Abstract :
SiN overlayers have been grown on quartz and single-crystal Si substrates at room temperature by ablating a Si N x 3 4
sintered target in a vacuum environment and different gas atmospheres, N2 and Ar. The film growth was controlled by real
time ellipsometry at a fixed photon-energy, 2.5 eV. Once the deposition process is completed, in situ spectro-ellipsometric
measurements were obtained in the 1.5 to 5 eV photon-energy range. The best curve fitting of the data is used to find the
film composition: a mixture of non-crystalline Si3N4, polycrystalline Si, p-Si, and amorphous Si, a-Si. The film crystallinity
is confirmed by TEM. The volume fraction of the film components is determined from ellipsometry. The ellipsometric
results are complemented by in situ characterization of the film by XPS. The film stoichiometry was found to depend on the
gas pressure. In fact, the ideal stoichiometry, xs4r3, was achieved at a critical pressure, a value which depended on the
kind of gas used during deposition. q1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
Keywords :
Ellipsometry , Background gas–plume collision , Silicon nitride , Laser ablation