Abstract

Tetrafluorosilane (SiF4) was demonstrated to be a good etchant of SiC substrates. Etch rates of silicon carbide (SiC) substrates using SiF4+H2, SiCl2H2 (DCS)+H2, and C3H8+H2 (at typical SiC growth conditions) were compared to the etch rates found using only H2. While H2 is responsible for C removal, we find that the SiC etch rate is limited by the Si removal rate, leading to liquid Si on the SiC surface. By using propane to prevent Si-droplet formation, the etch rate is significantly reduced to <1µmh−1. SiF4 enhances Si removal from the surface through the formation of SiF2 gas, resulting in an improved liquid Si-free surface with r.m.s. roughness 0.45nm and etch rates as high as 43µmh−1. Weak off-cut dependency was observed for SiF4 etching. At high etch rates (>15µmh−1) the etching becomes more isotropic in the SiC kink and step directions, leading to increased step bunching by the Schwoebel effect. DCS was found to be an ineffective etchant, depositing significant amounts of Si on the surface of SiC (~1–23µmh−1), despite the fact that SiCl2 is a volatile species at this temperature. These differences were explained by comparing Gibbs free energies for various Si-removal pathways.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call