Low Temprature Growth of Silicon Dioxide Films: A Study of Chemical Bonding by Ellipsometry and Infrared Spectroscopy.
Abstract
This paper presents a spectroscopic study using the techniques of ellipsometry and infrared (ir) absorption spectroscopy of the chemical bonding in silicon dioxide (SiO2) films grown in dry oxygen ambients at temperatures between 550 and 1000 C. We find that the index of refraction at 632.8 nm increases and the frequency of the dominant ir active bond-stretching vibration at about 1075/cm decreases as the growth temperature is decreased below 1000 C. Comparing the properties of these films with suboxides (SiOx, x <) grown by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), and compacted bulk silica has lead us to conclude; (a) that films grown at temperatures at or below 1000C are homogeneous stoichiometric oxides (SiO2); and (b) that the systematic and correlated variations in the index of refraction and the ir frequency result from increases in the film density with decreasing growth temperature. We present a microscopic model that accounts for; (a) the increases in the density and the index of refractions; and (b) the accompanying decrease in the ir stretching frequency in terms of a decrease in the Si-O-Si bond angle.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jul 29, 1986
- Accession Number
- ADA171735
Entities
People
- E. A. Irene
- G. Lucovsky
- J. K. Srivastava
- M. J. Manitini
Organizations
- North Carolina State University