Jk. Listebarger et al., USE OF TYPE-II (END OF RANGE) DAMAGE AS DETECTORS FOR QUANTIFYING INTERSTITIAL FLUXES IN ION-IMPLANTED SILICON, Journal of applied physics, 73(10), 1993, pp. 4815-4819
Type-II (end of range) defects, produced by Ge+ implantation, were inv
estigated as possible ''detectors'' for quantifying nonequilibrium int
erstitial concentrations following B+ implantation into silicon. The t
ype-II damage was created with a 100 keV (1 X 10(15)/cm2) Ge+ implant
into silicon followed by either a low-temperature (550-degrees-C) or a
high-temperature (800-degrees-C) anneal. This resulted in the formati
on of either a layer of point-defect clusters and small (<50 angstrom
in diameter) dislocation loops or a layer of larger (approximately 160
-400 angstrom in diameter) fully formed dislocations loops. This mater
ial was subsequently implanted with 30 keV B+ at doses between 7 X 10(
13)/cm2 and 2 X 10(14)/cm2. After a final 800-degrees-C anneal, the co
ncentration of atoms bound by the type-II dislocation loops was measur
ed. Results show that the concentration of interstitials bound by the
type-II dislocation loops increases with increasing B+ dose. Relative
to control sample values, the net concentration of interstitials trapp
ed as a result of B+ implantation varied from 7.0 X 10(13)/cm2 to 1.8
X 10(14)/cm2 over the dose range studied. Fully formed loops were also
found to be greater-than-or-equal-to 20% more efficient than clusters
in trapping the interstitials generated under identical B+ implant co
nditions. The difference is ascribed to the increase in equilibrium po
int-defect concentration necessary to stabilize the smaller loops prio
r to coarsening.