Dislocation-related photoluminescence in silicon implanted with fluorine ions
- Autores: Sobolev N.A.1, Kalyadin A.E.1, Sakharov V.I.1, Serenkov I.T.1, Shek E.I.1, Karabeshkin K.V.1, Karasev P.A.2, Titov A.I.2
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Afiliações:
- Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
- Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University
- Edição: Volume 43, Nº 1 (2017)
- Páginas: 50-52
- Seção: Article
- URL: https://bakhtiniada.ru/1063-7850/article/view/202314
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063785017010126
- ID: 202314
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Resumo
The implantation of 85-keV fluorine ions at a dose of 8.3 × 1014 cm–2 into single crystal Si does not lead to formation of an amorphous layer. Subsequent annealing at a temperature of 1100°C in a chlorine-containing atmosphere is accompanied by the appearance of D1 and D2 lines of dislocation-related luminescence. The intensity of both lines decreases as the annealing duration is increased from 0.25 to 3 h. As the measurement temperature is increased from 80 to 200 K, the intensities of these lines decrease and the positions of their peaks shift to longer wavelengths.
Sobre autores
N. Sobolev
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
A. Kalyadin
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
V. Sakharov
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
I. Serenkov
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
E. Shek
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
K. Karabeshkin
Ioffe Physical Technical Institute
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 194021
P. Karasev
Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 195251
A. Titov
Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University
Email: nick@sobolev.ioffe.rssi.ru
Rússia, St. Petersburg, 195251
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