Abstract

We investigate the ability to introduce strain into atomic-scale silicon device fabrication by performing hydrogen lithography and creating electrically active phosphorus δ-doped silicon on strained silicon-on-insulator (sSOI) substrates. Lithographic patterns were obtained by selectively desorbing hydrogen atoms from a H resist layer adsorbed on a clean, atomically flat sSOI(001) surface with a scanning tunnelling microscope tip operating in ultra-high vacuum. The influence of the tip-to-sample bias on the lithographic process was investigated allowing us to pattern feature-sizes from several microns down to 1.3 nm. In parallel we have investigated the impact of strain on the electrical properties of P:Si δ-doped layers. Despite the presence of strain inducing surface variations in the silicon substrate we still achieve high carrier densities (>1.0 × 1014 cm−2) with mobilities of ∼100 cm2 V−1 s−1. These results open up the possibility of a scanning-probe lithography approach to the fabrication of strained atomic-scale devices in silicon.

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