{"title":"Effect of single-step, high-oxygen-concentration annealing on buried oxide layer microstructure in post-implant-amorphized, low-dose SIMOX material","authors":"L. Chen, S. Bagchi, S. Krause, P. Roitman","doi":"10.1109/SOI.1999.819883","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Fabrication of high-dose SIMOX (typically 1.8/spl times/10/sup 18/ cm/sup 2/ at 200 keV) is a maturing materials technology with increasing commercial usage. However, lower-dose SIMOX (2 to 4/spl times/10/sup 17/ cm/sup 2/) has the potential to be more economical, as well as allow device designers a choice of oxide thickness, but film uniformity and quality must be as good or better than standard high-dose material. A variety of approaches to produce low-dose SIMOX have been used which include: low dose implant plus ITOX (internal thermal oxidation), which uses a second high temperature anneal with high oxygen concentration (Nakashima et al. 1996; Mrstik et al. 1995); multiple energy implants (Alles, 1997); lower energy implantation (Anc et al. 1998); rapid ramping to the high temperature anneal range (Ogura, 1998); N pre-implantation (Meyappan et al. 1995); and very-low dose, post-implant amorphization prior to high temperature annealing (Holland et al. 1996; Bagchi et al. 1997). For the last technique, it was reported there were changes in the precipitation mechanisms that control BOX development. The first was elimination of multiply-faulted defects as sites for preferred nucleation and growth of oxides which form a discontinuous upper layer of precipitates in untreated material. The second was enhanced diffusion of oxygen along defects and phase boundaries in the amorphized region to the single BOX layer that was developing. In this research, we extend the work on post-implant-amorphized low-dose SIMOX by reporting effects of a single-step high oxygen concentration anneal on its BOX microstructure.","PeriodicalId":117832,"journal":{"name":"1999 IEEE International SOI Conference. Proceedings (Cat. No.99CH36345)","volume":"13 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"1999 IEEE International SOI Conference. Proceedings (Cat. No.99CH36345)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/SOI.1999.819883","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Fabrication of high-dose SIMOX (typically 1.8/spl times/10/sup 18/ cm/sup 2/ at 200 keV) is a maturing materials technology with increasing commercial usage. However, lower-dose SIMOX (2 to 4/spl times/10/sup 17/ cm/sup 2/) has the potential to be more economical, as well as allow device designers a choice of oxide thickness, but film uniformity and quality must be as good or better than standard high-dose material. A variety of approaches to produce low-dose SIMOX have been used which include: low dose implant plus ITOX (internal thermal oxidation), which uses a second high temperature anneal with high oxygen concentration (Nakashima et al. 1996; Mrstik et al. 1995); multiple energy implants (Alles, 1997); lower energy implantation (Anc et al. 1998); rapid ramping to the high temperature anneal range (Ogura, 1998); N pre-implantation (Meyappan et al. 1995); and very-low dose, post-implant amorphization prior to high temperature annealing (Holland et al. 1996; Bagchi et al. 1997). For the last technique, it was reported there were changes in the precipitation mechanisms that control BOX development. The first was elimination of multiply-faulted defects as sites for preferred nucleation and growth of oxides which form a discontinuous upper layer of precipitates in untreated material. The second was enhanced diffusion of oxygen along defects and phase boundaries in the amorphized region to the single BOX layer that was developing. In this research, we extend the work on post-implant-amorphized low-dose SIMOX by reporting effects of a single-step high oxygen concentration anneal on its BOX microstructure.
高剂量SIMOX的制造(通常为1.8/spl倍/10/sup 18/ cm/sup 2/在200 keV下)是一种成熟的材料技术,商业用途越来越多。然而,低剂量SIMOX(2至4/spl倍/10/sup 17/ cm/sup 2/)具有更经济的潜力,以及允许设备设计人员选择氧化物厚度,但薄膜均匀性和质量必须与标准高剂量材料一样好或更好。已经使用了多种生产低剂量SIMOX的方法,包括:低剂量植入物加ITOX(内部热氧化),它使用高氧浓度的第二次高温退火(Nakashima等人,1996;Mrstik et al. 1995);多重能量植入(Alles, 1997);低能量注入(Anc et al. 1998);迅速上升到高温退火范围(Ogura, 1998);N植入前(Meyappan et al. 1995);以及非常低的剂量,在高温退火之前植入后非晶化(Holland et al. 1996;Bagchi et al. 1997)。对于最后一种技术,据报道,控制BOX发展的沉淀机制发生了变化。首先是消除多重缺陷作为氧化物优先成核和生长的场所,这些氧化物在未经处理的材料中形成不连续的上层沉淀。二是氧沿非晶区缺陷和相边界向正在形成的单BOX层扩散增强。在本研究中,我们通过报告单步高氧浓度退火对其BOX微观结构的影响,扩展了植入后非晶化低剂量SIMOX的工作。