Books by Keyword: Silicon-Germanium (SiGe)

Books

Edited by: Paul Mertens, Marc Meuris and Marc Heyns
Online since: January 2009
Description: Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters CPCI-S (WoS).
The contents of this publication include every conceivable issue related to contamination, cleaning and surface preparation during mainstream large-scale integrated circuit manufacture. Typically, silicon is used as the main semiconductor substrate. However, other semiconducting materials such as SiGe and SiC are currently being used in the source-sink junction areas, and materials such as Ge and III-V compounds are being considered for the transistor channel region of future-generation devices.
Edited by: Bo Monemar, Martin Kittler, Hermann Grimmeiss
Online since: August 2008
Description: Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters BCI (WoS).
This special-topic volume‚ Advances in Light-Emitting Materials’, makes an important contribution to the field of silicon and III-nitride semiconductors. It begins with a brief history of visible-light emitting diodes. However, silicon is currently expanding from micro-electronics and into photonics. Due to its unsuitable band-gap, it has not previously been the material-of-choice for opto-electronic integration. That is now beginning to change and silicon devices have been developed which have the capability to emit, modulate, guide and detect light and which can be combined with microelectronics to form electronic and photonic integrated circuits.
Edited by: Dr. Paul W. Mertens, Marc Meuris and Marc Heyns
Online since: November 2007
Description: Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters CPCI-S (WoS).
This collection of 86 peer-reviewed papers covers all aspects of the use of ultra-clean technology for large-scale integration on semiconductors, and cleaning and contamination-control in both front-end-of-line (FEOL) and back-end-of-line (BEOL) processing.
Edited by: Gordon Davies and Maria Helena Nazaré
Online since: December 1997
Description: Modern Technology depends upon silicon chips, and life as we know it would hardly be possible without semiconductor devices. Control over a given semiconductor's electronic properties is achieved via defect engineering, and the scientific and technical challenges in this field are manifold.
Volume is indexed by Thomson Reuters CPCI-S (WoS).
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