Influence of induced defects on the ultra thin film growth by low energy ion beam deposition

Author(s):  
H.-A. Durand ◽  
K. Sekine ◽  
K. Etoh ◽  
K. Ito ◽  
I. Kataoka
1991 ◽  
Vol 236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Herbots ◽  
O.C. Hellman ◽  
O. Vancauwenberghe

AbstractThree important effects of low energy direct Ion Beam Deposition (IBD) are the athermal incorporation of material into a substrate, the enhancement of atomic mobility in the subsurface, and the modification of growth kinetics it creates. All lead to a significant lowering of the temperature necessary to induce epitaxial growth and chemical reactions. The fundamental understanding and new applications of low temperature kinetics induced by low energy ions in thin film growth and surface processing of semiconductors are reviewed. It is shown that the mechanism of IBD growth can be understood and computed quantitatively using a simple model including ion induced defect generation and sputtering, elastic recombination, thermal diffusion, chemical reactivity, and desorption The energy, temperature and dose dependence of growth rate, epitaxy, and chemical reaction during IBD is found to be controlled by the net recombination rate of interstitials at the surface in the case of epitaxy and unreacted films, and by the balance between ion beam decomposition and phase formation induced by ion beam generated defects in the case of compound thin films. Recent systematic experiments on the formation of oxides and nitrides on Si, Ge/Si(100), heteroepitaxial SixGe1−x/Si(100) and GaAs(100) illustrate applications of this mechanism using IBD in the form of Ion Beam Nitridation (IBN), Ion Beam Oxidation (IBO) and Combined Ion and Molecular beam Deposition (CIMD). It is shown that these techniques enable (1) the formation of conventional phases in conditions never used before, (2) the control and creation of properties via new degrees of freedom such as ion energy and lowered substrate temperatures, and (3) the formation of new metastable heterostructures that cannot be grown by pure thermal means.


1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kunihiro Yagi ◽  
Shozo Tamura ◽  
Takashi Tokuyama

Hyomen Kagaku ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 724-728
Author(s):  
Shinji NAGAMACHI ◽  
Masahiro UEDA ◽  
Junzo ISHIKAWA

1991 ◽  
Vol 235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Herbots ◽  
O. C. Hellman ◽  
O. Vancauwenberghe

ABSTRACTThree important effects of low energy direct Ion Beam Deposition (IBD) are the athermal incorporation of material into a substrate, the enhancement of atomic mobility in the subsurface, and the modification of growth kinetics it creates. All lead to a significant lowering of the temperature necessary to induce epitaxial growth and chemical reactions. The fundamental understanding and new applications of low temperature kinetics induced by low energy ions in thin film growth and surface processing of semiconductors are reviewed. It is shown that the mechanism of IBD growth can be understood and computed quantitatively using a simple model including ion induced defect generation and sputtering, elastic recombination, thermal diffusion, chemical reactivity, and desorption. The energy, temperature and dose dependence of growth rate, epitaxy, and chemical reaction during IBD is found to be controlled by the net recombination rate of interstitials at the surface in the case of epitaxy and unreacted films, and by the balance between ion beam decomposition and phase formation induced by ion beam generated defects in the case of compound thin films. Recent systematic experiments on the formation of oxides and nitrides on Si, Ge/Si(100), heteroepitaxial SixGe1−x/Si(100) and GaAs(lOO) illustrate applications of this mechanism using IBD in the form of Ion Beam Nitridation (IBN), Ion Beam Oxidation (IBO) and Combined Ion and Molecular beam Deposition (CIMD). It is shown that these techniques enable (1) the formation of conventional phases in conditions never used before, (2) the control and creation of properties via new degrees of freedom such as ion energy and lowered substrate temperatures, and (3) the formation of new metastable heterostructures that cannot be grown by pure thermal means.


1991 ◽  
Vol 223 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Shimizu ◽  
N. Sasaki ◽  
S. Ogata ◽  
O. Tsukakoshi ◽  
S. Seki ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA high-current, low-energy multi-ion beam deposition system has been developed for the fabrication of tailored new materials. This system consists of two ion sources, a dual-sector type mass analyzer and a deceleration system. Several ion species can be extracted successively from the two ion sources by switching the mass analyzer selection. Artificially structured materials, especially having a layered structure, can be grown by the fine control of the growth process of each layer. Ar* ion deceleration characteristics of this ion beam deposition system and preliminary results about the epitaxial growth of Ca film on Si(100) are shown.


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