GADEST 2007 Selected, peer reviewed papers from Gettering and Defect Engineering in Semiconductor Technology - GADEST 2007" held from 14th to 19th October 2007 in Italy at the EMFCSC
Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Gettering and Defect Engineering In Semiconductor Technology (GADEST '91), Frankfurt, Germany, October 1991
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Gettering and Defect Engineering in Semiconductor Technology (GADEST '89) held at Garzau, GDR, October 1989
This collection comprises 117 peerreviewed papers invited from over 70 research institutions in more than 25 countries. These papers, written by internationally recognized experts in the field, review the current state-of-the-art and predict future trends in their respective authors'fields of research. Fundamental aspects, as well as technological problems associated with defects in electronic materials and devices, are addressed The collection is divided into the chapters: Crystalline silicon for solar cells: single crystals, multi-crystalline Si, ribbons, Si thin films on substrates; Silicon-based materials and advanced semiconductor materials (strained Si, SOI, SiGe, SiC, Ge); Impurities (oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, fluorine, metals) in Si; Modeling/simulation of defects in Si/semiconductors; Defect engineering in microelectronics and photovoltaics; Gettering and passivation techniques; Defect and impurity characterization (physical and electrical); Si-based Nanostructures (nanocrystals, nanowires, nanodevices); Silicon-based heterostructures and optoelectronics. Essential reading for those wanting to keep up with the field.
Gettering Defects in Semiconductors fulfills three basic purposes: – to systematize the experience and research in exploiting various gettering techniques in microelectronics and nanoelectronics; – to identify new directions in research, particularly to enhance the perspective of professionals and young researchers and specialists; – to fill a gap in the contemporary literature on the underlying semiconductor-material theory. The authors address not only well-established gettering techniques but also describe contemporary trends in gettering technologies from an international perspective. The types and properties of structural defects in semiconductors, their generating and their transforming mechanisms during fabrication are described. The primary emphasis is placed on classifying and describing specific gettering techniques, their specificity arising from both their position in a general technological process and the regimes of their application. This book addresses both engineers and material scientists interested in semiconducting materials theory and also undergraduate and graduate students in solid–state microelectronics and nanoelectronics. A comprehensive list of references provides readers with direction for further reading.
The development of solid state devices began a little more than a century ago, with the discovery of the electrical conductivity of ionic solids. Today, solid state technologies form the background of the society in which we live. The aim of this book is threefold: to present the background physical chemistry on which the technology of semiconductor devices is based; secondly, to describe specific issues such as the role of defects on the properties of solids, and the crucial influence of surface properties; and ultimately, to look at the physics and chemistry of semiconductor growth processes, both at the bulk and thin-film level, together with some issues relating to the properties of nano-devices. Divided into five chapters, it covers: Thermodynamics of solids, including phases and their properties and structural order Point defects in semiconductors Extended defects in semiconductors and their interactions with point defects and impurities Growth of semiconductor materials Physical chemistry of semiconductor materials processing With applications across all solid state technologies,the book is useful for advanced students and researchers in materials science, physics, chemistry, electrical and electronic engineering. It is also useful for those in the semiconductor industry.
Proceedings of the San Francisco meeting of April-May 1992. Papers emphasize deliberate and controlled introduction and manipulation of defects in order to engineer some desired properties in semiconductor materials and devices. Topics include: defects in bulk crystals, and in thin films; defect characterization; hydrogen interaction; processing induction of defects; quantum wells; ion implantation. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR