Abstract

The continuous downscaling of the process size for semiconductor devices pushes the junction depths and consequentially the implantation depths to the top few nanometers of the Si substrate. This motivates the need for sensitive methods capable of analyzing dopant distribution, total dose and possible impurities. X-ray techniques utilizing the external reflection of X-rays are very surface sensitive, hence providing a non-destructive tool for process analysis and control.X-ray reflectometry (XRR) is an established technique for the characterization of single- and multi-layered thin film structures with layer thicknesses in the nanometer range. XRR spectra are acquired by varying the incident angle in the grazing incidence regime while measuring the specular reflected X-ray beam. The shape of the resulting angle-dependent curve is correlated to changes of the electron density in the sample, but does not provide direct information on the presence or distribution of chemical elements in the sample.Grazing Incidence XRF (GIXRF) measures the X-ray fluorescence induced by an X-ray beam incident under grazing angles. The resulting angle dependent intensity curves are correlated to the depth distribution and mass density of the elements in the sample. GIXRF provides information on contaminations, total implanted dose and to some extent on the depth of the dopant distribution, but is ambiguous with regard to the exact distribution function.Both techniques use similar measurement procedures and data evaluation strategies, i.e. optimization of a sample model by fitting measured and calculated angle curves. Moreover, the applied sample models can be derived from the same physical properties, like atomic scattering/form factors and elemental concentrations; a simultaneous analysis is therefore a straightforward approach. This combined analysis in turn reduces the uncertainties of the individual techniques, allowing a determination of dose and depth profile of the implanted elements with drastically increased confidence level.Silicon wafers implanted with Arsenic at different implantation energies were measured by XRR and GIXRF using a combined, simultaneous measurement and data evaluation procedure. The data were processed using a self-developed software package (JGIXA), designed for simultaneous fitting of GIXRF and XRR data. The results were compared with depth profiles obtained by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS).

Highlights

  • Grazing incidence x-ray fluorescence (GIXRF) is a surface sensitive technique for the characterization of dopant profiles and thin layers in☆ Selected paper from the 15th International Conference on Total Reflection X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis and Related Methods, and the 49th Annual Conference on X-Ray Chemical Analysis (TXRF2013), Osaka, Japan, 23–27 Sept. 2013.D

  • Parratt implemented the complete field calculation for the prediction of the reflected part of the beam paving the way for X-ray reflectivity (XRR) analysis and providing the basis for GIXRF analysis

  • In 1991 de Boer [4] published a thorough derivation of the fluorescence emitted from layered samples based on the calculation of the derivative of the Poynting vector through the calculation of the reflection and transmission coefficients at each layer and making use of Parratt's recursive calculation of the electromagnetic field. He showed for the first time the combined measurement and analysis of GIXRF and XRR signals for layered media

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Summary

Introduction

Grazing incidence x-ray fluorescence (GIXRF) is a surface sensitive technique for the characterization of dopant profiles and thin layers in☆ Selected paper from the 15th International Conference on Total Reflection X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis and Related Methods, and the 49th Annual Conference on X-Ray Chemical Analysis (TXRF2013), Osaka, Japan, 23–27 Sept. 2013.D. In 1991 de Boer [4] published a thorough derivation of the fluorescence emitted from layered samples based on the calculation of the derivative of the Poynting vector through the calculation of the reflection and transmission coefficients at each layer and making use of Parratt's recursive calculation of the electromagnetic field. He showed for the first time the combined measurement and analysis of GIXRF and XRR signals for layered media. This approach is only valid in the dilute regime, i.e. if the change in refractive index due to the dopant is insignificant

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