Authors: James D. Oliver, Russ Kremer, Arnd Dietrich Weber, Kevin Nguyen, James Amano
Abstract: SEMI Standards charter is to develop standards that benefit the semiconductor industry. The SEMI organization has evolved over the last 40 years into an international organization with covering all aspects of semiconductor and flat panel materials and devices. SEMI Standards provides the framework for the development of consensus based standards documents. At present there are two published standards specific to silicon carbide, the first dealing with dimensions, properties and ordering information for SiC wafers, and the second defining a nomenclature for defects found on SiC: SEMI M55-0817 Specification for Polished Monocrystalline Silicon Carbide Wafers SEMI M81-0611 Guide to Defects Found on Monocrystalline Silicon Carbide Substrates Additional standards applicable to various semiconductor wafers also are available and new SiC related standards are being developed based on industry needs and volunteer participation.
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Authors: Birgit Kallinger, Bernd Thomas, Patrick Berwian, Jochen Friedrich, Gerd Trachta, Arnd Dietrich Weber
Abstract: Homoepitaxial growth on 4° off-axis substrates with different off-cut directions, i.e. [11-20] and [1-100], was investigated using a commercial CVD reactor. The characteristics of the growth process on substrates with different off-cut directions were determined with respect to applicable C/Si ratio, growth rate and n- and p-type doping range. Stable step flow growth was achieved over a broad range of C/Si ratio at growth rates ~ 15 µm/h in both cases. The n-type doping level of epilayers can be controlled at least in the range from 5 1014 cm-3 to 3 1017 cm-3 on both types of substrates. Highly p-type epilayers with p = 2 1019 cm-3 can also be grown on [1-100] off-cut substrates. Hence, the growth process for standard substrates was successfully transferred to [1-100] off-cut substrates resulting in epilayers with similar doping levels. The dislocation content of the grown epilayers was investigated by means of defect selective etching (DSE) in molten KOH. For both off-cut directions of the substrates, similar densities of threading edge dislocations (TED), threading screw dislocations (TSD) and basal plane dislocations (BPD) were found in the epilayers. Epilayers with very low BPD density can be grown on both kinds of substrates. The remaining BPDs in epilayers are inclined along the off-cut direction of the substrate. The surface morphology and roughness was investigated by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The epilayers grown on [1-100] off-cut substrates are smoother than those on standard substrates.
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Authors: Thomas L. Straubinger, Richard L. Woodin, T. Witt, J. Shovlin, Gary M. Dolny, P. Sasahara, Erwin Schmitt, Arnd Dietrich Weber, Jeff B. Casady, Janna R. B. Casady
Abstract: We report here an anisotropic increase in SiC bulk resistivity by annealing at 1150 °C, and discuss the implications for SiC devices. The increase in resistivity is resistivity dependent and can be (at least) partially reversed by a subsequent anneal at higher temperature. Ideal device performance is achievable with appropriate annealing steps during device processing.
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Authors: Thomas L. Straubinger, Erwin Schmitt, S. Storm, Michael Vogel, Arnd Dietrich Weber, Andreas Wohlfart
Abstract: One of the most crucial defects for the device fabrication on silicon carbide (SiC) substrates are areas with low crystalline quality and micro-pipe clusters which can still occupy several percent of the area in commercial available 4H-substrates. These defects originate from the seed or are generated by modification changes during growth and can be easily detected under crossed polarizers. In this presentation the historic development at SiCrystal from Acheson material to wafers with 100mm diameter, state of the art micro-pipe density and excellent crystalline quality (FWHM < 20 arcsec) on whole area will be shown. Additionally the influence of carbon inclusions on surface quality and the present dislocation densities in 4H substrates will be discussed. While carbon inclusions were reduced to uncritical levels dislocation densities are still in the range of 104 cm-2. Therefore strategies for further reduction will be pointed out. Finally a resistivity limit (16 mΩcm) for stacking fault formation during annealing at 1150°C will be defined.
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Authors: Thomas L. Straubinger, Michael Rasp, Erwin Schmitt, Arnd Dietrich Weber
Abstract: For several years the major focus of material issues in SiC substrates was laid on the
reduction of macroscopic defects like polytype inclusions, low angle grain boundaries and
micropipes. Since then significant improvements have been achieved and micropipe densities could
be reduced to values below 1 cm-2. Nevertheless the fabrication of high quality substrates at high
volume and low cost is still challenging. Therefore preconditions for reproducible process and
quality control will be discussed. Since it is obvious that dislocations are the main reason for
degradation in power devices the prevailing attention has also been shifted to that field of material
research. Intense studies were utilized on dislocation and stacking fault formation during
sublimation growth. For this reason we systematically varied crucial parameters of the crystal
growth process and applied several specific characterization methods, e.g. KOH-defect-etching,
electron microscopy and optical microscopy, to evaluate resulting material properties. The
investigations were accompanied by failure analysis on devices of the Schottky-type. We found out
that for the improvement of substrate quality emphasis has to be laid on the reduction of thermoelastic
stress in the growing crystal. The results of numerical calculations enabled us to derive
moderate growth conditions with reduced temperature gradients and correspondingly low defect
concentration.
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Authors: Ejiro Emorhokpor, E.P. Carlson, Jian Wei Wan, Arnd Dietrich Weber, C. Basceri, Jason R. Jenny, R. Sandhu, James D. Oliver, F. Burkeen, A. Somanchi, V. Velidandla, F. Orazio, A. Blew, M.S. Goorsky, Michael Dudley, William M. Vetter
Abstract: Micropipe density (MPD) is a crucial parameter for silicon carbide (SiC) substrates
that determines the quality, stability and yield of the semiconductor devices built on these
substrates. The importance of MPD is underscored by the fact that all existing specifications for
6H- and 4H-SiC substrates set upper limits for it. Several methods for measuring the MPD are
known, however, their reliability and applicability to various types of substrates (e.g. semiinsulating,
conducting, etc.) has not been systematically studied.
The subject of this paper is a comparative study of various techniques used for the MPD
measurement accompanied by statistical analysis of the results. The study was initiated by several
organizations working in the immediate field of silicon carbide or in closely related fields and
included SiC substrate manufacturers, substrate consumers, equipment manufacturers and
universities. The study represented a round robin experiment in which MPD was measured on
thirty SiC wafers of various pedigrees. The values of MPD have been determined using both
destructive and non-destructive techniques. The repeatability of each technique is analyzed and
compared with that of other techniques.
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Authors: Erwin Schmitt, Michael Rasp, Arnd Dietrich Weber, M. Kölbl, Robert Eckstein, L. Kadinski, M. Selder
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Authors: M. Müller, Matthias Bickermann, Dieter Hofmann, Arnd Dietrich Weber, Albrecht Winnacker
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Authors: Stephan G. Müller, Robert Eckstein, Wolfgang Hartung, Dieter Hofmann, M. Kölbl, Gerhard Pensl, Erwin Schmitt, Arnd Dietrich Weber, Albrecht Winnacker
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