| Literature DB >> 31658766 |
Ruggero Anzalone1, Massimo Zimbone2, Cristiano Calabretta3, Marco Mauceri4, Alessandra Alberti5, Riccardo Reitano6, Francesco La Via7.
Abstract
In this work, results related to the temperature influence on the homo-epitaxial growth process of 3C-SiC is presented. The seed for the epitaxial layer was obtained by an innovative technique based on silicon melting: after the first step of the hetero-epitaxial growth process of 3C-SiC on a Si substrate, Si melts, and the remaining freestanding SiC layer was used as a seed layer for the homo-epitaxial growth. Different morphological analyses indicate that the growth temperature and the growth rate play a fundamental role in the stacking faults density. In details, X-ray diffraction and micro-Raman analysis show the strict relationship between growth temperature, crystal quality, and doping incorporation in the homo-epitaxial chemical vapor deposition CVD growth process of a 3C-SiC wafer. Furthermore, photoluminescence spectra show a considerable reduction of point defects during homo-epitaxy at high temperatures.Entities:
Keywords: 3C-SiC homo-epitaxy; CVD; KOH; bulk growth; growth temperature; stacking faults
Year: 2019 PMID: 31658766 PMCID: PMC6829424 DOI: 10.3390/ma12203293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(a) Cross section SEM image of the 3C-SiC wafer (about 200 μm); (b) schematic representation of the structure: heteroepitaxial seed and homo-epitaxial layer. Layers have a different doping concentration and growth rate.
Figure 2The full width of half-maximum (FWHM) of the X-ray Rocking curve as a function of film thickness for different values of temperature and compared with other reference samples [3].
Figure 3(a) The intensity of the Transversal Optical (TO) Raman mode peak for the different growth temperatures studied; (b) FWHM of the TO curve as a function of the growth temperature.
Figure 4Optical microscope image of the sample growth at 1600 °C (left) and 1700 °C (right) after the molten KOH etching at 500 °C for 3 min. The figure shows the shape of the stacking faults after etching.
Figure 5(a) Stacking Faults density as a function of the growth temperature obtained by optical observation of the 3C-SiC layer; (b) Stacking Faults length as a function of growth temperature. The data were obtained after the molten KOH etching of the 3C-SiC wafer at 500 °C.
Figure 6Infrared PL spectra for different grown temperatures. For the seed sample grown at a lower temperature (1370 °C), the point defects peak is 50 times reduced in intensity when shown in the same scale.
Doping concentration.
| Growth Temperature (°C) | Low Doping (cm−3) | High Doping (cm−3) |
|---|---|---|
| 1600 | 4 × 1017 | 2.1 × 1018 |
| 1640 | 3.6 × 1017 | 3.3 × 1018 |
| 1700 | 4 × 1017 | 6.2 × 1018 |