EPI active devices
G.L. Patton, B.S. Meyerson, et al.
Silicon Materials Science and Technology 1990
Device grade ultrashallow p+ junctions have been fabricated by a novel ion implantation scheme. The novelty of the method is in using antimony to amorphize silicon prior to a low-energy boron implantation. Antimony satisfies a combination of two requirements lacking from all previously applied preamorphization schemes. First, due to the heavy mass of antimony, amorphization of silicon is achieved with a minimal amount of implantation damage. Second, and most important, antimony is a dopant of an opposite type than boron. Because of this, the inevitable implant tail of the preamorphizing species serves to confine the depth of the p layer. The optimized conditions for the application of this scheme have been determined. Junctions below 100 nm in depth, with less than 200 Ω/ sheet resistance and junction leakage of 10 nA/cm2, have been achieved. The electrical results have been correlated with the residual defect structure observed by cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy.
G.L. Patton, B.S. Meyerson, et al.
Silicon Materials Science and Technology 1990
J.M.C. Stork, G.L. Patton, et al.
Bipolar Circuits and Technology Meeting 1989
George A. Sai-Halasz, Matthew R. Wordeman, et al.
IEEE Electron Device Letters
D.L. Harame, K. Schonenberg, et al.
IEDM 1994