Chapter 2 Silicon Wafer
Chapter 2 Silicon Wafer
SILICON WAFER
5. EXCERCISES
Interfacial
defects
Quartz 12
Wafer Parameters
(A)
Liquid Si Isotherm X1
Isotherm X1
given by
Q k S r2
dT
dx
(5)
Liquid Si
2πrdx = radiation surface.
σ = Boltzman constant (NOT kB)
kS = thermal conductivity of the solid.
=1 for perfect blackbody.
<1 for “grey-body”. 25
dx 2
r
2 dT dk S
dx dx
k S r
2 d T
dx 2
(6)
d 2 T 2 4 (7)
• Substituting (6) into (4), we have 2
T 0
dx k Sr
d2 T 2
T5 0 (9)
dx 2 k M rTM
Vpmax = maximum pull rate, inversely proportional to the square root of crystal
26
radius.
MA4023 - MATERIALS AND LITHOGRAPHY TECHNOLOGY
Crystal growth rate: example
VO, IO, CO
CL IL, CL
28
CS
kO
CL
Most k0 values are <1 which means the impurity prefers to stay in the liquid.
Thus as the crystal is pulled, dopant concentration will increase.
In other words, the distribution of dopant along the ingot will be graded.
29
=1.019×10-4mol
30
k0
I 0 1 S
V
I 0 1 f 0
k
IL V0
C0 1 f 0
k 1
CL
VL V0 VS V0 1 f
The impurity level in the crystal (Cs) f = Vs/Vo, the ratio of solid
kO 1 silicon to the initial liquid
C S C O k O 1 f volume. 31
10
Boron
1
CS/CO
Phosphorus, Arsenic
0.1
Antimony
0.01
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
Fraction of Melt Solidified
Poly-Si
c-Si
RF coil
Concentration (Atoms/cm3)
Dopant
Material < 1014 1014 to 1016 1016 to 1019 >1019
Type (Very Lightly Doped) (Lightly Doped) (Doped) (Heavily Doped)
-- - +
Pentavalent n n n n n
-- - +
Trivalent p p p p p
MA4023 - MATERIALS AND LITHOGRAPHY TECHNOLOGY 34
BASIC PROCESS STEPS FOR WAFER PREPARATION
Wafer Lapping
Crystal Growth and Edge Grind Cleaning
Preparing crystal
Internal diameter
ingot for grinding
wafer saw
Diameter
grind
Flat grind
Scribed Identification
Notch
number
Step 5: Etching
Chemical Etch of Wafer Surface
to Remove Sawing Damage
Wafer
Slurry
Lower polishing pad
Physical dimensions
Flatness
Microroughness
Oxygen content
Crystal defects
Particles
Bulk resistivity
Pn is thermoelectric power
either (-) for e- or (+) for h+
Peltier
effect
The Hall effect was discovered more than 100 years ago when Hall
observed a transverse voltage across a conductor subjected to a magnetic
field.
The technique is more powerful than the sheet resistance method
described above because it can determine the material type,
carrier concentration and carrier mobility separately.
The basic method is illustrated in the next slide. The left part of the figure
defines the reference directions and the various currents, fields and
voltages; the right part of the figure illustrates a top view of a practical
geometry that is often used in semiconductor applications.
MA4023 - MATERIALS AND LITHOGRAPHY TECHNOLOGY 45
Hall Effect Measurements
D. Neamen, Semiconductor
p-type semiconductor
physics and devices 4th e Hall voltage:
Hole concentration:
Hole mobility
n-type semiconductor
Hall voltage: