Title: Diamond as a future semiconductor material
1Need of new semiconductor material
- Diamond as a future semiconductor material
- By-Aditya D. Dekhane
2Need of new semiconductor material
Moores law The driving force for innovations!!!
- High operating temperatures
- High power applications
- Better electrical and electronic properties
3Why Diamond?
4Diamond
Same valency as Silicon i.e.4
- Very strong SP3 C-C bonds
- Inert for chemical attack!!!
Ref Lecture notes Solid State Physics,
http//www.lcst-cn.org/Solid20State20Physics/Ch1
8.html
5Doping of diamond
- Needs to be doped for-
- Better electrical properties
- To be used in diodes, transistors
- P-type doping
- Boron (B)
- Sometimes natural diamonds are already p doped
- Boron is the best acceptor for diamond
- Energy band gap 0.2-0.3 eV
- Boron enters as a substitutional impurity
6Doping of diamond continued
- Nitrogen
- Most successful
- Energy gap 1.7 eV
- Insulators at room temperature due to deep energy
gap
- Phosphorus
- Shallow energy level dopant
- Energy band gap 0.5 eV
- Electron mobility raised by 100 cm2/V
- Sometimes interfere with electrical properties
- Sulfur
- Energy level 0.37 eV
- Electron mobility raised by 600 cm2/V
- Still under development
- Lithium
- As an interstitial impurity
- Still under development
7Doping techniques
- 1. Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- Impurity atoms incorporated in diamond during the
growth of diamond films. - Vapors containing impurity elements
- APCVD, LPCVD, PECVD!!!!
Impurity Impurity source Solvent gas Impurity/Carbon atom ratio (ppm) Temp. (C) Pressure (Torr) Reference
Boron B2O3 Ethanol 10000 800 100 1
Nitrogen N2 CH4 50000 800 100 1
Phosphorous PH3 CH4 1000-20000 950 80 2
8Doping techniques continued
- 2. Ion implantation
- High energy dose of ions bombarded, breaks
existing bonds and creates new - CIRA (Cold Implantation Rapid Annealing) and
- RTI (Room Temperature Implantation)
Dopant Process name Dose (cm-2) Energy (KeV) Annealing temperature (C) Annealing time (min) Reference
Nitrogen CIRA 1013 40-640 1400 10 3
Phosphorus CIRA 1016 84-165 1200 - 4
Boron CIRA 1016 30-60 600 - 4
Lithium RTI 1016 40-50 900 60 5
9Successful applications
1. Dual substrates by SP3 technologies Inc.
- 2. Diamond semicondutor by Nippon Telegraph and
Tele. Corp., Japan - Formed a semiconductor with 81 GHz frequency,
aiming at 300GHz with 30 W/mm power for practical
usage.
- 3. MEMS technology using Ultra Nanocrystalline
Diamond (UNCD) - Diamond materials Inc. developed UNCD doped 3
with nitrogen - Manufacturing with CVD method and reactive ion
etching technique for etching diamond
Ref 6, 7, 8
10 Interview with company
11 Interview with company continued...
- Company representative Ms. Nga Vu (Application
Process Engineer) - Company- SP3 diamond technologies, Santa Clara,
CA 95054 - Contact no.- 1-877-773-9940 Ext. 209
- Email- nvu_at_sp3inc.com
- Details of telephonic and email conversation
- Diamond wafers are manufactured on a substrate
Si, SiO2, W, WC, graphite - The diamond is deposited on substrates by CVD
method at 600-900C - Coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch
- Wafers successfully manufactured are of 4, 6,
8 and 12 sizes. - Boron as p-type dopant.
- Nitrogen as n-type dopant.
- Sheet resistance method is used to predict the
percentage of boron - More the amount of boron more risk of
interference with diamond properties. - Facility can manufacture micro as well as nano
grained diamond wafers.
12Summary
- Diamond has the best property combination
(Electrical, Mechanical) to be a future
semiconductor material. - Research work is necessary to develop n-type
doping methods - Reviewed information in paper is verified with
industry person and is under practical use. - Manufacturing techniques need to be developed
which are still costly for industrial scale
production.
13References
- Yoshiyuki Show, et al., Structural changes in CVD
diamond film by boron and nitrogen doping.
Diamond and related materials, 2000. 9(3-6) p.
337-340. - S. Koizumi, et al., Growth and characterization
of phosphorous doped 111 homoepitaxial diamond
thin films. Applied physics letters, 1997.
71(1065). - R. Kalish, C. Uzan-Saguy, and B. Philosoph,
Nitrogen doping of diamond by ion implantation.
Diamond and related materials, 1997. 6 p.
516-520. - Prins, J.F., Doping of diamond by the diffusion
f interstitial atoms into layers containing a
low density of vacancies. Diamond and related
materials, 1998. 7 p. 545-549. - R. Job, et al., Electrical properties of
lithium-implanted layers on synthetic diamond.
Diamond and related materials, 1996. 5 p.
757-760. - Jerry W. Zimmer and G. Chandler, SOD Substrates
The Next Step in Thermal Control, sp3 Diamond
Technologies Inc. - Hara, Y. NTT verifies diamond semiconductor
operation at 81 GHz. 2003. - John A. Carlisle and N.D. Kane, Commercializing
Diamond RF MEMS Devices. IEEE Microwave magazine,
2007 p. 62.
14Any questions???
Dr. Gordon E. Moore, Intel museum