Title: Lect' 21 Epitaxy
1Lect. 21 Epitaxy
- The term epitaxy (Greek epi "above" and taxis
"in ordered manner") describes an ordered
crystalline growth on a monocrystalline
substrate. - Epitaxial films may be grown from gaseous or
liquid precursors. Because the substrate acts as
a seed crystal, the deposited film takes on a
lattice structure and orientation identical to
those of the substrate. - This is different from other thin-film deposition
methods which deposit polycrystalline or
amorphous films, even on single-crystal
substrates. - If a film is deposited on a substrate of the
same composition, the process is called
homoepitaxy otherwise it is called
heteroepitaxy. - Homoepitaxy is a kind of epitaxy performed with
only one material. In homoepitaxy, a crystalline
film is grown on a substrate or film of the same
material. This technology is applied to growing a
more purified film than the substrate and
fabricating layers with different doping levels. - Heteroepitaxy is a kind of epitaxy performed with
materials that are different from each other. In
heteroepitaxy, a crystalline film grows on a
crystalline substrate or film of another
material. This technology is often applied to
growing crystalline films of materials of which
single crystals cannot be obtained and to
fabricating integrated crystalline layers of
different materials. Examples include gallium
nitride (GaN) on sapphire or aluminium gallium
indium phosphide (AlGaInP) on gallium arsenide
(GaAs).
2Epitaxy
Metastable phase
Transient layer
_at_ t1gtto
_at_ to
Stable phase (crystal)
Nuclei of Crystal phase
Crystallizationinterface
At time to, the before the epitaxy takes place
At the nucleation stage where thefirst crystal
layer is being formed
_at_ t3gtt2
_at_ t2gtt1
Transient layer
Transient layer
Local homoepitaxial interface
Nuclei of Crystal phase
Grown epitaxial layer
Grown epitaxial layer
Crystallizationinterface
Crystallizationinterface
Early stage of epitaxial growth
Hetroepitaxial interface
Epitxy proceeds
3Epitaxy
- The key processes of epitaxial growth are-
Perpendicular mass transport from the bulk
metastable phase material to the crystallization
interface.- Lateral mass transport through
lateral migration according to expitaxial order.
- desorption from the crystallization area
towards the bulk phase material. - The lattice constant of the epitaxially grown
layer needs to be close to the lattice constant
of the substrate wafer. Otherwise the bonds can
not stretch far enough and dislocations will
result. - Experimentally, it has proven that epitaxy growth
occurs when the lattice misfit, defined as
, is less than 15 - MethodsEpitaxial silicon is usually grown
using- vapor-phase epitaxy (VPE), a
modification of chemical vapor deposition. -
Molecular-beam (MBE)- liquid-phase epitaxy (LPE)
are also used, mainly for compound semiconductors.
af
dislocation
as
Dislocation due to the difference betweenthe
substrate (s) and film (f) lattice constants
Film Substrate
() Epitaxy Physical Principles and Technical
Implementation By Marian A. Herman, Wolfgang
Richter, Helmut Sitter
4Epitaxy
- The growth rate in Vapor phase deposition (VPE)
epitaxy follows the same model as CVD.
Ref http//www2.ece.jhu.edu/faculty/andreou/495/2
007/LectureNotes/Handout7_Thin20Film20Deposition
.pdf
5 Epitaxy
- Silicon is most commonly deposited from silicon
tetrachloride in hydrogen at approximately 1200
C - SiCl4(g) 2H2(g) ? Si(s) 4HCl(g)
- This reaction is reversible, and the growth rate
depends strongly upon the proportion of the two
source gases. Growth rates above 2 micrometres
per minute produce polycrystalline silicon, and
negative growth rates (etching) may occur if too
much hydrogen chloride byproduct is present. In
fact, hydrogen chloride may be added
intentionally to etch the wafer. An additional
etching reaction competes with the deposition
reaction - SiCl4(g) Si(s) ? 2SiCl2(g)
- Silicon VPE may also use silane, dichlorosilane,
and trichlorosilane source gases. For instance,
the silane reaction occurs at 650 C in this way - SiH4 ? Si 2H2
- This reaction does not inadvertently etch the
wafer, and takes place at lower temperatures than
deposition from silicon tetrachloride. However,
it will form a polycrystalline film unless
tightly controlled, and it allows oxidizing
species that leak into the reactor to contaminate
the epitaxial layer with unwanted compounds such
as silicon dioxide. - VPE is sometimes classified by the chemistry of
the source gases, such as hydride VPE and
metalorganic VPE.
6Lect. 22 Epitaxy
- Molecular beam epitaxy is a technique for
epitaxial growth via the interaction of one or
several molecular or atomic beams that occurs on
a surface of a heated crystalline substrate. - Molecular Beam Epitaxy takes place in high vacuum
or ultra high vacuum (10-8 Pa). - The most important aspect of MBE is the slow
deposition rate (1 to 300 nm per minute), which
allows the films to grow epitaxially. - The slow deposition rates require proportionally
better vacuum in order to achieve the same
impurity levels as other deposition techniques. - In solid-source MBE, ultra-pure elements such as
gallium and arsenic are heated in separate
quasi-knudsen effusion cells until they begin to
slowly sublimate.
- A typical Knudsen cell contains a crucible (made
of pyrolytic Boron Nitride, quartz, tungsten or
graphite), heating filaments (often made of metal
Tantalum), water cooling system, heat shields and
orifice shutter. - The gaseous elements then condense on the wafer,
where they may react with each other. In the
example of gallium and arsenic, single-crystal
gallium arsenide is formed. - The term "beam" simply means that evaporated
atoms do not interact with each other or any
other vacuum chamber gases until they reach the
wafer, due to the long mean free paths of the
beams.
Refhttp//www-opto.e-technik.uni-ulm.de/forschung
/jahresbericht/2002/ar2002_fr.pdf
7Epitaxy
- the molecular beam condition that the mean free
path of the particles
should be larger than the geometrical size of
the chamber is easily fulfilled if the total
pressure does not exceed 10-5 Torr.
- Also, the condition for growing a sufficiently
clean epitaxial layer must be satisfied, e.g.
requiring for the monolayer deposition times of
the beams tb and the background residual vapor
tres the relation tres lt 10-5 tb. - For a typical gallium flux J of 10-19 atoms/m2s
and for a growth rate in the order of 1 ?m/h, the
conclusion is that pres 10-11 Torr. - Thus, UHV is the essential environment for MBE.
Therefore, the rate of gas evolution from the
materials in the chamber has to be as low as
possible. - So pyrolytic boron nitride (PBN) is chosen for
the crucibles which gives low rate of gas
evolution and chemical stability up to 1400 C.
- molybdenum and tantalum are widely used for the
shutters, the heaters and other components, and
only ultrapure materials are used as source. - The operation time of a shutter of approximately
0.1 s is normally much shorter than the time
needed to grow one monolayer (typically 1 to 5 s)
8Epitaxy
- Reflection high-energy electron diffraction
(RHEED) is a technique used to characterize the
surface of crystalline materials. - RHEED systems gather information only from the
surface layer of the sample, which distinguishes
RHEED from other materials characterization
methods that rely on diffraction of high-energy
electrons. - Transmission electron microscopy, another common
electron diffraction method samples the bulk of
the sample due to the geometry of the system.
- A RHEED system requires an electron source (gun),
photoluminescent detector screen and a sample
with a clean surface, although modern RHEED
systems have additional parts to optimize the
technique. - The electron gun generates a beam of electrons
which strike the sample at a very small angle
relative to the sample surface. - Incident electrons diffract from atoms at the
surface of the sample, and a small fraction of
the diffracted electrons interfere constructively
at specific angles and form regular patterns on
the detector. - The electrons interfere according to the position
of atoms on the sample surface, so the
diffraction pattern at the detector is a function
of the sample surface.
9Epitaxy
y
k2
k1
k0
x
ko
- The oscillation of theRHEED signal
exactlycorresponds to the timeneeded to grow a
monolayer and thediffraction pattern on the
RHEED window gives direct indicationover the
state of the surface