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Kelly Ip PhD Defense ~ July 1, 2005 ~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Enginering Process Development for ZnO-based Devices
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Outline Introduction Inductively-coupled plasma (ICP) etching Hydrogen in ZnO Contact metallization Ohmic contacts Schottky contacts p-n junction diode Conclusions
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Introduction Direct, wide bandgap Bulk ZnO (n-type) commercially available Grown on inexpensive substrates at low temperatures High exciton binding energy Heterojunction by substitution in Zn-site Cd ~ 3.0 eV Mg ~ 4.0 eV Nanostructures demonstrated Ferromagnetism at practical T c when doped with transition metals Obstacle: good quality, reproducible p-type GaNZnO Bandgap (eV) 3.43.3 µ e (cm 2 /V-sec) 220200 µ h (cm 2 /V-sec) 105-50 m e 0.27m o 0.24m o m h 0.8m o 0.59m o Exciton binding2860 energy (meV) Potential Applications UV/Blue optoelectronics Transparent transistors Nanoscale detectors Spintronic devices
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching Wet etching HCl, HNO 3, NH 4 Cl, and HF Generally isotropic with limited resolution and selectivity High-density plasma etching Anisotropic with high resolution Favored by modern manufacturing environment Bulk, wurtzite (0001) ZnO from Eagle-Picher Gas chemistry: Cl 2 /Ar (10/5 sccm) & CH 4 /H 2 /Ar (3/8/5 sccm) Constant ICP source power at 500W and process pressure at 1 mTorr Varied rf chuck power: 50 – 300W
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching - Etch Rates CH 4 /H 2 /Ar ~3000 Å/min Cl 2 /Ar ~1200 Å/min
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching - Etch Mechanism Ion-Assisted Etch Mechanism ER E 0.5 -E TH 0.5 Vapor pressure of etch products: (CH 4 ) 2 Zn 301 mTorr at 20°C ZnCl 2 1 mTorr at 428 °C E TH ~ 96 eV for CH 4 /H 2 /Ar
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching - Photoluminescence Optical degradation even at the lowest rf power
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP - AFM Control 50 W rf 100 W rf 200 W rf300 W rf Zn and O etch products removed at same rate
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching - AES and SEM CH 4 /H 2 /Ar 200W rf O Zn O Control
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ ICP Etching - Summary Dry etching is possible with practical etch rates using CH 4 /H 2 /Ar Surface is smooth and stoichiometric Anisotropic sidewalls Optical quality is sensitive to ion energy and flux
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO Hydrogen Predicted role as shallow donor Introduced from growth ambient Present in optimal plasma etch chemistry Understand diffusion behavior and thermal stability Bulk, wurtzite (0001) ZnO, undoped (n~10 17 cm -3 ) from Eagle-Picher Hydrogen incorporation Ion Implantation of 2 H or 1 H (100keV, 10 15 - 10 16 cm -2 ) 2 H plasma exposure in PECVD at 100-300°C, 30 mins Post-annealing: 500 - 700°C
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Implanted - SIMS Removal of 2 H below SIMS limit at 700°C Thermally less stable than GaN (>900ºC)
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Implanted - RBS/C Minimal affect on BS yield near surface Small increase in scattering peak (6.5% of the random level before implantation and 7.8% after implantation) the nuclear energy loss profile of 100keV H + is max
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Implanted - PL Severe optical degradation even after 700ºC anneal Point defect recombination centers dominate
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Plasma - SIMS Large diffusion depth 2 H diffuses as an interstitial, with little trapping by the lattice elements or by defects or impurities
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Plasma/annealed - SIMS 2 H completely evolve out of the crystal at 500°C
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Plasma - CV Effects 2 H plasma treatment Passivate the compensating acceptor impurities Induces a donor state and increases the free electron concentration Suggest H from growth process n-type conductivity probably arises from multiple impurity sources
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO Implanted 2 H is slightly more thermally stable: trapping at residual damage in the ZnO by the nuclear stopping process Implanted Plasma exposure
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Hydrogen in ZnO - Summary Thermal stability and diffusion behavior of hydrogen in ZnO T 700 °C completely evolved the implanted H from ZnO Residual implant-induced defects severely degrade optical properties and minimal affect crystal structure Plasma: incorporation depths of about 30 m for 0.5 hr at 300°C T 500 °C to remove H introduced by plasma exposure Thermal stability of the hydrogen retention : direct implantation > plasma exposure Trapping at residual implant damage
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts Require low specific contact resistance Surface treatments As-received Organic solvents (trichloroethylene, methanol, acetone, 3 mins each) H plasma Ti/Al/Pt/Au metal scheme on n-type ZnO Bulk PLD films Au/Ni/Au and Au on p-type ZnMgO
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Ti/Al/Pt/Au on Bulk Bulk n-ZnO Metals Cross-sectional view of circular TLM R1R1 RORO ρ c lowest at 250 °C anneal ρ c ~ 6 10 -4 cm 2 Severe contact degradation after 600 °C anneal C = R S L T 2 Marlow and Das, Solid-State Electron. 25 91 (1982)
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Ti/Al/Pt/Au on Bulk - AES
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Ti/Al/Pt/Au on Bulk - SEM
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Growth: n-type ZnO:P Films N-type phosphorus-doped ZnO film on (0001) Al 2 O 3 grown by PLD Post-growth annealing Increase anneal temperature Decrease carrier concentration and Hall mobility Increase resistivity Reduction of shallow state density P dopants activation as acceptors in O site Post-growth Anneal T (°C) Carrier conc (#/cm 3 ) Resistivity ( cm) Hall mobility (cm 2 /Vs) 30 1.5 10 20 0.00218.5 425 6 10 19 0.0137.8 450 2.4 10 18 1.31.9 500 3.2 10 17 12.81.5 600 7.5 10 15 4631.8 Heo et al APL 83 1128 (2003) Post-growth Anneal T (°C) Carrier conc (#/cm 3 ) Resistivity ( cm) Hall mobility (cm 2 /Vs) 30 1.5 10 20 0.00218.5 425 6 10 19 0.0137.8 450 2.4 10 18 1.31.9 500 3.2 10 17 12.81.5 600 7.5 10 15 4631.8
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Ti/Al/Pt/Au ZnO:P Films Nonalloyed: n = 1.5 10 20 cm -3 c = 8.7 10 -7 -cm 2 Annealed: Measured at RT: n = 6.0 10 19 cm -3 c = 3.9 10 -7 -cm 2 Measured at 200 °C n = 2.4 10 18 cm -3 c = 2.2 10 -8 -cm 2 Ti/Al/Pt/Au (200/800/400/800)Å on PLD ZnO:P films
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - p-type ZnMgO Films Ohmic behavior after annealing 500 °C Ti/Au more thermally stable than Ni/Au contacts Severe degradation of Ni/Au after 600 °C anneal S. Kim et al APL 84 1904 (2004)
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - p-type ZnMgO Films Specific contact resistance after 600 °C anneal Au: 2.5 10 -5 cm 2 Au/Ni/Au: 7.6 10 -6 cm 2
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Au/ZnMgO
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Au/Ni/Au/ZnMgO
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Ohmic Contacts - Summary Ti/Al/Pt/Au to n-type ZnO (bulk, thin film) No significant improvement from H 2 plasma treatment or organic solvent cleaning AES revealed Ti-O interfacial reactions and intermixing between Al and Pt layers T 250°C Au/Ni/Au to p-type ZnMgO: lower C than Au alone
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts Previous Works Metals: Au, Ag, Pd Schottky barriers heights ~ 0.6-0.8 eV Barrier heights not following the difference in the work function value interface defect states determine contact characteristics Au is unstable even at 60°C This Work Investigate the effect of UV surface cleaning Metal schemes: PLD n-type film: Pt Bulk: Pt, W, W 2 B, W 2 B 5, CrB 2
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - Pt/Au on Bulk No ozone treatment: Linear I-V Ozone treatment: B = 0.696 eV = 1.49 J s = 6.17 10 -6 A-cm -2
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - UV Ozone - AFM No Ozone Treatment 30 min Ozone Treatment
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - UV Ozone - XPS C 1s peakNo ozone (at. %)30 min (at.%) No Ar + sputter29.55.8 1 min Ar + sputter5.31.1 2 min Ar + sputter2.60.1 Desorption of surface C contaminants
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - W/Pt/Au on Bulk Sputter-induced damages Non-rectifying for 250 °C and 500 °C anneal Rectifying after 700 °C anneal No ozone30 min ozone B (eV) 0.450.49 4.53.2 J s (A-cm -2 ) 8.43 10 -2 2.11 10 -2
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - W/Pt/Au - AES Post-deposition annealing 500 °C: no detectable intermixing 700 C anneal: Zn diffused out to the Au-Pt interface, independent of whether the samples had been exposed to ozone
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - W 2 B 5 vs. W 2 B W 2 B 5 /Pt/Au as deposited W 2 B 5 /Pt/Au 600ºC annealed W 2 B/Pt/Au as deposited W 2 B/Pt/Au 600ºC annealed
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Schottky Contacts - Summary Ozone treatment removes surface C contamination Pt contacts: ozone treatment produces transition from ohmic to rectifying behavior W contacts: require annealing T 700°C to repair sputter-induced damages AES revealed intermixing of metal layers and out- diffusion of Zn to Au-Pt interface Low barrier heights for boride contacts W 2 B showed good thermal stability high temperature ohmic contacts
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ p-n Junction Diode - Growth and Structure Full backside ohmic contact Bulk ZnO (0.5 mm, n ~ 10 17 cm -3 ) Buffer n-ZnO PLD film (~0.8 m) Zn 0.9 Mg 0.1 O: P 0.02 PLD film (~1.4 m) Circular ohmic contact (50 to 375 m diameter) Pulsed laser deposition (PLD) (0001) bulk ZnO substrate Zn 0.9 Mg 0.01 O:P 0.02 target KrF excimer laser ablation source Laser repetition rate: 1 Hz Laser pulse energy density: 3 J-cm -2 Growth: 400 °C, O 2 overpressure of 20 mTorr Ohmic contacts: p-ZnMgO: Pt/Au (200/800Å) n-ZnO: Ti/Al/Pt/Au 200/400/200/800Å) Annealed at 200 °C, 1 min, N 2 ambient Undoped buffer layer necessary for good rectifying behavior
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ p-n Junction Diode - IV Characteristics Measured at room temp: V RB –9.0 V J s 4.6 10 -9 A·cm -2 V f 4.0 V R ON 14.5 m ·cm -2
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ p-n Junction Diode - Reverse Breakdown Temperature coefficient: Slightly negative ~.1 to.2 V/K Presence of defects Non-optimized growth and processing
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ p-n Junction Diode - Summary Demonstrated ZnO-based p-n junctions ZnMgO/ZnO heterostructure system n-type ZnO buffer on the ZnO substrate is critical in achieving acceptable rectification in the junctions Important step in realizing minority carrier devices in the ZnO system
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Conclusions ICP etching Methane-based chemistry Practical etch rate but optical degradation H in ZnO Much less thermally stable than GaN Completely evolve out by 700°C anneals Ohmic contacts to ZnO Straightforward n-type Rapidly improving for p-type Schottky contacts to ZnO Low B for both n-type and p-type Surface states dominate transport mechanism p-n junction diode using ZnMgO/ZnO demonstrated
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~ University of Florida ~ Materials Science and Engineering ~ Acknowledgements Committee members: Prof. Stephen Pearton, Chair Prof. Cammy Abernathy Prof. David Norton Prof. Rajiv Singh Prof. Fan Ren, External Contributors: Y.-W. HeoY. LiB. Luo B.P. GilaE.S. LambersK.H. Baik A.H. OnstineM.E. OverbergJ.R. LaRoche
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