Abstract

The kinetics of etching hydrogenated amorphous silicon by a hydrogen plasma has been studied by in-situ spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements. The formation of a hydrogen-rich sublayer is clearly emphasized. Its thickness increases from 7 to 27 nm when the temperature during the hydrogen-plasma treatment is raised from 100 to 250°C. This effect is interpreted by solving the differential equation for trap-limited hydrogen diffusion through a mobile surface. By assigning the thickness of this sublayer to the mean diffusion distance of hydrogen we determined values of the effective diffusion coefficient of hydrogen higher than 10−14 cm2s−1 with an activation energy of 0.22 eV. The density of hydrogen traps is found to decrease from 7.3 × 1018 to 4.5 × 1017 cm−3 as the temperature of the hydrogen treatment increases from 100 to 250°C with an activation energy of 0.43 eV. This effect is interpreted by a thermal equilibrium involving hydrogen transitions between shallow states and hydrogen-trapping sites.

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