Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces

Computer processor chips of the last generation are based on silicon, modified to achieve maximum charge mobility to enable fast switching speeds at low power. III-V semiconductors have charge mobilities that are much higher than that of silicon making them suitable candidates for boosting the perfo...

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Main Authors: Contreras, Yissel, Muscat, Anthony
Other Authors: Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
XPS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/306095
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3060952015-10-23T05:28:42Z Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces Contreras, Yissel Muscat, Anthony Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona III-V semiconductors passivation self-assembled monolayers XPS Computer processor chips of the last generation are based on silicon, modified to achieve maximum charge mobility to enable fast switching speeds at low power. III-V semiconductors have charge mobilities that are much higher than that of silicon making them suitable candidates for boosting the performance of new electronic devices. However, III-V semiconductors oxidize rapidly in air after oxide etching and the poor quality of the resulting oxide limits device performance. Our goal is to design a liquid-phase process flow to etch the oxide and passivate the surface of III-V semiconductors and to understand the mechanism of layer formation.Self-assembled monolayers of 1-eicosanethiol (ET) dissolved in ethanol, IPA, chloroform, and toluene were deposited on clean InSb(100) surfaces. The InSb passivated surfaces were characterized after 0 to 60 min of exposure to air. Ellipsometry measurements showed a starting overlayer thickness (due to ET, oxides, or both) of about 20 Å in chloroform and from 32 to 35 Å in alcohols and toluene. Surface composition analysis of InSb with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy after passivation with 0.1 mM ET in ethanol confirmed the presence of ET and showed that oxygen in the Auger region is below detection limits up to 3 min after the passivation. Our results show that a thiol layer on top of a non-oxidized or low-oxide semiconductor surface slows oxygen diffusion in comparison to a surface with no thiol present, making this a promising passivation method of III-V semiconductors. 2013-11-08 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/306095 en_US Copyright © is held by the author.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic III-V semiconductors
passivation
self-assembled monolayers
XPS
spellingShingle III-V semiconductors
passivation
self-assembled monolayers
XPS
Contreras, Yissel
Muscat, Anthony
Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
description Computer processor chips of the last generation are based on silicon, modified to achieve maximum charge mobility to enable fast switching speeds at low power. III-V semiconductors have charge mobilities that are much higher than that of silicon making them suitable candidates for boosting the performance of new electronic devices. However, III-V semiconductors oxidize rapidly in air after oxide etching and the poor quality of the resulting oxide limits device performance. Our goal is to design a liquid-phase process flow to etch the oxide and passivate the surface of III-V semiconductors and to understand the mechanism of layer formation.Self-assembled monolayers of 1-eicosanethiol (ET) dissolved in ethanol, IPA, chloroform, and toluene were deposited on clean InSb(100) surfaces. The InSb passivated surfaces were characterized after 0 to 60 min of exposure to air. Ellipsometry measurements showed a starting overlayer thickness (due to ET, oxides, or both) of about 20 Å in chloroform and from 32 to 35 Å in alcohols and toluene. Surface composition analysis of InSb with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy after passivation with 0.1 mM ET in ethanol confirmed the presence of ET and showed that oxygen in the Auger region is below detection limits up to 3 min after the passivation. Our results show that a thiol layer on top of a non-oxidized or low-oxide semiconductor surface slows oxygen diffusion in comparison to a surface with no thiol present, making this a promising passivation method of III-V semiconductors.
author2 Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona
author_facet Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona
Contreras, Yissel
Muscat, Anthony
author Contreras, Yissel
Muscat, Anthony
author_sort Contreras, Yissel
title Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
title_short Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
title_full Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
title_fullStr Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
title_full_unstemmed Passivation of III-V Semiconductor Surfaces
title_sort passivation of iii-v semiconductor surfaces
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/306095
work_keys_str_mv AT contrerasyissel passivationofiiivsemiconductorsurfaces
AT muscatanthony passivationofiiivsemiconductorsurfaces
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