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Journal article

Visible photoluminescence from helium-ion implanted carbon in silicon

Abstract

Silicon wafers implanted with 30 keV He ions at room temperature in a low pressure hydrocarbon atmosphere exhibited visible photoluminescence. The samples were characterized by Raman, infrared, transmission electron microscopy, and heavy ion elastic recoil detection analysis. Two different layers were distinguishable on top of the silicon, with the upper layer comprising mostly amorphous carbon, as confirmed on a similarly implanted Be sample. Green photoluminescence was found to arise from the thinner a-Si1−xCx:H interface layer. Such a buried intermixed layer could be incorporated into a stable visible light emitting device based on crystalline silicon.

Authors

Lockwood DJ; Labbé HJ; Siegele R; Haugen HK

Journal

Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 78, No. 10, pp. 6185–6188

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Publication Date

November 15, 1995

DOI

10.1063/1.360563

ISSN

0021-8979

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