Abstract

The high quality of crystal growth and advanced fabrication technology of silicon carbide (SiC) in power electronics enables the control of optically active defects in SiC, such as silicon vacancies (VSi). In this paper, VSi are generated in hexagonal SiC (4H) samples through ion implantation of nitrogen or (and) aluminum, respectively the n- and p-type dopants for SiC. The presence of silicon vacancies within the samples is studied using cathodoluminescence at 80K. For 4H-SiC samples, the ZPL (zero phonon line) of the V1′ center of VSi is more intense than the one for the V1 center before annealing. The opposite is true after 900 °C annealing. ZPLs of the divacancy defect (VCVSi) are also visible after annealing.

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