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Rapid Heating of Ion-Implanted Silicon by High-Power Pulsed Microwave Radiation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 February 2011
Abstract
We have used 1.1-μs microwave pulses at a frequency of 2.856 GHz to rapidly heat the near-surface region of arsenic-implanted silicon. The samples were irradiated inside a WR-284 waveguide by single-pass TE10 traveling wave pulses. Post-irradiation studies show that surface melting occurs for incident pulse powers exceeding about 3 MW. Time-resolved measurements of the microwave reflectivity (R) show that there is an abrupt and large increase in R for microwave pulse powers greater than the melt threshold. Significant light emission was also observed from the test cell, which is most likely due to the relaxation of a microwave-induced plasma formed by electrical breakdown of gas. Using secondary ion mass spectrometry, we measured the depth profile of the implanted arsenic and found that the penetration of the melt front in the near-surface region is not spatially homogeneous over the silicon surface.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1988
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