Specific Process Knowledge/Doping: Difference between revisions
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!Process Temperature<sup>{{fn|1}}</sup> | !Process Temperature<sup>{{fn|1}}</sup> | ||
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*900°C - | *900°C - 1150°C | ||
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*900°C - | *900°C - 1150°C | ||
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*300°C | *300°C | ||
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* | *560°C - 620°C | ||
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*small samples | *small samples | ||
*50 mm wafers | *50 mm wafers | ||
*100 mm wafers | *100 mm wafers | ||
*150 mm wafers | |||
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*100 mm wafers (Boron and Phosphor) | *100 mm wafers (Boron and Phosphor) | ||
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<sup>{{fn|1}}</sup> In most cases you need a high temperature step to drive in and redistribute the | <sup>{{fn|1}}</sup> In most cases you need a high temperature step to drive in and redistribute the dopants in the material. This is typically done at 800°C - 1100°C in either high temperature annealing furnaces or by rapid thermal annealing. | ||
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Revision as of 08:13, 7 October 2014
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Doping your wafer
This page is about doping your wafer or making a thin film layer doped with boron, phosphor or Germane.
- Dope with Phosphorus - Doping Silicon wafers with phosphorus by thermal predeposition and drive-in
- Dope with Boron - Doping Silicon wafers with boron by thermal predeposition and drive-in
- Furnace LPCVD PolySilicon - Deposition of PolySi doped with B or P
- PECVD - Making boron glass (BSG), phosphorus glass (PSG), boron-phosphorus glass PBSG or germanium doped glass
- Ion implantation
Comparison of different doping processed
Phosphorous predep | Boron predep | PECVD doped thin film | Doped Poly Si | |
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Generel description | Dopants introduced by diffusion from gas-phase (POCL) | Dopants introduced by diffusion from solid source wafers | Deposition of doped thin film (oxides or nitrides) | Dopants introduced by in-situ doping of poly/amorphous Si |
Process Temperature1 |
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1 In most cases you need a high temperature step to drive in and redistribute the dopants in the material. This is typically done at 800°C - 1100°C in either high temperature annealing furnaces or by rapid thermal annealing.
Ion implantation
Ion implantation cannot be done at Danchip. IBS offers ion-beam implantation as a service. See more at the homepage of IBS: http://www.ion-beam-services.com/about_us.htm