Scott Greenhorn , Valérie Stambouli , Edwige Bano , François Pierre , Nicolas Gauthier , Matthieu Weber , Anastassios Lagoyannis , Evagelia Taimpiri , Bernard Pelissier , Konstantinos Zekentes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Amorphous semiconductor thin films are difficult to optimize for specific applications due to the high complexity of their chemical bonding structures, particularly for binary compounds like amorphous silicon carbide. Naturally, understanding the chemical composition and bonding is critical in determining the physical properties of the films. The chemical composition and bonding of various amorphous silicon carbide films are hereby studied using different analysis techniques: IBA technique (Ion Beam Analysis) which includes RBS (Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry), ERDA (Elastic Recoil Detection Analysis) and NRA (Nuclear Reaction Analysis), as well as, time-of-flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (ToF-SIMS), X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS), Raman spectroscopy, and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR). The results from each technique, including atomic ratio determination and bonding/structural information, are compared in order to obtain a complete picture of the films’ structure. According to the deposition conditions, the films are found to contain Si-Si, Si-C, C-C, and oxygen-related bonds, with varying ordering including graphitic regions or nanocrystallinity. IBA techniques and XPS demonstrated high reliability, while Raman spectroscopy provided consistent results, except for films with a very high silicon content. TOF-SIMS and FTIR require empirical calibration based on known measurements to produce useable results.
期刊介绍:
Materials Science in Semiconductor Processing provides a unique forum for the discussion of novel processing, applications and theoretical studies of functional materials and devices for (opto)electronics, sensors, detectors, biotechnology and green energy.
Each issue will aim to provide a snapshot of current insights, new achievements, breakthroughs and future trends in such diverse fields as microelectronics, energy conversion and storage, communications, biotechnology, (photo)catalysis, nano- and thin-film technology, hybrid and composite materials, chemical processing, vapor-phase deposition, device fabrication, and modelling, which are the backbone of advanced semiconductor processing and applications.
Coverage will include: advanced lithography for submicron devices; etching and related topics; ion implantation; damage evolution and related issues; plasma and thermal CVD; rapid thermal processing; advanced metallization and interconnect schemes; thin dielectric layers, oxidation; sol-gel processing; chemical bath and (electro)chemical deposition; compound semiconductor processing; new non-oxide materials and their applications; (macro)molecular and hybrid materials; molecular dynamics, ab-initio methods, Monte Carlo, etc.; new materials and processes for discrete and integrated circuits; magnetic materials and spintronics; heterostructures and quantum devices; engineering of the electrical and optical properties of semiconductors; crystal growth mechanisms; reliability, defect density, intrinsic impurities and defects.