Behavior of crystalline silicon under huge electronic excitations: A transient thermal spike description

Abstract

International audienceRecent experimental works devoted to the phenomena of mixing observed at metallic multilayers Ni/Si irradiated by swift heavy ions irradiations make it necessary to revisit the insensibility of crystalline Si under huge electronic excitations. Knowing that Ni is an insensitive material, such observed mixing would exist only if Si is a sensitive material. In order to extend the study of swift heavy ion effects to semiconductor materials, the experimental results obtained in bulk silicon have been analyzed within the framework of the inelastic thermal spike model. Provided the quenching of a boiling (or vapor) phase is taken as the criterion of amorphization, the calculations with an electron–phonon coupling constant g(300 K) = 1.8 x 1012 W/cm3/K and an electronic diffusivity De(300 K) = 80 cm2/s nicely reproduce the size of observed amorphous tracks as well as the electronic energy loss threshold value for their creation, assuming that they result from the quenching of the appearance of a boiling phase along the ion path. Using these parameters for Si in the case of a Ni/Si multilayer, the mixing observed experimentally can be well simulated by the inelastic thermal spike model extended to multilayers, assuming that this occurs in the molten phase created at the Ni interface by energy transfer from Si

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 12/11/2016