A model of the diffusion-segregation redistribution of phosphorus in an SiO2/Si system during thermal oxidation of highly doped silicon layers is developed taking into account the formation of a peak of surface impurity concentration at the interface. The formation of this surface concentration peak is attributed to a change in the free energy of the impurity atoms near the silicon surface. This process is simulated by a diffusion-segregation equation. It is shown that the developed diffusion-segregation model is quite adequate for describing the phosphorus redistribution occurring during the oxidation of uniformly doped silicon layers. For the oxidation of implanted silicon layers, it was found that the segregation coefficient of the phosphorus at the SiO2/Si interface is not constant but depends on time in the same way as the efficiency of transient enhanced diffusion in silicon. This phenomenon is explained by the reactivity of the impurity segregation during the thermal oxidation of silicon, when excess point defects in the implanted silicon layer affect both the oxidation process and the capture of impurity atoms by the growing silicon dioxide.
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