Low-Temperature Si and SiGe Epitaxial Growth by Ultrahigh Vacuum Electron Cyclotron Resonance Chemical Vapor Deposition (UHV-ECRCVD)

  • Hwang, Ki-Hyun (School of Materials Science&Engineering Seoul National University) ;
  • Joo, Sung-Jae (School of Materials Science&Engineering Seoul National University) ;
  • Park, Jin-Won (School of Materials Science&Engineering Seoul National University) ;
  • Euijoon Yoon (School of Materials Science&Engineering Seoul National University) ;
  • Hwang, Seok-Hee (School of Electrical Engineering) ;
  • Whang, Ki-Woong (School of Electrical Engineering) ;
  • Park, Young-June (School of Electrical Engineering)
  • Published : 1996.06.01

Abstract

Low-temperature epitaxial growth of Si and SiGe layers of Si is one of the important processes for the fabrication of the high-speed Si-based heterostructure devices such as heterojunction bipolar transistors. Low-temperature growth ensures the abrupt compositional and doping concentration profiles for future novel devices. Especially in SiGe epitaxy, low-temperature growth is a prerequisite for two-dimensional growth mode for the growth of thin, uniform layers. UHV-ECRCVD is a new growth technique for Si and SiGe epilayers and it is possible to grow epilayers at even lower temperatures than conventional CVD's. SiH and GeH and dopant gases are dissociated by an ECR plasma in an ultrahigh vacuum growth chamber. In situ hydrogen plasma cleaning of the Si native oxide before the epitaxial growth is successfully developed in UHV-ECRCVD. Structural quality of the epilayers are examined by reflection high energy electron diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, Nomarski microscope and atomic force microscope. Device-quality Si and SiGe epilayers are successfully grown at temperatures lower than 600℃ after proper optimization of process parameters such as temperature, total pressure, partial pressures of input gases, plasma power, and substrate dc bias. Dopant incorporation and activation for B in Si and SiGe are studied by secondary ion mass spectrometry and spreading resistance profilometry. Silicon p-n homojunction diodes are fabricated from in situ doped Si layers. I-V characteristics of the diodes shows that the ideality factor is 1.2, implying that the low-temperature silicon epilayers grown by UHV-ECRCVD is truly of device-quality.

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