Abstract

To suppress the undesirable substrate couplings, a novel approach, called the /spl pi/ technology (particle-enhanced isolation), was previously proposed, in which energetic proton beams were applied on the already-manufactured mixed-mode IC wafers prior to their packaging . The results of an improvement of 25-30 dB in coupling reduction and a two-to-three folds enhancement in inductor Q values were also demonstrated. The continuing improvement of this /spl pi/ technology has shed light on the concept of a new very large-scale integration backend solution: the particle-beam stand, a brute-force that may ultimately bring general system-on-a-chip manufacturing to a common platform. However, up to this day the physics describing properties of such proton-caused defect phase has never emerged. In this paper, the possible establishment of an effective, self-consistent, single level defect model is attempted. It will be carried out by fitting the existing single-trap-level theory with experimentally obtained parameters and the data from numerical simulations using the the stopping and range of ions in matter code (a charged-particle stopping-power calculation program). It will be revealed that, more than mere simple traps of charge carriers, those proton-created defects were also intrinsically charged (carrying +e or -e) and thus all were participating in the Rutherford-like scattering of the remaining free charge carriers which had survived the defect trapping. The calculated effective single trap level (E/sub T/) is about +0.24 eV in n-Si and -0.34 eV in p-Si, measuring from the center of the energy bandgap.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call