Silicon homoepitaxy using tantalum-filament hot-wire chemical vapor deposition

Amorphous and Nanocrystalline Silicon Science and Technology-2005(2020)

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Abstract
We have studied silicon films grown epitaxially on silicon wafers using hot-wire chemical vapor deposition (HWCVD) with a tantalum filament. Silicon films were grown on (100)-oriented hydrogen terminated silicon wafers at temperatures from 175°C to 480°C, using a Ta filament 5 cm from the substrate to decompose pure SiH 4 gas. The progression of epitaxy was monitored using real-time spectroscopic ellipsometry (RTSE). Analysis using RTSE, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and scanning electron microscopy shows that at a characteristic thickness, h epi all of the films break down into a-Si:H cones. Below 380°C, both hepi and the thickness of the transition to pure a-Si:H increase with increasing temperature. Above 380°C, hepi was not observed to increase further but TEM images show fewer defects in the epitaxial regions. Secondary ion-mass spectrometry shows that the oxygen concentration remains nearly constant during growth (<10 18 cm −3 ). The hydrogen concentration is found to increase substantially with film thickness from 5•10 18 to 5•10 19 cm −3 , likely due to the incorporation of hydrogen into the a-Si:H cones that grow after the breakdown of epitaxy.
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