Implanted Dopant Activation for Wide Bandgap Semiconductor Electronics
20190341261 ยท 2019-11-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Boris N. Feigelson (Springfield, VA, US)
- Francis J. Kub (Arnold, MD)
- Alan G. Jacobs (Arlington, VA, US)
Cpc classification
B23K26/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/034
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L21/0455
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/0006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L21/268
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/268
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/082
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L29/16
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/20
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/04
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L21/225
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L21/67
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An enhanced symmetric multicycle rapid thermal annealing process for removing defects and activating implanted dopant impurities in a III-nitride semiconductor sample. A sample is placed in an enclosure and heated to a temperature T.sub.1 under an applied pressure P.sub.1 for a time t.sub.1. While the heating of the sample is maintained, the sample is subjected to a series of rapid laser irradiations under an applied pressure P.sub.2 and a baseline temperature T.sub.2. Each of the laser irradiations heats the sample to a temperature T.sub.max above its thermodynamic stability limit. After a predetermined number of temperature pulses or a predetermined period of time, the laser irradiations are stopped and the sample is brought to a temperature T.sub.3 and held at T.sub.3 for a time t.sub.3 to complete the annealing.
Claims
1. A method for removing defects and activating implanted dopant impurities in a wide bandgap semiconductor material sample, comprising: placing the sample into an enclosure under a first applied gas pressure P.sub.1; in a first annealing step, heating the sample to a first predetermined steady temperature T.sub.1 and holding the sample at T.sub.1 for a first predetermined time t.sub.1 to begin removing the defects and activating the implanted dopant impurities in the sample, T.sub.1 being a temperature below a temperature T.sub.s above which the sample is thermodynamically unstable at pressure P.sub.1; after the expiration of time t.sub.1, in a second annealing step, while maintaining the sample at a second predetermined temperature T.sub.2 at a second applied gas pressure P.sub.2, subjecting the sample to a plurality of laser irraditions having a predetermined power for one of a predetermined number of temperature pulses or a second predetermined time t.sub.2, wherein each of the laser irradiations raises a temperature of an area of the sample impinged by the laser to a predetermined temperature T.sub.max, higher than T.sub.s, wherein at each laser irradiation, a temperature of the impinged area is above T.sub.s for a time t.sub.p shorter than a time to at which the sample would start to decompose at temperatures between T.sub.s and T.sub.max to further remove the defects and activate the implanted dopant impurities in the sample; and at the end of the predetermined number of temperature pulses or the predetermined time t.sub.2, maintaining the sample at a third predetermined steady temperature T.sub.3 below a temperature T.sub.s for a third predetermined time t.sub.3 to complete the removal of defects and activation of implanted dopant impurities in the sample.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the laser irradiations comprise a plurality of laser pulses.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the laser irradiations comprise a plurality of laser scans.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the wide bandgap semiconductor is III-nitride material as GaN, InN, AlN, BN, or an alloy thereof.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the wide bandgap semiconductor is diamond.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the wide bandgap semiconductor is SiC.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein each of T.sub.1, T.sub.2, and T.sub.3 is between 50 C. and a temperature at which the wide bandgap material sample becomes thermodynamically unstable.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein each of t.sub.1, t.sub.2, and t.sub.3 is between one minute and one day.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein T.sub.max is at least 0.7 times an absolute melting point of the wide bandgap material sample.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sample is heated to steady temperatures T.sub.1, T.sub.2, and T.sub.3 by means of RF inductive heating.
11. The method according to claim 1, wherein the laser irradiation is provided by a CO.sub.2 laser.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein the laser irradiation is provided by an excimer laser.
13. The method according to claim 1, further comprising applying a first predetermined plurality of laser irradiations at a first power P.sub.W1 to a first predetermined area A.sub.1 of the sample and applying a second plurality of laser irradiations at a second power P.sub.W2 to a second predetermined area A.sub.2 of the sample to produce first and second areas in the sample with different degrees of defect removal and/or different implanted dopant activation.
14. An apparatus for removing defects and activating implanted dopant impurities in a wide bandgap semiconductor material sample, comprising: a pressure chamber having a window in one wall thereof; a sample holder configured to hold the III-nitride semiconductor material sample in a predetermined orientation relative to the window in the chamber; means to provide steady heating of the sample; a laser source situated outside the chamber and being configured to apply a plurality of laser pulses or scans onto the sample; and steerable focusing optics configured to direct a beam from the laser source through the window impinging the sample as a focused laser beam on a predetermined area of the sample and scanning or rastering across the sample surface.
15. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the sample is situated so that the window is situated above an upper surface of the sample, and wherein the laser beam travels through the window and directly strikes the upper surface of sample.
16. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the steerable focusing optics are situated outside the pressure chamber.
17. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the steerable focusing optics are situated within the pressure chamber.
18. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the sample is situated so that the window is situated to a side of an upper surface of the sample, wherein the laser beam travels through the window towards the side of the upper surface of the sample, the apparatus further comprising a controllable redirecting mirror configured to direct the laser beam onto the upper surface of the sample.
19. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the means to provide steady heating of the sample is a flat RF coil operatively connected to a voltage source and being situated adjacent a surface of the sample opposite the surface impinged by the laser.
20. The apparatus according to claim 14, further comprising a laser susceptor situated between the sample and the laser source, the laser susceptor being configured to cause the sample to be heated when the laser susceptor is subjected to light from the laser beam impinging on the laser susceptor surface.
21. The apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the means to provide steady heating of the sample is a helical RF coil surrounding the sample holder.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0033] The aspects and features of the present invention summarized above can be embodied in various forms. The following description shows, by way of illustration, combinations and configurations in which the aspects and features can be put into practice. It is understood that the described aspects, features, and/or embodiments are merely examples, and that one skilled in the art may utilize other aspects, features, and/or embodiments or make structural and functional modifications without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
[0034] The present invention provides a method for annealing defects and activating impurities in such semiconductors.
[0035] The present invention also provides a method for annealing defects and activating implanted dopants in semiconductors.
[0036] The present invention provides a method for annealing semiconductor materials such as GaN, InN, AlN, BN, and their alloys, as well as SiC and diamond, which become thermodynamically unstable at the high temperatures required for defects annealing of that material. Annealing of defects in semiconductor materials typically requires a homologous temperature of about 0.7 times the material's melting temperature T.sub.m. While this 70% value is not absolute, it gives a general temperature about which atomic motion tends to occur in the solid and significant annealing can be achieved. For example, GaN melts at 2200 C. (2473 K), while defects in GaN anneal at about of 0.7*2473 K=1731 K or 1458 C. However, as noted above, at atmospheric pressure, GaN becomes unstable at temperatures over 850 C., decomposing into Ga and N.sub.2. The present invention provides a method to overcome this instability and keep the material metastable so that it can be annealed.
[0037] The present invention also provides a method for annealing defects in III-nitride semiconductors after dopant ion implantation and activating the implanted dopant impurities in the material.
[0038] The present invention also provides a process which provides the necessary conditions and parameters for annealing implant-induced damage and activating the implanted dopant impurities in III-nitride semiconductors.
[0039] The present invention also provides various embodiments of an apparatus which provides the necessary conditions and parameters for annealing implant-induced damage and activating the implanted dopant impurities in III-nitride semiconductors.
[0040] The present invention also provides various embodiments of an apparatus which provides the necessary conditions and annealing parameters for activating implanted Mg and other dopants in GaN.
[0041] The present invention can be used to form p-type semiconductor regions in III-nitride semiconductors which are doped during material growth, by ion implantation after growth, or by both methods.
[0042] The present invention also can be used to form n-type semiconductor regions in III-nitride semiconductors which are doped during material growth, by ion implantation after growth, or by both methods.
[0043] The present invention also can be used to form p-n junctions in semiconductor regions in
[0044] III-nitride semiconductors which are doped during material growth, by ion implantation after growth, or by both methods.
[0045] The present invention also can be used to make electronic and optoelectronic devices from III-nitride semiconductors, where the devices require p-type regions, n-type regions, and/or both types of regions in the semiconductor materials.
[0046] The present invention also can be used to make electronic and optoelectronic devices from III-nitride semiconductors, where the devices require p-n type semiconductor regions in the semiconductor materials.
[0047] These and other aspects of this invention can be accomplished by the new process of thermal annealing and new annealing apparatus described below.
[0048] In accordance with the present invention the new thermal annealing process includes the elements of the known SMRTA process described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,543,168 cited above, plus additional elements to produce a new annealing process that improves efficiency of activation and makes it possible, for example, to dope GaN by implantation in selective areas and create uniform p-type conductivity in the Mg-implanted parts of a GaN sample.
[0049] This new process can be described as an enhanced SMRTA (e-SMRTA) process.
[0050] The e-SMRTA process in accordance with the present invention uses a new dual heating annealing system which includes radiofrequency (RF) and laser heating working independently together inside a chamber or enclosure having a controlled gas atmosphere at pressures above 1 bar.
[0051] The block schematic in
[0052] As shown in
[0053] The e-SMRTA process in accordance with the present invention also includes a second, transient annealing step at metastable conditions. In this second annealing step, following the first, steady-state annealing at temperature T.sub.1, the material is maintained at a second steady state temperature T.sub.2 at an applied pressure P.sub.2 while a plurality of fast heating pulses, each having a pulse duration t.sub.p and a time between pulses t.sub.r, are applied to the material to produce a plurality of rapid heating/cooling cycles where the material at each pulse is rapidly heated up to a temperature T.sub.max which is above the temperature T.sub.s at which the semiconductor is thermodynamically stable, cools to a temperature below T.sub.s and then is rapidly heated again for the next temperature pulse. In most cases, the rapid heating is produced by a singular laser pulse or scan with several sequential pulses or scans producing a plurality of temperature pulses as needed by process considerations.
[0054] Finally, the e-SMRTA process in accordance with the present invention, following the second annealing step, the material is brought to a third temperature T.sub.3 at which the material is stable under an applied pressure P.sub.3 and is kept at temperature T.sub.3 for a predetermined period of time t.sub.3 in a third steady annealing regime to further remove defects and activate the dopant impurities in the material.
[0055] The exemplary process flow illustrated in
[0056] As shown in
[0057] In an optional step, shown as step 202 in
[0058] In a third step 203, the chamber is filled with a gas and is pressurized to a predetermined gas pressure P.sub.1, where the gas and the pressure are determined by the material to be treated.
[0059] Typical gases that can be used will most often include nitrogen or argon, but ammonia, hydrogen, or controlled amounts of water vapor or other gas species such as helium, nitrogen, neon, argon, krypton, or xenon may also be included in the gas as appropriate. For example, in some embodiments annealing GaN, nitrogen at pressures of about 25 to 100 bar is used, with the pressure depending on the substrate, since different substrates require different gas pressures to maintain or extend stability. However, the stability of the material can be affected by small amounts of other gases. For example, while a small amount of ammonia in the nitrogen gas stabilizes the Ga-polar face of GaN, it will destabilize the N-polar face, causing the GaN to lose nitrogen, so ammonia should be avoided when processing N-polar GaN. On the other hand, SiC tends to lose silicon at high temperatures, leaving carbon (or graphene) on the surface, and so when processing SiC in accordance with the present invention, a gas that includes a source of silicon may be preferred.
[0060] In some embodiments, the gas in the chamber will be pressurized to a pressure P1 greater than 10 atm (1 MPa) but pressures in the range of 1 to 1000 atm (0.1 to 100 MPa) may be applied as appropriate. In other embodiments, the pressure in the vessel can be reduced from atmospheric pressure to lower pressures, e.g., to a pressure of 1 Pa to 0.1 MPa, using a vacuum pump.
[0061] Once the gas in the vessel reaches the predetermined pressure, at step 204 shown in
[0062] The temperature T.sub.1 to which the sample is heated typically will depend on the material to be treated, the pressure applied in the chamber, and the degree of defects to be removed at this first steady annealing step. For example, as noted above, at atmospheric pressure, GaN becomes unstable and undergoes decomposition to Ga and N.sub.2 at about 850 C. Providing pressure above 1 atm in the chamber will allow the GaN to be subjected to temperatures above 850 C. without negatively affecting its stability. Thus, in the case of GaN annealing, if the chamber is under a nitrogen pressure of 1 atm, heating the sample to about 800 C. will provide a certain reduction in defects while increasing the nitrogen pressure in the chamber up to 40 atm allows to heat GaN to temperature of 1000 C. without it decomposing so that more defects can be removed.
[0063] The sample is maintained at temperature T.sub.1 for a predetermined time t.sub.1, where t.sub.1 can range from one minute up to one day, depending on the material to be treated, the extent of defect removal/dopant activation to be accomplished at this stage, and the processing conditions.
[0064] The purpose of this first annealing step is to reduce the first portion of the defect population and to improve the stability of the material during the subsequent high temperature pulses. It will perform some defect reduction from very high concentrations and also reduce stress and generally improve the material quality to the maximum extent possible while keeping the material thermodynamically stable. Thus, the purpose of this first anneal is to reduce the concentration of these defects to the greatest degree possible before applying the high temperature pulses to the material.
[0065] After the sample has been heated to T.sub.1 with the RF power to provide steady annealing of the sample for a first predetermined period of time t.sub.1, in the second e-SMRTA annealing step 205 in accordance with the present invention, while the chamber is pressurized to a second predetermined pressure P.sub.2 (which can be the same or different from pressure P.sub.1), the sample is subjected to a plurality of laser pulses or scans directed into the sample to provide cyclic rapid heating and cooling to further remove defects and activate dopants in the sample. Using fast laser pulses or scans in accordance with the present invention allows the material to undergo a heating-cooling cycle duration in the nanosecond to many millisecond range.
[0066] The RF (or other) heating is maintained to heat the sample to a baseline temperature of T=T.sub.2 which is maintained while these laser pulses or scans are applied. Thus, in accordance with the present invention, in the second step in the e-SMRTA method of the present invention, a series of laser pulses or scans are applied to rapidly heat the sample from temperature T.sub.2 to a predetermined temperature T.sub.max, where T.sub.max is higher than a temperature T.sub.s, a threshold temperature at which the material is still stable at the applied pressure P.sub.2. One skilled in the art will readily understand that temperature T.sub.max is very material dependent. For example, in the case of GaN, T.sub.max may be in the range of 1300-1700 C. (likely 1400-1550 C. or so) but could be in excess of that. In contrast, for InN (and alloys that include InN), T.sub.max will be much lower since InN starts to decompose at temperatures of about 550 C. For SiC, silicon loss occurs above 1400 C. but it is grown at 1600 C., and so temperatures above that would be necessary, most likely about 1800-2200 C.
[0067] The temperature pulses are applied at a predetermined rate with a predetermined rest time t.sub.r between pulses, with each heating and cooling cycle in which the temperature of the impinged sample ranges between T.sub.2 and T.sub.max occurring for a cycle time t.sub.p. After the sample is heated to temperature T.sub.max, the sample then rapidly cools to temperature T.sub.2 for the time t.sub.r between pulses and then is again rapidly heated to temperature T.sub.max upon the application of the next pulse. During each heating and cooling cycle, the sample is exposed to temperatures above T.sub.s for less time than a time t.sub.d at which the sample would start to decompose at temperatures between T.sub.s and T.sub.max, but as a result of the application of multiple such heating and cooling cycles, the sample can be exposed to temperatures above T.sub.s for a total cumulative time t.sub.sum greater than t.sub.d without the sample decomposing.
[0068] The duration t.sub.p of each heating cycle can range from nanoseconds to seconds, depending on the processing conditions, the material to be treated, and the desired extent of defects removal/dopant activation to be attained. For example, scanned laser systems (e.g. CO.sub.2 laser systems) can achieve 10 microsecond and longer temperature pulses fairly easily, while pulsed lasers (e.g. excimer lasers) can readily apply temperature pulses lasting 10s of nanoseconds. One skilled in the art will readily recognize that any suitable laser such as diode lasers, solid-state lasers, frequency-multiplexed lasers, dye lasers, q-switched lasers, or chirped lasers can be used to apply the laser pulses or scans in the e-SMRTA method of the present invention.
[0069] The shortest heating and cooling cycle duration provided by the RF heating step in the standard SMRTA process described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,543,168, supra, is limited to the scale of seconds. Application of faster heating and cooling rates using a laser in the e-SMRTA process in accordance with the present invention allows even higher maximum peak temperatures to be applied to the semiconductor material without the material decomposing. In return, the higher peak temperature at each of the multiple heating pulses provides better conditions for diffusional processes in a semiconductor material, and result in better restoration of structure damaged by implantation and better activation of the implanted dopants while preserving the integrity of the semiconductor.
[0070] Thus, in accordance with the present invention, the RF (or other) heating of the vessel is maintained simultaneously with the laser heating of the sample in the second annealing step. The laser heating of the sample allows for defect removal at very high peak temperatures with extremely fast heating-cooling cycles, while the applied RF heating keeps the whole sample at the necessary baseline temperature, i.e., at or below the thermodynamic stability limit of the material at the applied pressure, throughout the laser heating regime.
[0071] The laser pulses or scans are applied either for a predetermined number of temperature pulses or for a predetermined period of time t.sub.2, with the number of pulses and/or the period of time being determined by the processing conditions, the material to be treated, and/or the extent of defects to be removed/dopant activation to be achieved. The laser energy deposited into the sample at each pulse or scan can be modulated either by modifying the laser source power input to the optical systems or by maintaining constant output which is modulated by attenuating optics.
[0072] By using laser heating during the second annealing step in accordance with the present invention, large areas of the whole area of semiconductor can be treated by rastering the laser beam across the sample. In other cases, the laser can be applied selectively to one or more areas of the sample at the same or at different laser powers. In such cases, the laser beam can be directed toward and rastered across the first area A.sub.1 at power P.sub.W1, causing a predetermined number of heating pulses that obtain a predetermined maximum temperature T.sub.max1, and then can be directed toward another area A.sub.2 at power P.sub.W2 causing several heating pulses to a maximum temperature T.sub.max2 to obtain different degrees of dopant activation in different areas of the sample.
[0073] At the end of the predetermined time/number of heating pulse cycles, in a next step 206, the laser is turned off, but the RF heating is maintained at temperature T.sub.3 under an applied pressure P.sub.3, where one or the other of temperature T.sub.3 and P.sub.3 can be the same or different from the original temperature T.sub.1 or pressure P.sub.1 for a third annealing step in which the material is annealed for a predetermined time t.sub.3 in a steady annealing regime at temperatures at which a semiconductor is still stable at pressure P.sub.3. The time t.sub.3 at which the material is held at temperature T.sub.3 for this third annealing step can range from one minute to one day, depending on the processing conditions, material to be treated, and/or the extent of defects to be removed/dopant activation to be achieved. Finally, in step 207, the RF power is removed and sample is cooled and removed from the vessel.
[0074] Thus, the new dual heating annealing system, which includes RF and laser heating working independently together inside a chamber with controlled gas atmosphere at pressures above 1 bar, provides an enhanced symmetric multicycle rapid thermal annealing process by heating a semiconductor sample in a vessel to a predetermined baseline temperature, applying a plurality of nano- to millisecond heating/cooling cycles allowing maximum peak temperatures higher than standard SMRTA processing, and then maintaining the elevated temperature after the end of the laser heating cycle while keeping the integrity of the semiconductor material in the treated sample.
[0075] Where and the extent to which the laser power is absorbed can depend on the type of laser used and its power, as well as on the characteristics of the sample to which the laser pulse or scan is applied. As a result, the laser power can be absorbed in the substrate, or in one or more of the films deposited on the substrate, or in the laser susceptor layer where one is present.
[0076] The block schematics in
[0077] The block schematics in
[0078]
[0079] Laser source 6, which provides the heat in the second annealing step, is situated outside the chamber and produces an unfocused laser beam 7 which travels into focusing optics 8, which in this embodiment are also located outside the chamber.
[0080] Laser source 6 can be any appropriate laser that can provide sufficient power to the sample to raise its temperature to T.sub.max which, as described above, is above a temperature T.sub.s at which the material is thermodynamically stable. In some embodiments, laser source 6 can be a gas laser such as a CO laser emitting at near 5 m or can be a CO.sub.2 laser emitting at a wavelength of 9-12 m, and especially at 10.6 m. In other embodiments, laser source 6 can be a diode laser, either fiber or free space coupled emitting in the IR, near-IR, visible, or UV ranges, e.g., emitting at 780-830 nm, 880 nm, 915-980 nm, 1060 nm, 1400-1500 nm, or other wavelengths. In still other embodiments, laser source 6 can be a solid state laser such as a Nd:YAG laser; a frequency-multiplexed (doubled, tripled, etc.) laser; a dye laser; or a pulsed laser such as an excimer, q-switched, or chirped laser.
[0081] Focusing optics 8 convert the unfocused beam 7 emitted by laser source 6 into a focused laser beam 10. Focusing optics 8 can be in the form of any suitable steerable focusing lens that can direct the laser beam onto specified locations on a stationary sample within the chamber; alternatively, it can be a stationary lens, with the sample being moved within the chamber so that the laser strikes the sample at different locations.
[0082] The focused laser beam 10 enters the chamber by means of window 9 in a wall of the chamber, where the window can be made from any suitable material such as diamond, sapphire, quartz, borosilicate glass, ZnSe, Ge, Si, N-BK7 optical glass, Schott glass, or other materials.
[0083] Once it is in the chamber, focused laser beam 10 strikes sample 5 and forms one or more laser heated zones 11 on the surface of the sample. By appropriately activating and steering steerable focusing optic 8 using any suitable steering mechanism, the focused laser beam can be directed to heat and anneal specified areas of the sample in a predetermined manner as described above.
[0084] The laser intensity profile at focus can be Gaussian in two dimensions (circular), Gaussian in two dimensions but with different FWHMs creating an oval appearing profile, flat (like a top hat) in one or both direction, or anywhere in between. In many cases, the profile can be Gaussian in the scanning direction with some narrow FWHM and either Gaussian or flat orthogonal to the scan direction.
[0085] The laser annealing in accordance with the present invention is accomplished across areas by rastering the beam (similar to ink jet printers) where the laser beam is scanned across the sample, then moves orthogonal to that scan direction by some distance, and scanned again. Adjacent scans can be stitched together to form a larger area that has been annealed; stitching of adjacent scans can be accomplished with a large amount of overlap (common with Gaussian orthogonal beam profiles) or little overlap (common with flat intensity profiles).
[0086] In addition, the RF and laser heating of the sample in accordance with the present invention can be in any suitable geometrical orientation with respect to the chamber, with respect to each other, or with respect to the sample. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
[0087]
[0088] As noted above, such from the side laser heating may be used to reduce perturbation of the laser focus from motion and/or turbulence of the gas in the chamber. All of the other components in this embodiment, i.e., RF coil 2, RF susceptor 3, sample holder 4, and sample 5 within the chamber, with laser source 6, unfocused laser beam 7, and steerable focusing optics 8 are as they were described above with respect to
[0089] Another embodiment in which the laser beam enters the chamber from the side is shown in
[0090] In the embodiments described above, the RF heating is provided by a flat pancake RF coil and RF susceptor situated, e.g., below the sample to be treated. In an alternative embodiment, RF heating element can be in the form of a flat pancake coil above the laser susceptor, with the laser impinging the sample from below.
[0091] In still other embodiments, aspects of which are illustrated in
[0092] Thus, as illustrated in
[0093] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0094] Advantages and New Features
[0095] The dual RF/laser annealing provided by the method of the present invention, provides the following advantages over prior art annealing techniques:
[0096] By decoupling baseline heating and pulsed heating regimes, better control and better precision of the annealing can be obtained.
[0097] Laser annealing specifically allows access to very high temperatures locally (2000-3000 C.) relatively easily depending on parameters, far in excess of bulk heating methods with the same complexity.
[0098] The increased heating and cooling rates enable the application of higher peak temperatures during shorter pulses.
[0099] The decreased pulse duration provided by the use of laser annealing allows the semiconductor material to tolerate higher temperatures due to the reduced time for damage or decomposition to occur, i.e. annealing a material while it is still metastable.
[0100] The access to higher temperatures also may break up deleterious defect complexes more efficiently.
[0101] A method and apparatus for an enhanced symmetric multicycle rapid thermal annealing of a semiconductor sample has been described. Although particular embodiments, aspects, and features have been described and illustrated, one skilled in the art would readily appreciate that the invention described herein is not limited to only those embodiments, aspects, and features but also contemplates any and all modifications and alternative embodiments that are within the spirit and scope of the underlying invention described and claimed herein. The present application contemplates any and all modifications within the spirit and scope of the underlying invention described and claimed herein, and all such modifications and alternative embodiments are deemed to be within the scope and spirit of the present disclosure.