• DocumentCode
    1392695
  • Title

    Study of Carrier Mobility of Low-Energy High-Dose Ion Implantations

  • Author

    Qin, Shu ; Prussin, Simon A. ; Reyes, Jason ; Hu, Yongjun Jeff ; McTeer, Allen

  • Author_Institution
    Process R/D Dept., Micron Technol., Inc., Boise, ID, USA
  • Volume
    39
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    587
  • Lastpage
    592
  • Abstract
    New carrier drift mobility data for boron-, phosphorus-, and arsenic-doped Si in a low-energy high-dose implant regime are measured and studied using a continuous anodic oxidation technique/differential Hall effect technique. The data show that, when the doping concentration is >; 1020/cm3, both the hole and electron mobility values are lower than the conventional model predictions, and the electron mobility of the As-doped Si is lower than that of the P-doped ones. The data also show that, when the doping concentration is >; 1021/cm3 the hole mobility in the B-doped Si and the electron mobility in the P-doped Si are almost equal and reach as low as ~40 cm2/V · s, and the electron mobility of the As-doped Si is the lowest and reaches ~30 cm2/V · s. These mobility data are much lower than the conventional model predictions and are also lower than the previously published data. For the ULSI device and circuit analyses, simulations, and designs, these new mobility data need to be taken into consideration.
  • Keywords
    Hall effect; anodisation; arsenic; boron; doping profiles; electron mobility; elemental semiconductors; hole mobility; phosphorus; plasma immersion ion implantation; semiconductor doping; silicon; Si:As; Si:B; Si:P; ULSI device; carrier drift mobility; circuit analysis; continuous anodic oxidation; differential Hall effect; doping concentration; electron mobility; hole mobility; low-energy high-dose ion implantations; Annealing; Doping; Electron mobility; Implants; Impurities; Semiconductor device measurement; Silicon; Carrier and mobility profiles; continuous anodic oxidation technique/differential Hall effect (CAOT/DHE) method; low-energy high-dose implants; plasma doping (PLAD); spreading resistance profiling (SRP) method;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0093-3813
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPS.2010.2089702
  • Filename
    5654595