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Doping and Crystal Growth Techniques

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Title: Doping and Crystal Growth Techniques


1
Doping and Crystal Growth Techniques
2
Types of Impurities
  • Substitutional Impurities
  • Donors and acceptors
  • Isoelectronic Defects
  • Vacancies
  • Charged Vacancies
  • Color centers in solids (alkali halides)
  • Interstitial Atoms
  • Mid Gap Trap
  • Antisite Defects

3
Back to the Periodic Table
4
Column V Atoms
  • Have 5 outer shell electrons

5
The extra electron on the phosphorous atom is
easily removed and becomes a free electron
without generating a hole. The phosphorous atom
becomes positively charged (ionized).
6
Back to the Periodic Table (again)
7
Column III Atoms
  • Have 3 outer shell electrons

8
The boron atom steals an electron from a
neighboring Si atom to complete the four bonds
with the surrounding Si atoms, generating a hole
at the neighboring Si atom. The boron atom
becomes negatively charged (ionized).
9
n-type Semiconductors
  • Are doped with donor atoms, which have an extra
    electron that they donate to the crystal
  • When the concentration of donor atoms is much
    greater than the intrinsic carrier concentration,
    the electron concentration is composed of these
    donated electrons.

10
p-type Semiconductors
  • Are doped with acceptor atoms, which generate
    holes in the crystal
  • When the concentration of acceptor atoms is much
    greater than the intrinsic carrier concentration,
    the hole concentration is composed of the holes
    generated by the acceptors.

11
Carrier Concentrations
  • n-type semiconductor
  • p-type semiconductor

12
Bohr model for Hydrogen atom
13
Translation to Donor Atom
  • Include relative dielectric constant
  • Extra electron has a effective mass equal to the
    conduction band electrons

14
Translation to Acceptor Atom
  • Include relative dielectric constant
  • Missing electron has a effective mass equal to
    the valence band electrons

15
Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle
  • In quantum mechanics, we talk about the
    probability of finding a particle in a certain
    place.
  • DxDp h/2
  • DtDn 1/4p
  • DtDE h/2

16
Impurity Level
DeBroglies relation The deeper the impurity
level from either Ec or Ev, the smaller rn is
i.e, the electron or hole is more tightly bound
to the impurity.
17
http//kottan-labs.bgsu.edu/teaching/workshop2001/
chapter6.htm
18
GaP LEDs have a low concentration of N impurities
in them. The impurity energy level has a large k
that extends from the X minima to the G minima,
allowing the trapped electrons to radiative
recombine with holes.
19
Types of Impurities
  • Substitutional Impurities
  • Donors and acceptors
  • Isoelectronic Defects
  • Vacancies
  • Charged Vacancies
  • Color centers in solids (alkali halides)
  • Interstitial Atoms
  • Mid Gap Trap
  • Antisite Defects

20
Types of Crystal Growth
  • Product is a boule from which wafers are then cut
  • Czochralski (CZ)
  • Float Zone (FZ)
  • Bridgeman

21
Czochralski
www.qahill.com/tz/silicon/silicon.html
http//www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/amat/elmat_en/kap
_6/illustr/i6_1_1.html
22
(No Transcript)
23
http//www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/amat/elmat_en/kap
_6/backbone/r6_1_2.html_dum_1
24
Impurity Segregation
Where Co is the initial concentration of th
impurity in the melt
25
Impurity Segregation
Atom Cu Ag Au C Ge Sn As
ko 4 104 106 2.5 105 7 102 3.3 102 1.6 102 0.3
Atom O B Ga Fe Co Ni Sb
ko 0.5 0.8 8 103 8 106 8 106 4 104 2.3 102
26
Float Zone
www.mrsemicon.com/crystalgrowth.htm
www.tms.org/pubs/journals/JOM/9802/Li/
27
Impurity Segregation
Where Co is the initial concentration of the
impurity in the solid and L is the width of the
melted region within RF coil
28
Bridgeman
  • Used for some compound semiconductors
  • Particularly those that have a high vapor
    pressure
  • Produced D shaped boules

29
Crystalline Defects
  • Point Defects
  • Vacancies
  • Impurities
  • Antisite Defects
  • Line Defects
  • Dislocations
  • Edge
  • Loop
  • Volume Defects
  • Voids
  • Screw Dislocations

30
Edge Dislocation
http//courses.eas.ualberta.ca/eas421/lecturepages
/mylonite.html
31
Screw Dislocation
http//focus.aps.org/story/v20/st3
32
Strain induced Dislocations
  • The temperature profile across the diameter of a
    boule is not constant as the boule cools
  • the outer surface of the boule contracts at a
    different rate than the internal region
  • Thermal expansion differences produces edge
    dislocations within the boule
  • Typical pattern is a W

33
Strain due to Impurities
  • An impurity induces strain in the crystal because
    of differences in
  • ionic radius as compared to the atom it replaced
  • Compressive strain if the ionic radius is larger
  • Tensile strain if the ionic radius is smaller
  • local distortions because of Coulombic
    interactions
  • Both cause local modifications to Eg

34
Dislocation Count
  • When you purchase a wafer, one of the
    specifications is the EPD, Etch Pit Density
  • Dislocations etch more rapidly in acid than
    crystalline material
  • Values for EPD can run from essentially zero (FZ
    grown under microgravity conditions) to 106 cm-2
    for some materials that are extremely difficult
    to grow.
  • Note that EPD of 106 cm-2 means that there is a
    dislocation approximately every 10mms.

35
Wafer Manufacturing
  • Boules are polished into cylinders
  • Aligned using an x-ray diffraction system
  • Cut into slices using a diamond edged saw
  • Slices are then polished smooth using a colloidal
    grit
  • Mechanical damage from sawing causes point
    defects that can coalesce into edge dislocations
    if not removed

36
http//www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/amat/elmat_en/kap
_6/backbone/r6_1_2.html_dum_1
37
SCS Manufacturing
38
Carrier Mobility and Velocity
  • Mobility - the ease at which a carrier (electron
    or hole) moves in a semiconductor
  • Symbol mn for electrons and mp for holes
  • Drift velocity the speed at which a carrier
    moves in a crystal when an electric field is
    present
  • For electrons vd mn E
  • For holes vd mp E

39
L
H
W
Va
Va
40
Resistance
41
Resistivity and Conductivity
  • Fundamental material properties

42
Current Flow
43
Resistivity
n-type semiconductor
p-type semiconductor
44
Diffusion
  • When there are changes in the concentration of
    electrons and/or holes along a piece of
    semiconductor
  • the Coulombic repulsion of the carriers force the
    carriers to flow towards the region with a lower
    concentration.

45
Diffusion Currents
46
Relationship between Diffusivity and Mobility
47
Wafer Characterization
  • X-ray Diffraction
  • Crystal Orientation
  • Van der Pauw or Hall Measurements
  • Resistivity
  • Mobility
  • Four Point Probe
  • Resisitivity
  • Hot Point Probe
  • n or p-type material
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