Physical review volume 05, number january 15, 1957


ELECTRONIC ENERGY LEVELS FROM Zn IN Si



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1957Diffusion and Electrical Behavior of Zinc in Silicon

. ELECTRONIC ENERGY LEVELS FROM Zn IN Si

The high diffusion coefficient found for Zn in Si and reported in Part I suggests that the flow of Zn at high temperatures is mainly interstitial. Figure 3(a) illus­trates an interstitial Zn atom which would be expected to introduce two donor levels into Si. Since, at low temperature, Zn is found to have introduced acceptor levels into Si, it is assumed that interstitial Zn reacts with lattice vacancies at high temperature to produce substitutional Zn. Figure 3(b) illustrates a substi-

  1. Fuller, Theuerer, and van Roosbroeck, Phys. Rev. 85, 678 (1952); L. Esaki, Phys. Rev. 89, 1026 (1953).

Table I. Compilation of Hall effect results on silicon samples before and after diffusion of zinc together with conditions of the diffusion.

Group Sample No.

Crystal No.

Amount of
Doping doping cm-3

E
Temp. (°C)

Jiffusion

Energy levels observed in ev

Amount of shallow levels cm~3

Time (hr)

Type

338

P-909

As 8.7 ХЮ16

1070

64

n

0.049 (As)




339

7-1041

As 1.7X1016

1070

64

n

0.049 (As)




A 351

7-87

As 4.9X1016

1300

3

n

0.049 (As)




Л 334

17-635

As 2.6ХЮ14

1050

64

p

0.31




198

7-13-2

As 2.2 X1014

1235

16

p

0.31




330

17-635

As 5.6ХЮ16

1350

2

p

0.31




346

ZR-5

В 1 ХЮ14

1350

1.5

p

0.31




335

7-218

В 5 ХЮ14

1050

16.3

p

0.31, 0.092

9 ХЮ14

p 336

17-652

В 1.5ХЮ16

1050

16.3

p

0.31, 0.092

9 X1014

B 342

7-11724

В 4.4ХЮ15

1350

1.5

p

0.31, 0.092

4.5ХЮ15

337

7-834

В 1.0ХЮ16

1350

1.8

p

0.31, 0.092

1.0ХЮ16



















0.045 (B)




333

7-15

В 2.0ХЮ17

1350

2.0

p

0.045 (B)

2.2X1017

167

7-218

В 5 ХЮ14

1175

64

p

0.31, 0.092

5 X1014

332

7-218

В 5 ХЮ14

1350

2

p

0.31, 0.126

4 X1014

C 357

7-1252

В 1.2 ХЮ16

1175

16

p

0.31, 0.092




329

7-1252

В 1.2 ХЮ16

1350

2

p

0.31, 0.126

6 ХЮ14

356

7-1252

В 1.2ХЮ16

1350

2

p

0.31, 0.126




348

7Z-1412

Al 3.5ХЮ15

1350

1.3

p

0.31, 0.078

3.0ХЮ16

D 343

7-1029

Ga 7.4ХЮ15

1350

1.3

p

0.31, 0.083

8 X10lfi

344

7Z-469

Ga 3.4ХЮ16

1350

1.3

p

0.31, 0.083

3.2ХЮ15







Control, no Zn diffused

•-










347

7-218

В 7 Х10»

1350

1.3

p

0.045 (B)

8 X10“


disclose no new levels in the upper half of the forbidden energy gap. Carrier mobilities indicate scattering only by singly charged centers. Samples 334, 798, and 330 (Group A, Table I), containing As and converted to />-type by Zn diffusion, show a single level at 0.31 ev from the valence band. The curve in Fig. 4 for 330 is typical of these samples. Sample 346, containing 1ХЮ14 cm4 B, behaves in the same way. In all other initially />-type samples (Table I) the level after Zn diffusion was also found at 0.31 ev except in sample 333 where it was masked by 2.0X1017 cm-3 В levels. In these other samples the deep level appears above other levels as shown in the high-temperature range of the curves in Fig. 4.
The concentration of the 0.31-ev level in several samples has been computed from carrier concentration data and the results plotted in Fig. 2. The concen­tration depends upon diffusion temperature and agrees well with the results of Part I. The concentration was calculated on the assumption that the level is an acceptor associated with substitutional Zn and, there­fore, that there are four spin states available in the unionized acceptor for occupation by an electron. Assumption of two spin states would have given results about fifty percent lower in concentration. It is interesting that no second acceptor level comparable to that found for Zn in Ge3 has been found in the forbidden gap of Si diffused with Zn.

  1. Shallow Levels

The results in Table I (Groups В, C, and D) and in Fig. 4 show that new levels are introduced, below the 0.31-ev level and at lower concentrations, by diffusion of Zn into />-type Si. Several facts concerning these levels are to be noted: (a) the level of the original acceptor has disappeared, (b) shallow levels have about the same concentration as the original acceptor, (c) the new level found depends upon the element used for the original acceptor (Group D, Table I), (d) the level depends upon some other (unknown) parameter because both the 0.092 ev and the 0.126-ev levels are found at different times when В is used as the original acceptor. No shallow level is seen in sample 346 con­taining 1ХЮ14 cm-3 B. This suggests that the diffusion process adds 1014 cm-3 donors, perhaps as interstitial Zn, which compensates the level. The 0.092-ev level seems to have a maximum solubility of 5X1016 cnr3. This behavior is indicated by the curve for sample 337 in Fig. 4. This sample contains IX1016 cm-3 B. Analysis of the curve, which shows the 0.045-ev В level, shows the sample to contain ~5X1015 cm-3 of the 0.092-ev level and also ~5X1015 cnr3 of the В level.
A few conjectures can be made about the nature of the shallow levels. Below a В concentration of ^1016 cnr3 the В level is not observed in the Zn diffused samples. This would not happen if the levels introduced were ordinary acceptors. It would happen, however, if the new levels being added were donors which filled the В levels or if diffused Zn altered in some way the energy of the В levels. If donors were added above the В levels, such donors would be partially emptied according to the concentration of В levels. Carrier concentration curves of these donors would show the
saturation effect corresponding to the В level concen­trations. This behavior is observed. However, two facts argue against the levels being donors: (1) their energy depends upon the original acceptor element; (2) calculation of donor and acceptor concentration from carrier concentration curves yields results which do not correspond to the known original acceptor concen­tration, nor to a donor concentration which would be expected if the new level were associated with substi­tutional Zn. Hence we conclude that the new levels are probably acceptors and are due to a complex formed between Zn and the original acceptor. We may be dealing with a situation analogous to Li++B~ in germanium17 where, it is assumed, an ion pair forms and then reacts with a vacancy to form a compound. Thus
Li++ e~-Г О T- B—>LiB~ in Ge,
and
Zn+++2ZnB“ in Si.
The compound shown schematically in Fig. 3(c) would be expected to be an acceptor. The changes in energy level found when Al and Ga are substituted for В seem consistent with the assumption of compound formation. The appearance at different times of two shallow levels when В is used as the acceptor suggests that the situation is even more complicated than has been suspected and that a more careful study must be made of the temperature dependence of equilibria involving substitutional and interstitial Zn, ion pairing, and compound formation.

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