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Removal of fluorine from a Si (100) surface by a remote RF hydrogen plasma

Contributors:   J.P. Barnak, S. King, J. Montgomery, Ja-Hum Ku, and Robert J. Nemanich
ABSTRACT
Fluorine contamination was removed from a Si(100) surface by an atomic H flux. The surface was intentionally contaminated to approximate the residual fluorine concentration remaining after a concentrated HF last process. By dipping the wafers in concentrated HF the thin oxide was removed and replaced with a hydrogen and fluorine terminated surface. This surface was then either vacuum annealed or exposed to a 20 Watt rf excited H-plasma at 50 mTorr, in order to achieve an atomically clean surface. The substrate temperature during the H-plasma exposure and vacuum anneal was 450°C. The surface chemistry was characterized with x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS), auger electron spectroscopy (AES), and angle-resolved UV photoemission spectroscopy (ARUPS). The surface symmetry was characterized with low energy electron diffraction (LEED). Before the H-plasma exposure, the XPS spectra indicated Si-F bonding, and a 1×1 LEED diffraction pattern was observed. Immediately following the H-plasma exposure, the fluorine concentration was reduced below detection limits of XPS, and the surface showed a 2×1 reconstruction. A mechanism is proposed by which molecular HF results from atomic hydrogen interactions with fluorine on the surface.

Publisher: Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings,   Volume: 386,   357-362 ||  Published: ||   PDF (1.78 MB) ||   Read more...