grown - Example GaxAl1-xAsGaAsGaxAl1-xAs
13MOCVD
- Example GaxAl1-xAsGaAsGaxAl1-xAs
- n- and p-doping achievable by having excess As or
Ga respectively in a GaAs layer - Composition and carrier concentration controls
refractive index and electrical conductivity,
thus TIR achieved in a semiconducting
superlattice - Enables quantum and photon confinement for
electronic and optoelectronic and optical
devices, multiple quantum well laser, quantum
cascade laser, distributed feedback laser,
resonant tunneling transistor, high mobility
ballistic transistor, laser diode
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15BAND GAP ENGINEERING OF SEMICONDUCTORS
- The MOCVD, LPE, CVD, CVT, MBE are all deposition
techniques that provide angstrom precise control
of film thickness - Together with composition control one has a
beautiful synthetic method for fine tuning the
electronic band gap and hence most of the
important properties of a semiconductor quantized
film - The key thing is to achieve epitaxial lattice
matching of the film with the underlying
substrate - This avoids things like lattice strain at the
interface, elastic deformation, misfit
dislocations, defects - All of these problems serve to increase carrier
scattering and quenching of e-h recombination
luminescence (killer traps), thereby reducing the
efficacy of the material for advanced device
applications
16MOCVD PRECURSORS, SINGLE SOURCE MATERIALS
- Me3Ga, Me3Al, Et3In
- NH3, PH3, AsH3
- H2S, H2Se
- Me2Te, Me2Hg, Me2Zn, Me4Pb, Et2Cd
- Example for IR detectors
- Me2Cd Me2Hg Me2Te (H2, 500oC) ? CdxHg1-xTe
- All pretty toxic materials
17MOCVD PRECURSORS, SINGLE SOURCE MATERIALS
- Specially designed MOCVD reactors, hot and cold
wall designs, controlled flow of precursors using
mass flow meters directing them to heated
substrate single crystal, induction heater,
silicon carbide coated graphite susceptor for
mounting substrate - Chemistry of this type creates a problem for
semiconductor manufacturers in terms of safe
disposal of toxic waste - Most reactions occur in range 400-1300oC,
complications of diffusion at interfaces,
disruption of atomically flat epitaxial
surfaces/interfaces occurs during deposition - Photolytic processes (photoepitaxy) help to bring
the deposition temperatures to more reasonable
temperatures
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20REQUIREMENTS OF MOCVD PRECURSORS
- RT stable
- No polymerization, decomposition
- Easy handling
- Simple storage
- Not too reactive
- Vaporization without decomposition
21REQUIREMENTS OF MOCVD PRECURSORS
- Vaporization without decomposition
- Modest lt 100oC temperatures
- Low rate of homogeneous pyrolysis, gas phase, wrt
heterogeneous decomposition - HOMO HETERO rates 1 1000
- Heterogeneous reaction on substrate
- Greater than on other hot surfaces in reactor
22REQUIREMENTS OF MOCVD PRECURSORS
- Not on supports, vessel
- Ready chemisorption of precursor on substrate
- Detailed surface and gas phase studies of
structure of adsorbed species, reactive
intermediates, kineticss, vital for quantifying
film nucleation and growth processes - Electronic and optical films synthesized in this
way - Semiconductors, metals, silicides, nitrides,
oxides, mixed oxides (e.g., high Tc
superconductors)
23CRITICAL PARAMETERS IN MATERIALS PREPARATION FOR
SYNTHESIS OF THIN FILMS
- Composition control - precise command over
stoichiometry and adventitious carbonaceous
deposits - Variety of materials to be deposited
- Good film uniformity
- Large areas to be covered, gt 100 cm2
- Precise reproducibility
24CRITICAL PARAMETERS IN MATERIALS PREPARATION FOR
SYNTHESIS OF THIN FILMS
- Growth rate, thickness control
- 2-2000 nm layer thicknesses
- Precise control of film thickness
- Accurate control of deposition, film growth rate
25CRITICAL PARAMETERS IN MATERIALS PREPARATION FOR
SYNTHESIS OF THIN FILMS
- Crystal quality, epitaxy
- High degree of film perfection
- Defects degrade device performance
- Reduces useable wafer yields
26CRITICAL PARAMETERS IN MATERIALS PREPARATION FOR
SYNTHESIS OF THIN FILMS
- Purity of precursors
- Usually less than 10-9 impurity levels
- Stringent demands on starting material purity
- Challenge for chemistry, purifying and analyzing
at the ppb level - Demands exceptionally clean growth system
otherwise defeats the object of controlled doping
of films for device applications
27CRITICAL PARAMETERS IN MATERIALS PREPARATION FOR
SYNTHESIS OF THIN FILMS
- Interface widths
- Abrupt changes of composition, dopant
concentration required, vital for quantum
confined structures - 30-40 sequential layers often needed
- Alternating composition and graded composition
films - 0.5-50 nm thicknesses required with atomic level
precision - All of the above has been more-or-less perfected
in the electronics and optics industries
28TECHNIQUES USED TO GROW SEMICONDUCTOR FILMS AND
MULTILAYERED FILMS
- MOCVD
- Liquid phase epitaxy
- Chemical vapor transport
- Molecular beam epitaxy
- Laser ablation
- Used for band gap engineering of semiconductor
materials that function at 1.5 microns in near IR
- integrating with glass fiber optics and
waveguides
29BAND GAP ENGINEERING
- Designer semiconductors
- Zinc blende lattice
- Lattice constant
- Composition
- Doping
- Thickness
- Multilayers
- Epitaxial lattice matching
- Control of band gap and refractive index
- Operating wavelengths for optical
telecommunication systems labeled in purple
306InP/3GaAs/6InP EPITAXIALLY MATCHED SUPERLATTICE
31TAILORED BAND GAPS - DESIGNER MOCVD GRADED
COMPOSITION POTENTIAL WELLS
AlxGa1-xAs graded composition-gap superlattice
CB AlAs wide gap
e
CB GaAs narrow gap
Tunable h?
VB GaAs narrow gap
h
VB AlAs wide gap
Designer quantum well architecture - band gap
engineering - graded potential can be used to
enhance electron mobility in HEMTs or build a
quantum cascade laser
32Federico Capasso co-inventor of the quantum
cascade laser imagined small things when he used
size and dimensionality of materials to tailor
their properties for electronic and optical
devices
33QUANTUM CASCADE LASER A NICE EXAMPLE OF BAND GAP
ENGINEERING BY MOCVD The white bands in the TEM
are QWs made of GaInAs, which are sandwiched
between barrier layers of AlInAs ranging in
thickness from atomic to 12 atomic layers . All
the wells are part of a quantum cascade laser.
When a voltage is applied to the device,
electrons move down the potential barrier from
narrow to wide band QWs and emit a photon between
the two thickest QWs. Then the electron moves on
to the next stage to the right where the process
repeats.
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35PHYSICAL METHODS FOR MAKING THIN FILMS
- CATHODE SPUTTERING
- Bell jar equipment, 10-1 to 10-2 torr of Ar, Kr,
Xe - Glow discharge created, positively charged rare
gas ions, accelerated in a high voltage to
cathode target, high energy ions collide with
cathode - Sputter material from cathode, deposits on
substrate opposite cathode to form thin film - Multi-target sputtering also possible, creates
composite or multi-layer films
36PHYSICAL METHODS FOR MAKING THIN FILMS
- THERMAL VACUUM EVAPORATION
- High vac bell jar gt 10-6 torr, heating e-beam,
resistive, laser - Gaseous material deposits on substrate, film
nucleates and grows - Containers must be chemically inert, W, Ta, Nb,
Pt, BN, Al2O3, ZrO2, Graphite - Substrates include insulators, metals, glass,
alkali halides, silicon, sources include metals,
alloys, semiconductors, insulators, inorganic
salts
37CONTROL OVER THIN FILM GROWTH AT THE ATOMIC
SCALE MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY
38MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY
Structure of thin film
Vapor phase species control
Ar ion gun for cleaning substrate surface or
depth profiling
Surface analysis
Elemental sources in shuttered Knudsen cells
39MOLECULAR BEAM EPITAXY - MBE
- Million dollar thin film machine, ideal for
preparing high quality artificial semiconductor
quantum superlattices, ferroelectrics,
superconductors - Ultrahigh vacuum system gt10-12 torr, what's in
the chamber? - Elemental or compound sources in shutter
controlled Knudsen effusion cells, Ar ion gun
for cleaning substrate, surface or depth
profiling sample using Auger analyzer, high
energy electron diffraction for surface structure
analysis, mass spectrometer for control and
detection of vapor species, e-gun for heating the
substrate
40PHOTOEPITAXYMaking atomically perfect thin
films under milder and more controlled
conditionsEt2Te Hg H2 (h?, 200oC) ? HgTe
2C2H6