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1.
B‐doped Si multiple delta‐layers (MDL) were developed as certified reference materials (CRM) for secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) depth profiling analysis. Two CRMs with different delta‐layer spacing were grown by ion beam sputter deposition (IBSD). The nominal spacing of the MDL for shallow junction analysis is 10 nm and that for high energy SIMS is 50 nm. The total thickness of the film was certified by high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR‐TEM). The B‐doped Si MDLs can be used to evaluate SIMS depth resolution and to calibrate the depth scale. A consistency check of the calibration of stylus profilometers for measurement of sputter depth is another possible application. The crater depths measured by a stylus profilometer showed a good linear relationship with the thickness measured from SIMS profiling using the calibrated film thickness for depth scale calibration. The sputtering rate of the amorphous Si thin film grown by sputter deposition was found to be the same as that of the crystalline Si substrate, which means that the sputtering rate measured with these CRMs can be applied to a real analysis of crystalline Si. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
The possibilities of quantitative secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) depth profiling of Al in AlxGa1 ? xN/AlN/GaN transistor heterostructures are shown. Using a series of test structures for a TOF.SIMS‐5 time‐of‐flight mass spectrometer, we obtained a refined linear calibration dependence of the secondary‐ion yield on the composition ×, namely, Y(CsAl+)/Y(CsGa+) = K × x/(1 ? x), with a high linear correlation coefficient, Rl = 0.9996, which permits quantitative SIMS analysis of relatively thick AlGaN barrier layers. The method of profile reconstruction with allowance for the main artifacts of ion sputtering has been first applied for the analysis of GaN/AlGaN/AlN/GaN high electron mobility transistor structure. This method permits to perform quantitative analysis of the thickness and composition of a nanometer‐thin AlN sublayer and to estimate the measurement error. For the structure being studied, the AlN sublayer is 1.2 ± 0.2 nm thick. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Sputter depth profiles of an Rh/C microscopically modulated thin film (double layer thickness 7 nm) were obtained by low energy SIMS and SNMS. The depth resolution was obtained using the linear superposition of error functions at the interfaces. In optimal cases the depth resolution was shown to be of the order of 1–2 nm for both techniques.  相似文献   

4.
We propose a new approach to express SIMS depth profiling on a TOF.SIMS‐5 time‐of‐flight mass spectrometer. The approach is based on the instrument capability to independently perform raster scans of sputter and probe ion beams. The probed area can be much smaller than the diameter of a sputter ion beam, like in the AES depth profiling method. This circumstance alleviates limitations on the sputter beam–raster size relation, which are critical in other types of SIMS, and enables analysis on a curved‐bottomed sputter crater. By considerably reducing the raster size, it is possible to increase the depth profiling speed by an order of magnitude without radically degrading the depth resolution. A technique is proposed for successive improvement of depth resolution through profile recovery with account for the developing curvature of the sputtered crater bottom in the probed area. Experimental study of the crater bottom form resulted in implementing a method to include contribution of the instrumental artifacts in a nonstationary depth resolution function within the Hofmann's mixing–roughness–information depth model. The real‐structure experiment has shown that the analysis technique combining reduction of a raster size with a successive nonstationary recovery ensures high speed of profiling at ~100 µm/h while maintaining the depth resolution of about 30 nm at a 5 µm depth. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
Matrix effects are crucial for analyses using time‐of‐flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF‐SIMS) in terms of quantitative analysis, depth profiling and imaging. It is often difficult to predict how co‐existing materials will influence each other before such analysis. However, matrix effects need to be curtailed in order to assume the appropriate amount of a target material in a sample. First, matrix effects on different types of organic mixed samples, including a sample composed of Irganox 1010 and Irganox 1098 (MMK sample) and another composed of Irganox 1010 and Fmoc‐pentafluoro‐L‐phenylalanine (MMF sample), were observed utilizing ToF‐SIMS and the dependence of the secondary ion polarity of the matrix effects on the same sample was evaluated. Next, the correction method for the ToF‐SIMS matrix effects proposed by Shard et al. was applied to a comparison of the positive secondary ion results to the negative ones. The matrix effects on the positive ion data in both samples were different from those on the negative ion data. The matrix effect correction method worked effectively on both the negative and positive depth profiles. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
The accuracy of ultrashallow depth profiling was studied by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and high‐resolution Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy (HRBS) to obtain reliable depth profiles of ultrathin gate dielectrics and ultrashallow dopant profiles, and to provide important information for the modeling and process control of advanced complimentary metal‐oxide semiconductor (CMOS) design. An ultrathin Si3N4/SiO2 stacked layer (2.5 nm) and ultrashallow arsenic implantation distributions (3 keV, 1 × 1015 cm?2) were used to explore the accuracy of near‐surface depth profiles measured by low‐energy O2+ and Cs+ bombardment (0.25 and 0.5 keV) at oblique incidence. The SIMS depth profiles were compared with those by HRBS. Comparison between HRBS and SIMS nitrogen profiles in the stacked layer suggested that SIMS depth profiling with O2+ at low energy (0.25 keV) and an impact angle of 78° provides accurate profiles. For the As+‐implanted Si, the HRBS depth profiles clearly showed redistribution in the near‐surface region. In contrast, those by the conventional SIMS measurement using Cs+ primary ions at oblique incidence were distorted at depths less than 5 nm. The distortion resulted from a long transient caused by the native oxide. To reduce the transient behavior and to obtain more accurate depth profiles in the near‐surface region, the use of O2+ primary ions was found to be effective, and 0.25 keV O2+ at normal incidence provided a more reliable result than Cs+ in the near‐surface region. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
The sputter damage profiles of Si(100) by low‐energy O2+ and Ar+ ion bombardment at various angles of incidence were measured using medium‐energy ion scattering spectroscopy. It was observed that the damaged Si surface layer can be minimized down to 0.5–0.6 nm with grazing‐incident 500 eV Ar+ and O2+ ions at 80°. To illustrate how the damaged layer thickness can be decreased down to 0.5 nm, molecular dynamics simulations were used. The SIMS depth resolution estimated with trailing‐edge decay length for a Ga delta‐layer in Si with grazing‐incident 650 eV O2+ was 0.9 nm, which is in good agreement with the measured damaged layer thickness. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

8.
An indirect, compositional depth profiling of an inorganic multilayer system using a helium low temperature plasma (LTP) containing 0.2% (v/v) SF6 was evaluated. A model multilayer system consisting of four 10 nm layers of silicon separated by four 50 nm layers of tungsten was plasma‐etched for (10, 20, 30) s at substrate temperatures of (50, 75, and 100) °C to obtain crater walls with exposed silicon layers that were then visualized using time‐of‐flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF‐SIMS) to determine plasma‐etching conditions that produced optimum depth resolutions. At a substrate temperature of 100 °C and an etch time of 10 s, the FWHM of the second, third, and fourth Si layers were (6.4, 10.9, and 12.5) nm, respectively, while the 1/e decay lengths were (2.5, 3.7, and 3.9) nm, matching those obtained from a SIMS depth profile. Though artifacts remain that contribute to degraded depth resolutions, a few experimental parameters have been identified that could be used to reduce their contributions. Further studies are needed, but as long as the artifacts can be controlled, plasma etching was found to be an effective method for preparing samples for compositional depth profiling of both organic and inorganic films, which could pave the way for an indirect depth profile analysis of inorganic–organic hybrid structures that have recently evolved into innovative next‐generation materials. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
A simple model which describes the essential features commonly observed in a molecular sputter depth profile is presented. General predictions of the dependence of measured molecular ion signals on the primary ion fluence are derived for the specific case where a mass spectrometric technique such as SIMS or secondary neutral mass spectrometry (SNMS) is used to analyze the momentary surface. The results are compared with recent experimental data on molecular depth profiles obtained by cluster‐ion‐initiated SIMS of organic overlayers. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
The mixing roughness information depth model is frequently used for the quantification of sputter depth profiles. In general, the solution of the convolution integral for any kind of in‐depth distributions is achieved by numerical methods. For a thin delta layer, an analytical depth resolution function is presented, which enables a simple and user‐friendly quantification of measured delta layer profiles in AES, XPS and SIMS. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
 A suitable fibre coating is essential to obtain optimal fibre-matrix interaction in fibre-strengthened composite materials. Thin films (∼100 nm) of silicon carbide, turbostratic carbon, and boron nitride were deposited by CVD as single or double layers on commercial multi-filament fibres in a continuous process. The fibre material itself may be carbon, alumina, silicon carbide, or a quaternary ceramic of SiCBN. The application of MCs+-SIMS enables one to determine the composition (including impurities of H and O) of various fibre coating materials with an accuracy of at least 20% relative. Due to the special geometry of the multi-filament samples the depth resolution of the SIMS depth profiles is limited, nevertheless, layered structures and some details of the interface between coating and fibre can be studied. The depth calibration of the SIMS depth profiles is derived from sputter rates established on flat samples with a composition similar to that of the fibre coating material. However, the obtained film thicknesses are not extremely different from the values derived from TEM on cross sections of coated fibres.  相似文献   

12.
Based on a brief review of the well‐established framework of definitions, measurement and evaluation principles of the depth resolution in sputter profiling for interfaces, delta layers, single layers and multilayers, an extension to additional definitions is presented, which include the full‐width‐at‐half‐maximum of layer profiles and non‐Gaussian depth resolution functions as defined by the Mixing‐Roughness‐Information depth (MRI) model. Improved evaluation methods for adequate analysis of sputter depth profiles as well as improved definitions of depth resolution are introduced in order to meet new developments in ToF‐SIMS and GDOES, and in cluster ion sputtering of so‐called delta layers in organic matrices. In conclusion, the full‐width‐at‐half‐maximum definition and measurement of depth resolution, Δz(FWHM), is found to be more appropriate than the traditional Δz(16–84%) in order to characterize depth profiles of single layers and multilayers, because it is also valid for non‐Gaussian depth resolution functions. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Sputter‐depth profiles of model organic thin films on silicon using C60 primary ions have been employed to measure sputtering yields and depth resolution parameters. We demonstrate that some materials (polylactide, Irganox 1010) have a constant and high sputtering yield, which varies linearly with the primary ion energy, whereas another material (Alq3) has lower, fluence‐dependent sputtering yields. Analysis of multi‐layered organic thin films reveals that the depth resolution is a function of both primary ion energy and depth, and the sputtering yield depends on the history of sputtering. We also show that ~30% of repeat units are damaged in the steady‐state regime during polylactide sputtering. Crown Copyright © 2006. Reproduced with the permission of Her Majesty's Stationery Office. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
Silicon oxynitride has been used as a shallow gate oxide material for microelectronics and its thickness has been reduced over the years to only a few tens of angstroms due to device size scaling. The nitride distribution and density characteristic in the gate oxide thus becomes imperative for the devices. The shallow depth profiling capability using time‐of‐flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF‐SIMS) has huge potential for the nitrogen characterization of the shallow gate oxide film. In this article, both positive and negative spectra of TOF‐SIMS on silicon oxynitride have been extensively studied and it was found that the silicon nitride clusters SixN? (x = 1–4) are able to represent the nitrogen profiles because their ion yields are high enough, especially for the low‐level nitride doping in the oxide, which is formed by the annealing of nitric oxide on SiO2/Si. The gate oxide thickness measured by the TOF‐SIMS profiling method using 18O or CsO profile calibration was found to correlate very well with transmission electron microscope measurement. The nitrogen concentration in the gate oxide measured using the TOF‐SIMS method was consistent with the results obtained using the dynamic SIMS method, which is currently applied to relatively thicker oxynitride films. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed multiple short‐period delta layers as a reference material for SIMS ultra‐shallow depth profiling. Boron nitride delta layers and silicon spacer layers were sputter‐deposited alternately, with a silicon spacer thickness of 1–5 nm. These delta‐doped layers were used to measure the sputtering rate change in the initial stage of oxygen ion bombardment. A significant variation of sputtering rate was observed in the initial 3 nm or less. The sputtering rate in the initial 3 nm was estimated to be about four times larger than the steady‐state value for 1000 eV oxygen ions. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
The oxidation of iron (Fe) by water (D2O) vapour at low pressures and room temperature was investigated using time‐of‐flight (ToF) SIMS. The results supported those found previously using XPS and the QUASES? program in that a duplex oxide structure was found containing a thin outer surface hydroxide (Fe(OD)2) layer over an inner oxide (FeO) layer. The extraordinary depth resolution of the ToF‐SIMS profiles assisted in identifying the two phases; this resolution was achieved by compensation for surface roughness. A substantial concentration of deuterium was found in the subsurface oxide layer. This observation confirmed previous assessments that the formation of FeO was from the reaction of Fe(OD)2 with outward‐diffusing Fe, leaving deuterium as a reaction product. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

17.
We present the results of a VAMAS (Versailles project on Advanced Materials and Standards) interlaboratory study on organic depth profiling, in which twenty laboratories submitted data from a multilayer organic reference material. Individual layers were identified using a range of different sputtering species (C60n+, Cs+, SF5+ and Xe+), but in this study only the C60n+ ions were able to provide truly ‘molecular’ depth profiles from the reference samples. The repeatability of profiles carried out on three separate days by participants was shown to be excellent, with a number of laboratories obtaining better than 5% RSD (relative standard deviation) in depth resolution and sputtering yield, and better than 10% RSD in relative secondary ion intensities. Comparability between laboratories was also good in terms of depth resolution and sputtering yield, allowing useful relationships to be found between ion energy, sputtering yield and depth resolution. The study has shown that organic depth profiling results can, with care, be compared on a day‐to‐day basis and between laboratories. The study has also validated three approaches that significantly improve the quality of organic depth profiling: sample cooling, sample rotation and grazing angles of ion incidence. © Crown copyright 2010.  相似文献   

18.
We attempted to make an accurate depth profiling in secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) including backside SIMS for ultra‐thin nanometer order layer. The depth profiles for HfO2 layers that were 3 and 5 nm thick in a‐Si/HfO2/Si were measured using quadrupole and magnetic sector type SIMS instruments. The depth profiling for an ultra‐thin layer with a high depth resolution strongly depends on how the crater‐edge and knock‐on effects can be properly reduced. Therefore, it is important to control the analyzing conditions, such as the primary ion energy, the beam focusing size, the incidence angle, the rastered area, and detected area to reduce these effects. The crater‐edge effect was significantly reduced by fabricating the sample into a mesa‐shaped structure using a photolithography technique. The knock‐on effect will be serious when the depth of the layer of interest from the surface is located within the depth of the ion mixing region due to the penetration of the primary ions. Finally, we were able to separately assign the origin of the distortion to the crater‐edge effect and knock‐on effect. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
Reconstruction of original element distribution at semiconductor interfaces using experimental SIMS profiles encounters considerable difficulties because of the matrix effect, sputtering rate change at the interface, and also a sputtering‐induced broadening of original distributions. We performed a detailed depth profiling analysis of the Al step‐function distribution in GaAs/AlxGa1?xAs heterostructures by using Cs+ primary ion beam sputtering and CsM+ cluster ion monitoring (where M is the element of interest) to suppress the matrix effect. The experimental Depth Resolution Function (DRF) was obtained by differentiation of the Al step‐function profile and compared with the ‘reference’ DRF found from depth profiling of an Al delta layer. The difference between two experimental DRFs was explained by the sputtering rate change during the interface profiling. We experimentally studied the sputtering rate dependence on the AlxGa1?xAs layer composition and applied it for a reconstruction of the DRF found by differentiating the Al step‐function distribution: the ‘reconstructed’ and ‘reference’ DRFs were found to be in good agreement. This confirmed the correctness of the treatment elaborated. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
Principal component analysis (PCA) and other multivariate analysis methods have been used increasingly to analyse and understand depth profiles in X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). These methods have proved equally useful in fundamental studies as in applied work where speed of interpretation is very valuable. Until now these methods have been difficult to apply to very large datasets such as spectra associated with 2D images or 3D depth‐profiles. Existing algorithms for computing PCA matrices have been either too slow or demanded more memory than is available on desktop PCs. This often forces analysts to ‘bin’ spectra on much more coarse a grid than they would like, perhaps even to unity mass bins even though much higher resolution is available, or select only part of an image for PCA analysis, even though PCA of the full data would be preferred. We apply the new ‘random vectors’ method of singular value decomposition proposed by Halko and co‐authors to time‐of‐flight (ToF)SIMS data for the first time. This increases the speed of calculation by a factor of several hundred, making PCA of these datasets practical on desktop PCs for the first time. For large images or 3D depth profiles we have implemented a version of this algorithm which minimises memory needs, so that even datasets too large to store in memory can be processed into PCA results on an ordinary PC with a few gigabytes of memory in a few hours. We present results from ToFSIMS imaging of a citrate crystal and a basalt rock sample, the largest of which is 134GB in file size corresponding to 67 111 mass values at each of 512 × 512 pixels. This was processed into 100 PCA components in six hours on a conventional Windows desktop PC. © 2015 The Authors. Surface and Interface Analysis published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.  相似文献   

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