Measuring sub-surface spatially varying thermal conductivity of silicon implanted with krypton

Author:

Pfeifer Thomas W.1ORCID,Tomko John A.1ORCID,Hoglund Eric2ORCID,Scott Ethan A.13ORCID,Hattar Khalid3,Huynh Kenny4,Liao Michael4ORCID,Goorsky Mark4ORCID,Hopkins Patrick E.125

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, USA

2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, USA

3. Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185, USA

4. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California—Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA

5. Department of Physics, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, USA

Abstract

The thermal properties of semiconductors following exposure to ion irradiation are of great interest for the cooling of electronic devices; however, gradients in composition and structure due to irradiation often make the measurement difficult. Furthermore, the nature of spatial variations in thermal resistances due to spatially varying ion irradiation damage is not well understood. In this work, we develop an advancement in the analysis of time-domain thermoreflectance to account for spatially varying thermal conductivity in a material resulting from a spatial distribution of defects. We then use this method to measure the near-surface ([Formula: see text]1 [Formula: see text]m) thermal conductivity of silicon wafers irradiated with Kr+ ions, which has an approximate Gaussian distribution centered 260 nm into the sample. Our numerical analysis presented here allows for the spatial gradient of thermal conductivity to be extracted via what is fundamentally a volumetric measurement technique. We validate our findings via transmission electron microscopy, which is able to confirm the spatial variation of the sub-surface silicon structure, and provide additional insight into the local structure resulting from the effects of ion bombardment. Thermal measurements found the ion stopping region to have a nearly 50[Formula: see text] reduction in thermal conductivity as compared to pristine silicon, while TEM showed the region was not fully amorphized. Our results suggest this drastic reduction in silicon thermal conductivity is primarily driven by structural defects in crystalline regions along with boundary scattering between amorphous and crystalline regions, with a negligible contribution being due to implanted krypton ions themselves.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

Reference71 articles.

1. J. Wood, “Ion implantation,” in Encyclopedia of Materials: Science and Technology, edited by K. H. Jürgen Buschow, R. W. Cahn, M. C. Flemings, B. Ilschner, E. J. Kramer, S. Mahajan, and P. Veyssière (Elsevier, Oxford, 2001), pp. 4284–4286.

2. Ion beams in silicon processing and characterization

3. Lattice Strain Measurements in Hydrogen Implanted Materials for Layer Transfer Processes

4. NRC, “NRC information notice 2009–23, supplement 1: Nuclear fuel thermal conductivity degredation” (2012), pp. 1–4.

5. D. M. Sawyer and J. I. Vette “Ap-8 trapped proton environment for solar maximum and solar minimum,” Technical Report (1976), available at https://www.osti.gov/biblio/7094195.

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