Title :
Fabrication of high-Ge fraction relaxed SiGe-On-Insulator virtual substrate by MBE growth and thermal annealing
Author :
Miura, A. ; Irisawa, T. ; Koh, S. ; Nakagawa, K. ; Shiraki, Y.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Appl. Phys., Univ. of Tokyo, Japan
Abstract :
SiGe-On-Insulator (SGOI) is a promising structure that allows the fabrication of high speed, low power consumption sub-100 nm complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS). Much research has been previously made on SGOI virtual substrates with the Ge concentration of 10%/spl sim/30%, which is used for strained-Si channel metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect-transistors (MOSFETs). However, no reports have been ever made on strained-Ge channel structures grown on SGOI virtual substrates, though strained-Ge channel devices demonstrate very high mobilities, which indicates that the combination of these structures with the SGOI technology is promising. In order to grow strained-Ge channels on SGOI virtual substrates, a high Ge fraction of 60% 70% is necessary. We report on the first attempt of the fabrication of high-Ge fraction relaxed SGOI virtual substrate by MBE growth and thermal diffusion. We have achieved a single crystal high-Ge fraction (/spl sim/64%) layer, a smooth surface (/spl sim/0.4 nm rms), complete strain relaxation, and an almost uniform Ge distribution.
Keywords :
Ge-Si alloys; Rutherford backscattering; X-ray diffraction; annealing; atomic force microscopy; molecular beam epitaxial growth; semiconductor growth; semiconductor materials; stress relaxation; substrates; thermal diffusion; CMOS; Ge concentration; MBE growth; MOSFETs; Rutherford backscattering; SGOI; SiGe; X-ray diffraction; almost uniform Ge distribution; atomic force microscopy; fabrication; high-Ge fraction relaxed SiGe-On-Insulator virtual substrate; low power consumption; single crystal high-Ge fraction layer; smooth surface; strain relaxation; strained-Ge channel structures; thermal annealing; thermal diffusion; Annealing; Atomic force microscopy; Fabrication; Germanium silicon alloys; Molecular beam epitaxial growth; Plasma temperature; Rough surfaces; Silicon germanium; Substrates; X-ray scattering;
Conference_Titel :
Molecular Beam Epitaxy, 2002 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7581-5
DOI :
10.1109/MBE.2002.1037928