Abstract

It is shown that plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (PECVD) of thin SiO2 on Si wafers followed by rapid thermal annealing (RTA) can result in very high effective carrier lifetime (≳5 ms) and extremely low surface recombination velocity (≤2 cm/s). Thin SiO2 (∼100 Å) layers were prepared by direct PECVD at 250 °C and RTA was performed at 350 °C in forming gas. Detailed metal-oxide-semiconductor analysis and model calculations showed that such a low recombination velocity is the result of moderately high positive oxide charge (5×1011–1×1012 cm−2 ) and relatively low midgap interface-state density (5×1010–1×1011 cm−2 eV−1). RTA was found to be superior to furnace annealing, and a forming gas ambient was better than a nitrogen ambient for achieving a very low surface recombination velocity. Some degradation in the surface recombination velocity or effective lifetime was observed. It is found that a PECVD SiN cap on top of the thin SiO2 not only suppressed this degradation but also enhanced the effective lifetime.

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