A detailed procedure for surface doping of Silicon interfaces is provided. The ultra-shallow surface doping is demonstrated by using phosphorus containing monolayers and rapid annealing process. The method can be used for doping of macroscopic area surfaces as well as nanostructures.
Monolayer Contact Doping (MLCD) is a simple method for doping of surfaces and nanostructures1. MLCD results in the formation of highly controlled, ultra shallow and sharp doping profiles at the nanometer scale. In MLCD process the dopant source is a monolayer containing dopant atoms.
In this article a detailed procedure for surface doping of silicon substrate as well as silicon nanowires is demonstrated. Phosphorus dopant source was formed using tetraethyl methylenediphosphonate monolayer on a silicon substrate. This monolayer containing substrate was brought to contact with a pristine intrinsic silicon target substrate and annealed while in contact. Sheet resistance of the target substrate was measured using 4 point probe. Intrinsic silicon nanowires were synthesized by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process using a vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) mechanism; gold nanoparticles were used as catalyst for nanowire growth. The nanowires were suspended in ethanol by mild sonication. This suspension was used to dropcast the nanowires on silicon substrate with a silicon nitride dielectric top layer. These nanowires were doped with phosphorus in similar manner as used for the intrinsic silicon wafer. Standard photolithography process was used to fabricate metal electrodes for the formation of nanowire based field effect transistor (NW-FET). The electrical properties of a representative nanowire device were measured by a semiconductor device analyzer and a probe station.
Controlled surface doping of semiconductor structures with macroscopic areas as well as at the nanoscale is important for advanced semiconductor device architectures such as FinFet2,3, as well as for nanostructure based devices such as nanowire-based sensors and photovoltaics4-7. We recently introduced monolayer contact doping (MLCD) for repeatable, uniform surface doping of silicon interfaces with macroscopic and nanometric dimensions with control over dopant dose and diffusion profile1. An important feature of MLCD is the restriction of monolayer formation to a substrate that is termed "donor substrate". MLCD simplifies some of the process steps required for Monolayer Contact Doping (MLCD) and provides complementary surface doping capabilities8. Once the donor substrate is loaded with the dopant containing monolayer by using self-limiting surface chemistry, the donor substrate is brought to contact with the substrate intended for doping, termed "target substrate", and both substrates are annealed while in contact. During the anneal process, dopant atoms diffuse to both donor and target substrates, and are activated at the elevated temperature. Since MLCD does not require high energy implantation of dopant atoms, no structural damage is caused to the semiconductor lattice during the process and no further anneal step is required. Good control over dopant diffusion is possible by controlling the rapid thermal process parameters. Ultra shallow and uniform dopant diffusion lengths down to a few nanometers are easily achieved. Separation of the monolayer from the process sequence simplifies the process, allow greater control over process parameters and open new possibilities for doping schemes that were not possible by using other methods. Achieving dopant level as high as the solubility limit of phosphorus in silicon is possible by multiple MLCD doping processes applied successively. In summary, traditional doping methods suffer from intrinsic limitations to fabricate ultra-shallow doping profiles. This is because of inherent statistical variations of source concentrations, overall dose and energy distribution, which are inherent to the low implantation energies required for ultra-shallow implantation. MLCD provides a simple means for surface doping, this is the result of the unique features of MLCD relying on the precise control of dopant dose and location at the atomic scale by utilizing robust surface chemistry for generating the dopant source with self-limiting monolayer chemistry formed exclusively at the semiconductor surface.
1. Surface Cleaning
2. Monolayer Formation
3. Nanowire Synthesis
4. Nanowire Drop-casting onto Substrate
5. Rapid Thermal Anneal
6. Sheet Resistance Measurements
7. Nanowire Device Fabrication and Characterization
Representative results for phosphorous-MLCD surface doping process are shown in Figure 1. Intrinsic silicon wafers were treated with phosphorous-MLCD, resulting in monotonic decrease in the sheet resistance values. Sheet resistance values decrease for longer anneal times and higher anneal temperatures as shown by the three traces in Figure 1. Sheet resistance values can be correlated to activated dopant concentration. Lower sheet resistance values indicate higher doping levels and vice versa. Higher anneal temperature and longer anneal time results in higher doping levels and lower sheet resistance values. Note that further increase in the anneal time will not result in further decrease of sheet resistance since the monolayer dopant source is a limited source, leading to limited source diffusion regime. In fact, for long anneal times often an increase in sheet resistance is observed due to dilution of the dopant by deep diffusion into the intrinsic silicon bulk material.
Typical NW-FET device I-V measurements for intrinsic NW and MLCD-doped devices are presented in Figure 2. The i-SiNW device exhibits a non-active source drain channel prior to phosphorous-MLCD. Following contact doping, the NW device show increase in conductivity compared to the intrinsic device as demonstrated by the I-V curves with saturation current values >1 µA for gate voltage of 5 V and source-drain bias of 3 V for a moderately doped SiNW. Similarly to doping of bulk surfaces, higher anneal temperatures results in higher doping levels and higher currents through the NW channel. For a highly doped SiNW current values of >50 µA were measured at 5 V gate voltage and 3 V source-drain voltage. Further analysis of the I-V curve may be carried out to calculate Ion/Ioff ratios, charge carrier type and mobility values.
Figure 1. Sheet resistance (Rs) values for target substrate annealed at 900 °C, 950 °C and 1,000 °C for various anneal times.
Figure 2. SEM image showing the NW channel and Source-Drain nickel electrodes scale bar 2 µm (A). (B) I-V curves of intrinsic NW-FET (black) compared to MLCD moderately doped NW-FET (blue) annealed at 900 °C for 30 sec, and highly doped NW-FET annealed at 1,005 °C for 10 sec (red).
MLCD is a simple and reproducible method. However, attention to surface cleaning and monolayer formation must be taken. Piranha cleaning of the surfaces prior to the MLCD process is important not only for the purpose of avoiding possible impurities, but also for initialization of the surface for reproducible monolayer formation providing reproducible results between processes. The piranha treatment results in hydroxylation of surface groups which is required for binding of precursor molecules to the surface for the formation of the monolayer. Cleaning and activation can also be achieved by oxygen plasma although it is not recommended due to incorporation of charged species at the surface which affects the doping results. The resulting doping profiles can be controlled by the anneal time and temperature.
MLCD rely on self-limiting surface chemistry resulting in the formation of single molecular layer (monolayer) of dopant containing molecules at the interface of the donor substrate. Use of a monolayer as the dopant source ensures a well-defined initial dopant dose and dopant is placed at the interface brought to contact with the intended interface for surface doping. MLCD is designed such that the monolayer formation step on the donor substrate is separated from the target substrate. Using a separate substrate for the monolayer formation simplifies the overall surface doping process, does not require the deposition and removal of SiO2 capping layer, allowing removal of the native oxide layer from the target substrate for enhanced dopant incorporation. Furthermore, intrinsic nanowires doped by MLCD process were shown to exhibit highly uniform longitudinal dopant distribution that is difficult to achieve by in-situ CVD nanowires synthesis1,9.
Various phosphine oxide precursor molecules may be used as source for monolayer formation. Dopant surface dose can be tuned by the molecular footprint of the precursor, with bulky molecular precursors leading to lower surface density of dopant source. Another way to control the initial dopant surface density is by the formation of mixed monolayers with one component in the mixture having dopant atom and the other component absent. The molecular mixture ratio and surface affinity result in tunable dopant surface concentration. Different precursors exhibit different decomposition mechanisms and therefore results in different doping levels1.
Further characterization of surfaces doped with MLCD includes TOF-SIMS measurements of dopant diffusion profiles. Doping of nanowires is characterized by fabrication of nanowire based field effect transistors (NW-FET) and electrical measurements of the devices. Nanowires are synthesized using CVD by the vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) mechanism described elsewhere10,11. The devices are fabricated by photolithography based on statistical method, without the use of e-beam lithography which is common for this task. The electrodes pattern consist of periodic groups of four metal pads, each group is numbered for identification. The gap between the pads defines the nanowire device channel length and usually designed for ~2 µm. An optical microscope with a dark field filter is used for locating successfully formed devices present between two metal pads and connected by a single nanowire. The I-V characteristics of these devices are measured by a semiconductor analyzer. Annealing of the metal contacts using forming gas is recommended in order to eliminate contact problems and variations. For nickel contacts anneal the sample at 400 °C for 30 sec under forming gas (5% H2, 95% N2).
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was partially funded by the Farkas center for light-induced processes.
High purity silicon wafers | Topsil | – | |
50 nm Si3N4/50 nm SiO2/Si wafers | Silicon Valley Microelectronics | – | |
Sulfuric Acid 98% | BioLab | 19550523 | |
Hydrogen Peroxide 30% | J.T. Baker | 2190-03 | |
Ammonium Hydroxide 25% | J.T. Baker | 6051 | |
Ethanol | J.T. Baker | 8025 | |
Mesitylene | Sigma | M7200 | |
Dichloromethane | Macron | 4881-06 | |
Tetraethyl methylenediphosphonate | Aldrich | 359181 | |
Mineral Oil | Sigma | M3516 | |
Hydrofluoric Acid 49% | J.T. Baker | 9564-06 | |
Isopropanol | J.T. Baker | 9079-05 | |
N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone | J.T. Baker | 9397-05 | |
AZ nLOF2020 | AZ Electronic Materials | nLOF 2020 | |
AZ 726 MIF | AZ Electronic Materials | 726 MIF | |
Poly-L-Lysine solution | Sigma | P8920 | |
Gold colloid solution | Ted Pella | 82160-80 | |
RTA system | AnnealSys | MicroAS | |
4 point probe sheet resistance measurement system | Jandel | RM3-AR | |
Mask aligner | Suss | MA06 | |
e-Beam evaporator | VST | TFDS-141E | |
Semiconductor analyzer | Agilent | B1500A | |
CVD system | – | – | Home-built |