Effects of minor addition of N<sub>2</sub>/O<sub>2</sub> impurities on silicon nanostructure formation behavior in hydrogen plasma process
POSTER
Abstract
We have developed various Si processing techniques using a relatively high-pressure hydrogen plasma (> 3 kPa). In the course of developments, we found that hydrogen plasma treatment with minor air addition led to a micrometer-scale cone structure on the Si surface. Since this obtained surface showed very low reflectance (0.5%), this hydrogen plasma technique is expected to apply to high-performance photoelectric devices. In this study, we investigated the impacts of minor N2/O2 gas addition (flow rate concentration < 1%) into hydrogen plasma on the obtained Si surface morphology after the plasma process. As a result, we revealed that a small amount of N2 addition resulted in pillar Si nanostructure formation with rounded tips. On the other hand, O2 addition led to minor roughening Si surface. In addition, when the N2 and O2 were simultaneously supplied to the process atmosphere, the high-aspect-ratio Si nanocone could be obtained. The optical emission spectra of the plasma implied that minor O2 addition enhanced atomic hydrogen generation in the plasma. This result suggests that O2 addition promotes the formation of sharp-tipped nanocone structure through enhancement of chemical etching by atomic hydrogen.
Presenters
-
Toshimitsu Nomura
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University
Authors
-
Toshimitsu Nomura
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University
-
Naoki Tamura
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University
-
Ken Sakamoto
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University
-
Hiroaki Kakiuchi
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University
-
Hiromasa Ohmi
Department of Precision Engineering, Osaka University