Title :
Study of Carrier Mobility of Low-Energy, High-Dose Ion Implantations Using Continuous Anodic Oxidation Technique/Differential Hall Effect (CAOT/DHE) Measurements
Author :
Qin, Shu ; Hu, Y. Jeff ; McTeer, Allen ; Prussin, Si ; Reyes, Jason
Author_Institution :
Process R/D Dept., Micron Technol., Inc., Boise, ID, USA
Abstract :
New carrier mobility (¿) data for boron-, phosphorus-, and arsenic-doped Si in a low-energy, high-dose implant regime are measured and studied using continuous anodic oxidation technique/differential Hall effect (CAOT/DHE) technique. The data show that when the doping concentration is > 1020/cm3, both hole and electron mobility values are lower than the conventional model predictions, and the electron mobility of the As-doped Si is lower than the P-doped ones. The data also show that when the doping concentration is > 1021/cm3, the hole mobility in B-doped Si and the electron mobility in P-doped Si are almost equal and reach as low as ~40 cm2/V sec, and the electron mobility of As-doped Si is the lowest and reaches ~30 cm2/V sec. 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; electron mobility; elemental semiconductors; hole mobility; ion implantation; phosphorus; silicon; Si:As; Si:B; Si:P; carrier mobility; continuous anodic oxidation technique; differential Hall effect; doping concentration; electron mobility; hole mobility; ion implantations; DH-HEMTs; Doping; Electron mobility; Hall effect; Implants; Ion implantation; Oxidation; Predictive models; Semiconductor process modeling; Ultra large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Microelectronics and Electron Devices (WMED), 2010 IEEE Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Boise, ID
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6572-9
DOI :
10.1109/WMED.2010.5453751