Abstract

The concept of fully encapsulated, semi-insulating silicon (SI-Si) Czochralski silicon on insulator substrates for silicon microwave devices is presented. The experimental results show that, using gold as a compensating deep level impurity in silicon, a resistivity of is achieved in this work. Sufficiently high resistivity substrates for microwave applications are obtained by depositing gold on silicon and annealing for 1 h at . Silicon dioxide and silicon nitride are considered as diffusion barriers for use in the new technology. At , the diffusivity of gold in plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposited silicon nitride is , whereas for silicon dioxide, it is less than . These results imply that silicon nitride would be ineffective as a diffusion barrier in the SI-Si technology but that a 600 nm thick buried silicon dioxide might allow devices to be processed with a thermal budget of up to 15 h at without impurity contamination.

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