F. Eichhorn et al., Strain and SiC particle formation in silicon implanted with carbon ions ofmedium fluence studied by synchrotron x-ray diffraction, J APPL PHYS, 86(8), 1999, pp. 4184-4187
Implantation of C ions with an energy of 195 keV into Si wafers heated up t
o 800 degrees C results in an elastic distortion of the Si host lattice and
in the formation of crystalline SiC particles or their prestages depending
on implantation dose and temperature. Synchrotron x-ray diffraction at the
Rossendorf beamline in Grenoble was used to reveal phase formation and the
correlated lattice strain changes. Only a Si lattice deformation without g
rowth of SiC was observed if the fluence did not exceed 5 x 10(15) C ions/
cm(2). After implantation of C ions up to 4 x 10(17) cm(-2) at a temperatur
e of 500 degrees C, agglomerations of Si-C and an altered state of Si latti
ce deformation are found. By implantation of 4 x 10(17) ions/cm(2) at 800 d
egrees C, particles of the 3C-SiC (beta-SiC) phase grow, which are aligned
with the Si matrix. They are aligned in such a way with the Si matrix that
the cubic crystallographic axes of matrix and particles coincide with an ac
curacy of 3 degrees. (C) 1999 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-8979(99
)05820-X].