1 research outputs found
Imaging Structure and Composition Homogeneity of 300 mm SiGe Virtual Substrates for Advanced CMOS Applications by Scanning X‑ray Diffraction Microscopy
Advanced semiconductor heterostructures
are at the very heart of
many modern technologies, including aggressively scaled complementary
metal oxide semiconductor transistors for high performance computing
and laser diodes for low power solid state lighting applications.
The control of structural and compositional homogeneity of these semiconductor
heterostructures is the key to success to further develop these state-of-the-art
technologies. In this article, we report on the lateral distribution
of tilt, composition, and strain across step-graded SiGe strain relaxed
buffer layers on 300 mm Si(001) wafers treated with and without chemical–mechanical
polishing. By using the advanced synchrotron based scanning X-ray
diffraction microscopy technique K-Map together with micro-Raman spectroscopy
and Atomic Force Microscopy, we are able to establish a partial correlation
between real space morphology and structural properties of the sample
resolved at the micrometer scale. In particular, we demonstrate that
the lattice plane bending of the commonly observed cross-hatch pattern
is caused by dislocations. Our results show a strong local correlation
between the strain field and composition distribution, indicating
that the adatom surface diffusion during growth is driven by strain
field fluctuations induced by the underlying dislocation network.
Finally, it is revealed that a superficial chemical–mechanical
polishing of cross-hatched surfaces does not lead to any significant
change of tilt, composition, and strain variation compared to that
of as-grown samples