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Characterization of process and radiation induced defects in Si and Ge using conventional deep level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) and Laplace-DLTSNyamhere, Cloud 02 February 2010 (has links)
Defects in semiconductors are crucial to device operation, as they can either be beneficial or detrimental to the device operation depending on the application. For efficient devices it is important to characterize the defects in semiconductors so that those defects that are bad are eliminated and those that are useful can be controllably introduced. In this thesis, deep level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) and high-resolution Laplace-DLTS (LDLTS) have been used to characterize deep level defects introduced by energetic particles (electrons or Ar ions) and during metallization using electron beam deposition on silicon and germanium. Schottky diodes were used to form the space-charge region required in DLTS and LDLTS measurements. From the DLTS and LDLTS measurements the activation enthalpy required to ionize a trap, ET, and defect carrier capture cross-section ó were deduced. LDLTS proved particularly useful since it could separate deep levels with closely spaced energy levels (the limit being defects with emission rates separated by a factor greater than 2), which was not possible by conventional DLTS. The majority carrier traps in gallium-, boron- and phosphorus-doped silicon introduced after MeV electron irradiation and during electron beam deposition have been characterized, and several defects such as the divacancy, A-center and E-center and other complex defects were observed after the two processes. Annealing studies have shown that all deep levels are removed in silicon after annealing between 500°C-600°C. Both electron and hole traps introduced in n-type germanium by electron irradiation, Ar sputtering and after electron beam deposition have been characterized using DLTS and LDLTS. The E-center is the most common defect introduced in germanium after MeV electron irradiation and during electron beam deposition. Annealing shows that defects in germanium were removed by low thermal budget of between 350°C - 400°C and it has been deduced that the E-center (V-Sb) in germanium anneals by diffusion. The identification of some of the defects was achieved by using defect properties such as defect signature, introduction rates, annealing behavior and annealing mechanisms, and then comparing these properties to theoretical defect models and results from other techniques. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Physics / unrestricted
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Fabrication and electrical characterisation of quantum dots : uniform size distributions and the observation of unusual electrical characteristics and metastabilityJames, Daniel January 2010 (has links)
Quantum dots (QDs) are a semiconductor nanostructure in which a small island of one type of semiconductor material is contained within a larger bulk of a different one. These structure are interesting for a wide range of applications, including highly efficient LASERs, high-density novel memory devices, quantum computing and more. In order to understand the nature of QDs, electrical characterisation techniques such as capacitance-voltage (CV) profiling and deep-level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) are used to probe the nature of the carrier capture and emission processes. This is limited, however, by the nature of QD formation which results in a spread of sizes which directly affects the energy structure of the QDs. In this work, I sought to overcome this by using Si substrates patterned with a focused ion beam (FIB) to grow an array of identically-sized Ge dots. Although I was ultimately unsuccessful, I feel this approach has great merit for future applications.In addition, this thesis describes several unusual characteristics observed in InAs QDs in a GaAs bulk (grown by molecular beam epitaxy-MBE). Using conventional and Laplace DLTS, I have been able to isolate a single emission transient. I further show an inverted relation between the emission rate and the temperature under high field (emissions increase at lower temperatures). I attribute this to a rapid capture to and emission from excited states in the QD. In addition, I examine a metastable charging effect that results from the application of a sustained reverse bias and decreases the apparent emission rate from the dots. I believe this to be the result of a GaAs defect with a metastable state which acts as a screen, inhibiting emission from the dots due to an accumulation of charge in the metastable state. These unusual characteristics of QDs require further intensive work to fully understand. In this work I have sought to describe the phenomena fully and to provide hypotheses as to their origin.
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