Chemical Vapor Deposited Boron Doped Polycrystalline Diamond Thin Film Growth on Silicon and Sapphire Growth, Doping, Metallization, and Characterization

Chemical Vapor Deposited Boron Doped Polycrystalline Diamond Thin Film Growth on Silicon and Sapphire Growth, Doping, Metallization, and Characterization
Author: Hassan Golestanian
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1997
Genre: Chemical vapor deposition
ISBN:

Diamond's unique properties are potentially superior among the existing substrate materials for electronic applications. Among these properties, diamond's physical hardness, molar density, thermal conductivity, and sound velocity are the highest while its thermal expansion coefficient, compressibility, and bulk modules are the lowest. Because of this unique combination of properties, diamond has diverse applications in electronics, optics, and material coatings. Scientists around the world have been studying possible applications of diamond and its synthesis by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) in the semiconductor industry for almost the latter half of this century. The use of bulk crystals severely limits semiconductor applications of diamond due to difficulty in doping, device integration, high cost, and small area of bulk diamond. Therefore, a great deal of effort has been undertaken by researchers around the world on diamond synthesis by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). With some of the same limitations, homoepitaxial growth of diamond is not considered to be a feasible solution. As a result, heteroepitaxial growth of diamond is being considered to be an attractive possibility. Heteroepitaxial diamond growth has been the main subject of research since the first successful growth of diamond thin films on foreign substrates was reported. Polycrystalline and highly oriented diamond thin films grown on various substrates, especially silicon, have been reported over the years. There also have been reports of device fabrication on diamond such as diamond based point contact transistors, Schottky diodes, and field effect transistors at a laboratory level. The technology has been very challenging and there remain many obstacles to overcome before diamond based devices are to become part of the semiconductor industry. For example, epitaxial growth of CVD diamond, selective doping, n-type doping, and metallization of the grown films are not totally understood due to the polycrystalline nature of CVD diamond films. The objective of this work is the study of hot-filament chemical vapor deposited boron doped polycrystalline diamond thin films grown on both silicon and sapphire. A new horizontal gas flow configuration rather than the typical vertical gas flow configuration is utilized to provide larger area and better quality films grown on these substrates. The study includes characterization of grown films using scanning electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction analysis, and electrical characterization. Two types of contacts to the films grown on silicon substrates are fabricated enabling various electrical measurements. However, on sapphire substrates, low volume resistivity diamond films are grown despite severe adhesion problems. The effects of various substrate pre-treatments, growth conditions, and doping concentrations are presented.

Growth and Characterization of Diamond Thin Films

Growth and Characterization of Diamond Thin Films
Author: Sattar Mirzakuchaki
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1996
Genre: Diamond thin films
ISBN:

Chemical vapor deposited (CVD) diamond thin films grown homoepitaxially as well as on non-diamond substrates have been the subject of intense investigation since the beginning of the last decade. Diamond's remarkable properties such as physical hardness, chemical inertness, high thermal conductivity, high breakdown voltage, and high carrier mobility are the main factors for the attention it has received from many researchers around the world. Although these properties are somewhat degraded in polycrystalline diamond films, they are still superior to many other materials. One of the most potentially useful applications of diamond thin films is in the semiconductor industry. Although a few prototype devices such as field effect transistors and Schottky diodes have been fabricated on diamond, some major obstacles remain to be overcome before full scale commercial applications of diamond as a semiconductor is possible. The high cost of large area monocrystalline diamond substrates has forced researchers to look for alternative substrates for the heteroepitaxial growth of diamond. So far only marginal results have been reported on the growth of highly oriented diamond films and on the heteroepitaxial growth involving substrates that are as costly as diamond. Silicon, as the dominant material in semiconductor industry, has been the subject of much research as a substrate for the growth of polycrystalline diamond. Another problem in development of diamond as a semiconductor is the effective doping of diamond, particularly for n-type conductivity. Although many researchers have studied boron-doped (p-type) diamond thin films in the past several years, there have been few reports on the effects of doping diamond films with phosphorous (n-type). Once these two issues have been solved, other fabrication steps such as oxidation, etching, masking, etc. may be attempted. The present work is a study directed toward solving some of these problems by looking at in-situ doping of n-type hot filament CVD (HFCVD) grown diamond films on silicon substrates. The study includes electrical characterization, stable metallic contacts, effect of silicon substrate surface pretreatment, and selective area deposition. A number of different techniques for inducing diamond nucleation on Si substrates are studied and the resulting diamond films characterized by common techniques such as Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, optical and scanning electron microscopy, and profilometery. The effect of doping the diamond films with different concentrations of phosphorous as well as calculation of the activation energy by temperature measurement was also carried out in this work. A new technique is presented for the selective deposition of diamond films onto silicon substrates.

Growth and Characterization of Phosphorus-doped Diamond Films

Growth and Characterization of Phosphorus-doped Diamond Films
Author: Rajat Roychoudhury
Publisher:
Total Pages: 126
Release: 1997
Genre: Diamond thin films
ISBN:

Diamond is one of the most technologically and scientifically valuable crystalline solids due to its extraordinary thermal, mechanical, optical, chemical and radiation resistant properties. This uniqueness makes diamond materials of great interest in the field of microelectronics. However, progress in this area has been limited because of difficulties associated with doping, uniformity of polycrystalline films, patterning and inconsistency in reproducibility. For application in electronics, both p- and n-type doping of diamond films must be realized. Both natural and synthetic p-type diamond exists, and boron doping of diamond films (for p-type conductivity) is readily obtainable during chemical vapor deposition. Devices such as field effect transistors and Schottky diodes have been fabricated from such films. However, the development of diamond-based electronic devices has been hindered by the inability to produce reasonably conductive n-type diamond. In this study, we have investigated in situ phosphorus doping of diamond films to obtain n-type conducting diamond films. The diamond films were obtained through hot-filament chemical vapor deposition. The films were identified as good quality polycrystalline diamond through X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. The n-type dopant incorporation was established through Secondary Ion Mass Spectroscopy. Both lightly doped (resistive) and heavily doped (well conducting) n-type diamond films were obtained, and their electrical properties were established through Current-Voltage characteristics. The diamond interface characteristics with silicon substrate and metal contacts were studied through Voltage Contrast and Electron Beam Induced Current techniques. Devices such as Schottky diodes were fabricated from these phosphorus doped diamond films. These diamond films were found to be reproducible and their electrical characteristics repeatable, thus, setting a trend towards solving one of the main problems in realizing diamond as a material for the future in the semiconductor industry.

Diamond Based-Materials

Diamond Based-Materials
Author: Qiang Hu
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

The studies covered in this dissertation concentrate on the various forms of diamond films synthesized by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method, including microwave CVD and hot filament CVD. According to crystallinity and grain size, a variety of diamond forms primarily including microcrystalline (most commonly referred to as polycrystalline) and nanocrystalline diamond films, diamond-like carbon (DLC) films were successfully synthesized. The as-grown diamond films were optimized by changing deposition pressure, volume of reactant gas hydrogen (H2) and carrier gas argon (Ar) in order to get high-quality diamond films with a smooth surface, low roughness, preferred growth orientation and high sp3 bond contents, etc. The characterization of diamond films was carried out by metrological and analytical techniques such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and Raman spectroscopy. The results of characterization served as feedback to optimize experimental parameters, so as to improve the quality of diamond films. A good understanding of the diamond film properties such as mechanical, electrical, optical and biological properties, which are determined by the qualities of diamond films, is necessary for the selection of diamond films for different applications. The nanocrystalline diamond nanowires grown by a combination of vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) method and CVD method in two stages, and the graphene grown on silicon substrate with nickel catalytic thin film by single CVD method were also investigated in a touch-on level.

Low-Pressure Synthetic Diamond

Low-Pressure Synthetic Diamond
Author: Bernhard Dischler
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 383
Release: 2013-03-08
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642719929

A comprehensive presentation of the complete spectrum of methods for CVD-diamond deposition and an overview of the most important applications.