Comparison of three different boron doping techniques.
\r\n\tRisk management aims to develop an efficient organizational development environment through risk planning, assessment, analysis, and control. This process will apply in all areas of activity, and the evaluation framework is the same regardless of the field. This volume will aim to appeal to chapters that address methods, models, evaluation frameworks, benefits, barriers, and other dimensions of risk management.
\r\n\tSustainability and the circular economy are approaches approached by many companies and have become activities of global interest. Protecting the environment, streamlining the consumption of organizational resources, reducing the amount of waste generated, and other activities are objectives of these efforts. The circular economy contributes to the sustainable development of the company or country and the achievement of the global objectives of sustainable development. This book will aim to collect various studies for organizational and global sustainability.
\r\n\tLeadership has become a globally desirable approach that can help improve organizational competitiveness and reduce organizational risks. Risks and barriers in risk-free management can be well managed through effective organizational leadership. This book will aim to bring together chapters that explore different areas of leadership.
Due to both practical and theoretical reasons, the properties and the possible preparation techniques of chiral compounds are investigated in ever widening fields of research, applying various examination methods [1, 2]. It is a great challenge for some researchers if the goal is to find a simple, inexpensive, economical and also patentable preparation of a given chiral compound (single enantiomer), for example according to the demands of the industrial production or drug discovery. Although nowadays several alternative synthetic pathways can be found for the preparation of a given single enantiomer, most probably in most cases the break-up of a certain racemic composition [3], leading to the synthesis of the final product, followed by the purification of the mixture, is applied [1, 2, 4]. In most cases, mixtures of diastereomers received with appropriate resolving agents, or mixtures of enantiomers isolated thereof, have to be separated. It is common in the two separation methods, that the distribution of the mixtures between two phases, and the phase separation can be applied [4, 5, 6]. However, the phase distribution of the mixtures of chiral compounds is not linear, but the distributions follow the binary melting phase diagrams of the mixtures, or the ternary phase diagrams characteristic also for the applied solvent [7, 8].
Besides the effect of the applied solvents, the phase distribution of the mixtures is also determined by kinetic or thermodynamic control [9]. The phase distribution is also determined by the eutectic composition of the chiral molecules in the mixtures [10, 11]. The equilibrium of the supramolecular helical structures, which participate in the phase distribution, determines the formation of the phase equilibriums [12]. A remarkable consequence of the effect of the helical structures is that the mirror-image macroscopic enantiomers form not only mirror-image crystals, but by attaching together, mirror-image helical crystals are formed [13, 14]. At the same time, mainly one of the helicities can be attributed to a given enantiomer, most probably this is the reason behind the results of separations. In the followings, the most characteristic examples of the above-mentioned methods will be discussed.
The enantiomeric mixtures form crystals of a given helicity corresponding to the major configuration (Scheme 1).
Purification of enantiomeric mixtures of threonine from water (ee0 ≠ 0).
In case of purification of enantiomeric mixtures of threonine was observed, that the majority of crystals have a convolution corresponding to the helical structure of the excess, while the minor enantiomer, crystallized near the excess, have the opposite convolution. The ratio between the major and minor helical crystals is in good correlation with the eutectic composition of the enantiomeric mixture of threonine. So the eutectic composition (eeEu) precipitates during evaporation, dominated by the helicity of the excess, along with the crystallization of the minor enantiomer as well.
Mirror-image crystals are formed from the supramolecular helical structures, which contain one of the enantiomer in excess. The helicity of the crystals is determined by the optical rotation of the enantiomer in excess [13, 14].
The ethanol solution of the conglomerate racemic
Application of particle-size-controlled crystallization for resolution.
According to Soloshonok et al., the SDE (self disproportionation of enantiomers) appears in three main areas: gravitational field, phase transition, and the achiral chromatography [17]. Basically, the gravity-based SDE applies the differences in crystal density. The racemate enantiomeric mixture can be considered as the mechanical mixture of the racemic and enantiopure crystals, which can have different crystal densities. This difference can be applied for the separation of the racemic and enantiopure fraction. For example, from a enantiomeric mixture of phenylalanine (
Application of density difference for the purification of enantiomeric mixtures.
Based on these results, separation of amino acid enantiomeric mixtures was carried out via density gradient ultracentrifugation, applying an iodinated gradient (
In the case of phase transitions, the SDE phenomenon is not uniform, it highly depends on the type of the phase transition [17].
In the case of the recrystallization of enantiomeric mixtures, by plotting the enantiomeric purity of the solid phase in function of the starting enantiomeric purity, a curve similar to binary and ternary phase diagrams can be obtained (
Typical curve received from the recrystallization of a conglomerate-type enantiomer mixture (
A possible mechanism of the recrystallization of racemate-type enantiomeric mixtures is described by Tamura [24, 25, 26, 27, 28].
In the case of mandelic acid, the vapor phase has a eutectic composition, which is independent from the composition of the starting mixture and this composition will sublimate [29]. Independently from the preparation of the starting mixture, enantiomeric mixtures of mandelic acid of 30–54% enantiomeric purity were received as sublimates (Scheme 5), which approximates well the eutectic composition determined from the binary and ternary phase diagrams of mandelic acid (
Sublimation of enantiomer mixtures of mandelic acid (MA).
During the distillation of enantiomer mixtures of isopropyl-(
Separation of enantiomer mixtures by distillation.
The SDE phenomenon prevails in the case of enantiomeric enrichment by achiral chromatography. Applying achiral stationary phase and an appropriate eluent, the enantiomeric mixtures can be separated to a polar and a less polar phase, which have different enantiomer purity from the staring composition due to the formation of homo- and heterochiral associations. For example, an enantiomeric mixture of
Purification of enantiomeric mixture of
Such a separation was first described by Cundy and Crooks [40], but this method is applied by others as well, for the purification of enantiomeric mixtures [17, 41].
After partial liberation of the achiral salt of the enantiomeric mixtures, the purity of the received enantiomeric mixture may be different from the starting composition. By the addition of base equivalent to the enantiomeric excess to the hydrochloric salt of the conglomerate
Fractionated precipitation of enantiomer mixture of Tisercin.
By the resolution of the racemic
Fractionated precipitation of
In the case of the fractionated precipitation of the enantiomer mixtures of
Fractionated precipitation of N-propionyl-phenylalanine.
With the combination of precipitation and extraction, for example by liberating a part of the enantiomer mixture in the mixture of water and a water-immiscible solvent, the free enantiomer will stay in the organic phase, while the salt in the water [45].
The purification of enantiomer mixtures can also be carried out by the transformation of the racemic percentage of the enantiomer mixture into solid phase as salt, followed by the distillation of the free enantiomeric excess [46, 47]. This method was applied in the case of enantiomer mixtures of salts of 1-phenylethyl-amine (
The racemic amlodipine with the chiral dicarboxylic tartaric acid crystallizes as the neutral salt of the racemic compound from solvents, without the presence of solvates or solvate-like molecules. Consequently, in the case of enantiomeric mixtures with achiral dicarboxylic acids, the crystallization of the neutral salt of the racemic percentage seemed to be logical.
To the enantiomeric mixture of AML in solution (in acetone), achiral fumaric acid (
Purification of enantiomeric mixture of amlodipine.
The salt of a chiral amine of supramolecular helical (double helix) structure and an achiral acid precipitates from the solvent (methanol) containing racemic alcohol as well, in the form of supramolecular helical crystals, which are composed of chiral amine, acid and one enantiomer of the racemic alcohol (Scheme 12) [49].
The salt of chiral base and achiral acid crystallizes with the appropriate enantiomer of racemic alcohol.
According to Kinbara, the most suitable resolving agent of a racemic molecule can be selected by the design of a stable hydrogen bond system [50]. Saigo et al. concluded after the analysis of several single crystals of pairs of diastereomeric salts, that the formed CH/π interactions play a significant role in the solubility difference of the diastereomers, which clearly influences the chiral recognition and thus the result of the separation [51, 52].
Others estimated well by quantum chemical computations the difference between the lattice energies of the pairs of diastereomeric salts, without preliminary knowledge on the crystal structure [53, 54]. However, it is confessed by the authors that these calculations need to be upgraded in order to be safely applicable in the search of resolving agents.
The conclusions drawn from the preparative results can facilitate the choice of the resolving agent. For example, it is already trivial, that very good separations can be reached with the application of a resolving agent of similar molecular structure (structurally related) to the racemic compound [10, 21, 55, 56, 57, 58].
Another approach construes the importance of the ratio of molecular lengths of the racemic molecule and the resolving agent instead of the structural similarity. According to Sakai, the author of the “space-filler concept,” the crystal-lattice of the less soluble diastereomer salt is influenced by the structural properties of the constituents of the salt (i.e., the enantiomer and the resolving agent), such as the molecular size. Sakai et al. investigated the relative molecular length of the racemic molecule and the resolving agent in course of resolutions of 1-aryl-alkylamines with 2-hydroxycarboxylic acids and vice versa (Scheme 13). Based on the results of 20 resolutions, the best separations of the racemic mixtures can be reached with the application of a resolving agent of similar molecular length [59].
Calculation of molecular length according to Sakai.
Other researchers considered the longest carbon-chain as the length of a molecule (Scheme 14). Based on the average of the results of 21 resolutions (
Calculation method of molecular length used by other researchers.
Average of enantiomeric excess values of enantiomeric mixtures separated from diastereomeric salt in function of the difference of molecular length.
Average of efficiency of resolution values of enantiomeric mixtures separated from diastereomeric salt in function of the difference of molecular length.
Besides the abovementioned 21 resolutions [10], carried out with structurally related resolving agents, the results of 28 additional resolutions [8, 18, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74] applying structurally nonrelated resolving agents were systematized (most of them were industrialized).
Based on the results of 49 resolutions, by plotting the average enantiomeric excess and efficiency of resolution values in function of the difference of molecular length, respectively, the following diagrams are received (Schemes 17 and 18). Accordingly, higher enantiomeric excess can be reached in case of higher difference of molecular length of the racemic compound and the resolving agent [75].
1-Aminoindane was successfully resolved with the application of nearly 0.5 equivalent aspartic acid (
Resolution of Rasagilin intermediate with (
For the resolution of racemic acids basic amino acids were also applied, for example (
Resolution of 2-chloro-mandelic acid with (S)-lysine.
With the application of equivalent amount of (
Resolution of mandelic acid with the application of mixtures of resolving agents according to the Pope-Peachey half-equivalent method.
Among the half-equivalent resolving agents, (
The racemic mandelic acid (
Resolution of mandelic acid with the mixture of (
After the resolution of
Resolution of
With the application of achiral additives, which are structurally related to the resolving agent, the efficiency of the enantiomer separations was significantly improved.
By changing the half of the phenylglycine methyl ester (
Resolution of N-acetyl-phenylglycine with 1-phenylethylamine and with benzylamine as achiral additive.
The resolution of racemic ibuprofen (IBU) with (
Effect of benzylamine on the resolution of racemic ibuprofen by scCO2 extraction.
Racemic 1-phenylethylamine (
Resolution of racemic 1-phenylethylamine in the presence of urea and its derivatives.
The resolution of racemic mandelic acid (
Resolution of mandelic acid with the application of amphoteric achiral additives.
The results were compared to experiments carried out with the application of solely half-equivalent resolving agent. In the case of (
In the case of resolution of amlodipine with (
Resolutions of amlodipine with (
Resolution of amlodipine with (
With the addition of urea, which has similar structure to the different solvates, to the resolving agent (
Resolution of amlodipine with (
One of the possibilities for the separation of mixtures of chiral compounds (enantiomers, diastereomers) is their nonlinear distribution between two phases. The phase-distribution depends on the starting mixture, which follows well the curves of the binary and ternary phase diagrams. The equilibrium processes between the supramolecular associates, formed from the chiral molecules, as well as the solubility equilibriums and the catalytic interactions of the formed crystals lead to the phase distribution of the mixtures. Most probably the helical structure of the associates, resulting in another mirror-image relation, determines their phase-distribution.
In the case of enantiomeric mixtures, the macroscopic manifestation of the helical associates is the formation of crystals of helical structure, related to the configuration of the enantiomer in excess. The phase-distribution is determined by the eutectic composition of one of the present chiral molecules through the effects of the solvent and the time-dependence of the phase equilibriums. The equilibriums can be affected by the partial replacement of the chiral compounds by structurally related chiral or achiral molecules.
It has a more beneficial effect, if the molecules composing the diastereomer have different size and bond lengths.
The authors thank the financial support of the Hungarian OTKA Foundation (K 124180 for E. Fogassy).
In semiconductor technology, doping is a process that introduces delicately controlled amounts of impurities (called dopants) into an intrinsic semiconductor to modify its electrical, optical, and structural properties significantly. The intrinsic semiconductors are pure semiconductors without impurities (typical semiconductors of group IV in the periodic table: Si and Ge), in which the number of excited electrons equals the number of holes. In the doping process, a dopant is added, which could play a role as either a donor to contribute an electron or an acceptor to create a hole with the semiconductor crystal that respectively generates two types of semiconductors: n-type and p-type. The dopants belonging to group III, such as boron (B), aluminum (Al), gallium (Ga), and indium (In), are referred to as acceptors for p-type semiconductors. Moreover, group V elements, including phosphorus (P), arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), bismuth (Bi), and lithium (Li), are donors to contribute free electrons in n-type semiconductors. Boron is a p-type dopant with only three electrons in its valence shell. During the boron incorporation process into the silicon crystal, the one atom of boron can bond with four silicon atoms. Still, since boron only has three free electrons to provide, a hole is created. This hole acts like a positive charge, so boron-doped (B-doped) semiconductors are referred to as p-type semiconductors (Figure 1a). In the p-type semiconductors, the holes, like the positive charge, attract electrons. But when an electron moves into a hole, the electron leaves a new hole in the previous position. Thus, in a boron-doped semiconductor, the holes constantly move around inside the crystal as electrons continuously try to fill them. This appears like the moving of the positive carrier.
Schematic of (a) boron-doped silicon, (b) an ion implanter, and (c) ion penetration path into a silicon substrate.
The unstoppable development of electronic technology demands the detailed design and effective performance of microelectronics. The formation of shallow and low resistivity junctions is required for contact resistance reduction and leakage current consideration. The precise control of dimension and dopant concentration of source/drain region to achieve a high shallow doping efficiency is crucial for junction fabrication [1, 2, 3]. Shallow doping could create doped layers with depths ranging about dozens of nanometers. It required low-energy ions for implantation by considering thermal redistribution [4]. At low energy, the penetrated navigation of ions was mainly directed along crystalline channels rather than moving randomly into semiconductors [5]. Boron is one of the essential dopants for shallow doping in silicon because of its good diffusivity [3].
Boron doping has grabbed attention for several decades. Studies can be classified as ion implantation, solid-phase doping, monolayer doping, and other methods such as sputtering and chemical solution mixing. These techniques are used widely in semiconductor technology. This chapter studied the characteristics of widely used and recently developing methods, such as monolayer doping, by showing the advantages and disadvantages of these doping techniques to give an overall sight of the doping methodology of boron, so it is easier to choose and use suitable doping techniques to meet a specific requirement in further boron-doping application.
Ion implantation is a material surface modification process by introducing a dopant, also called an impurity, into a solid substrate at a low temperature. In boron implantation, boron atoms are ionized into cations, which are accelerated and injected into a solid substrate at a depth from dozens to hundreds of nanometers by an intense electric field, consequently modifying the mechanical, chemical, or electrical properties of the target material [6, 7]. The usage of ion implantation in doping semiconductors was described first by William Shockley in 1954, but it gained noticeability only until the late 1970s and entered mass production [8]. Ion implantation has been used to dope boron in various semiconductors ranging from Si/Ge, 2D materials such as graphene, hBN, carbon nanotube, metal oxide, TiNi, TiAlNi, etc. An ion implant system, a so-called implanter, is very complicated that used to ionize, select, and accelerate ions for implantation, as shown in Figure 1(b).
It allows preciseness to control the penetration depth of boron atoms into the substrate in the ion implantation process. At first, the boron is ionized by electron impact in an ion source that contains a plasma generated by microwave radiation or radiofrequency (RF). The boron ions are extracted from the ion source using electromagnetic fields to form the ion beam, which is directed into a mass analyzer magnet. The beam is centered and bent at a right angle. The radius of the ion bend is determined by analyzing the ions’ electromagnetic field characteristics in a high vacuum environment to avoid the ambient gas molecules that could affect the mass-to-charge charge ratio. Therefore, boron ions are selected from different ions in the ion source to exit the mass analyzer using an electromagnetic lens. The ion beam of boron atoms is accelerated to high energies (toping up from sub-keV to MeV values) and steered to inject onto the target substrate using electromagnetic fields. This process must be carried out in a high vacuum environment to avoid the ambient gas molecules that could affect the linear free travel of the ions. When boron ion reaches the crystal surface, the penetration of boron ions into the crystal matrix is proportional to its angle of incidence and energy. The path of ions is not a linear line but follows a “lightning” line through the crystal (Figure 1c). The concentration of dopant atoms corresponds to the penetrated depth into the substrate obeying a Gaussian distribution as shown in Figure 2.
Representative dopant profile in a substrate undergoing ion implantation.
The average value of total path length is termed the range R that is considered at both horizontal and vertical motions. The average depth of profile is known as the projected range Rp, which featured for ion energy and mass of dopant with a standard deviation ΔRp. The ion concentration N(x) at depth x can be described by equation in Figure 2, where Np is peak concentration, Rp is the projected range, and ∆Rp is the standard deviation.
The implanted dose Q that is required to satisfy Np and Rp is calculated by the below Eq. (1):
The two factors affecting the boron implant process that can be controlled to adjust the implantation conditions are implant energy and boron dosage (fluence). These two parameters can examine the range (depth) distributions of implanted ions. Moreover, the characteristics of dopants are essential for the implant process. Unlike heavy ions formed by Sb, As, and P, light boron ions are transferred easily into the crystal, making boron ions stop at a more profound distance than at the same energy condition.
During the ion penetration, the irradiation energy is enough to break the lattice matrix of the semiconductor to create defects. Still, the atoms sometimes could not substitute lattice sites and could be stranded in interstitial positions. Post-implant annealing is vital to stimulate boron by replacing the boron atoms in the crystal lattice positions. This process will also help repair any damage induced in the crystal matrix by the extreme collisions of the high-energy boron ions and somewhat widen the allocation of boron [9]. Once situated into the lattice, boron will work as an acceptor to improve the electrical properties of original semiconductors.
Ion implantation in crystalline solid created the different types of defects, including (1) a Frenkel defect, a type of point defects in crystalline solid, are interstitials (self-interstitials), and vacancies (substitutional points) created from breaking lattice sites illustrated in Figure 3a (2) interstitial and vacancy clusters formed by the combination of interstitials and vacancies, (3) the complexes of defects-dopant resulting from the interaction between defects and dopants, (4) amorphous states, in which regular lattice is destroyed thoroughly after implantation. All these defect forms are determined in boron implanted silicon corresponded with different implantation conditions. Silicon interstitials are typically dominant defects that are created from boron implantation in silicon; besides that, we also found the existence of Si interstitial clusters, boron-Si interstitial clusters, which are products of the interaction of Si interstitials with each other, and Si interstitials with boron implanted atoms [10, 11, 12].
(a) The formation of a vacancy/interstitial pair of implantation damage in crystalline solid. (b) EOR dislocation loops that create at the a/c interface after solid-phase epitaxial regrowth.
Depending on implantation conditions (implantation dose, energy, and annealing), the implantation-annealing damage can also induce the formation of extended defects that are divided into three main types, including dislocation loops and rod-like defects {311} and stacking faults [14, 15, 16, 17]. The {311} defects are noticed with a long, thin rod-like shape; hence, they are also called rod-like defects. These rod-like defects are collections of silicon atom ribbons that arrange lying on {311} planes and extend in the <110> directions to create planar defects. The dislocation loops, like its name, are the deformed structural defects formed by the precipitation of an extra circular atomic layer of silicon atoms on a {111} plane. The stacking faults are crystallographic defects resulting from the disordering of stacking planes [16, 18]. These extended defects are different forms of Si interstitial clusters formed from the combination of Si interstitials, and they can survive even after thermal annealing [19].
Apart from implantation defects, a dopant diffusion phenomenon was found during annealing, and it is enormously different from normal equilibrium diffusion. They discovered that this phenomenon was more vital than at low temperatures of annealing and slowed down at higher temperatures. By its features, this phenomenon has been named Transient Enhanced Diffusion (TED) since the 1980s [16]. TED is one of the main problems affecting the reduction of boron activation during thermal annealing. The enhanced boron diffusion causes the spreading of the boron profile and the deepening of the junction. It has been found that TED has a profound relationship with the presence of excess Si-self-interstitials in silicon [11].
High-energy implantation is typically favored to obtain superconductors. However, this could cause the lattice disorder after implantation. The structural damages caused by boron implantation at high energies in silicon were investigated and classified. They found three regions of the damaged layer that are situated along with the silicon’s depth: the near-surface crystalline region, the severely damaged region, and the tail zone of the damaged layer after boron implantation at 1 × 1015 ions/cm2 [15]. In other materials, such as diamonds, the accumulation of lattice defects is the main problem of ion implantation. The accumulation of multiple defects generated a lot of vacancies, represented by damage density (vacancies/cm3). A considerable damage density in diamonds is caused by high-energy boron implantation around MeV and the thermal annealing process rather than restoring the diamond structure, and it causes the graphitization in diamonds [20, 21, 22]. These defects resulted from the high-energy collision of boron ions into a solid substrate, which broke the lattice sites. In some boron implant cases, the ions could not activate and diffuse inside the semiconductor leading to the unsuccessful replacement of boron atoms in lattice points. This resulted in the less of electrical carriers in this semiconductor and the ineffective boron doping process.
The amorphization process regularly creates a bunch of extended defects. It also causes end-of-range (EOR) defects beyond the amorphous/crystalline interface. EOR defects produced during amorphization are more abundant in self-interstitials compared with extended defects created under non-amorphization conditions. The formation of the amorphous layer is investigated related to using high-dose boron implants. Suppose the implanted boron doses are more enormous than required. In that case, it produces a high density of defects (silicon interstitial and vacancies) that can accumulate into defect clusters and trigger the amorphization process. The interstitials are highly mobile; the amorphization process that occurs at low energy implantation can cause an out-diffusion of boron atoms and interstitials to the surface, which limits the fabrication of shallow junction. The loss of interstitials results in the failure of recrystallization during annealing [23, 24]. Boron implantation with a high dose causes the enhancement of the boron diffusion, which leads to inactive boron in silicon. Boron atoms are found that gather into clusters and substituted silicon atoms at a supersaturation condition of a boron implantation dose that was greater than 1.1 × 1019 ions/cm2. The boron diffusivity appeared in silicon that lowered the activation of boron, but annealing at high temperatures from 800°C to 1000°C in silicon retarded the boron diffusion in silicon and increased active boron concentration [25].
Moreover, the high implantation doses used to obtain high boron concentrations can cause amorphization of the implanted region [26]. In a study by Aradi et al., the significant increase of defect concentration at higher boron ion fluence of 1 × 1017 ions/cm2 caused a lattice disorder resulting in amorphization of h-BN material [27, 28]. Similarly, a report on implanting boron in Ge showed that high boron concentration exceeded the solid solubility limit and caused boron atoms to be immobile even after annealing treatment at high temperatures. Some research indicated that implantation induced defects that increase the diffusion of boron rather than retard the diffusion. Furthermore, using a high dose of boron can lead to precipitation of excess boron, which may reduce the boron diffusion. However, it still leaves boron atoms inactive because of the combination of boron with defects [20]. The defect clusters arise from the dissolution and erosion resulting from the recombination and out-diffusion of defects. Temperature conditions in boron implantation are also a factor affecting amorphization. The lattice damage at negative implantation temperatures is recorded that is more severe than implantation at room temperature. It was reported that the level of lattice disorder could be 20–30 times lower in room temperature implants than those implanted under cold conditions, for instance, −150°C. Lui et al. also found that boron implanted at a cold temperature of −100°C caused more implant damage by boron self-amorphization no matter the dose and implant energy [23, 29].
The post-annealing is an important process to repair the principal damage created by ion implantation, restore the lattice site to a perfect lattice state, and activate dopants into substitutional sites [9, 30]. After ion implantation, the semiconductor is usually so severely damaged; therefore, its electrical behavior is controlled by deep-level electron and hole traps where carriers are captured and increase the resistivity of the semiconductor. The subsequent annealing process is required to heal lattice damage and reside dopant atoms in substitutional positions. A suitable annealing treatment is very important, which resolves problems after implantation, including recrystallization, dopant activation, and diffusion depth. There are mainly two types of post-annealing: furnace thermal annealing and rapid thermal annealing (RTA) for ion implantation. During post-annealing, the repair and diffusion processes coincide, but their speeds vary depending on the annealing’s temperatures and time. The furnace thermal annealing is satisfied to supply a high temperature but requires a time furnace annealing of at least 15 min to ensure a practical operation. Therefore, the furnace annealing typically causes unnecessary boron diffusion. Rapid thermal annealing is used to heat implanted materials by different methods (with various heating-based lamps) in a rapid period from a hundred seconds to nanoseconds, which allows for minimizing the boron diffusion. The mechanism of thermal annealing to repair the lattice damage depends on damage levels in materials after implantation, and it relates closely to the boron activation.
At the beginning stages of annealing, the vacancy clusters and interstitial clusters are disbanded to release vacancies and interstitials. Most of the Frenkel pairs are removed in the initial stages of annealing, leaving interstitial-type defects, which freshly released after dopant atoms occupy lattice sites and kick Si interstitials out. These Si interstitials condense quickly into characteristic rod-like defect {311} clusters on annealing at temperatures over 400°C. When annealing at 900°C, the density of these {311} defects can increase rapidly to reach the peak and start to dissolve upon ongoing annealing due to the evaporation of Si interstitials [6].
If the damage is not severe, these rod-like defects dissolve absolutely, and the crystal structure recovers perfectly. Above severe damage level, the larger {311} defects can turn into stable dislocation loops, which are very strenuous to remove. These loops are secondary defects and remain after the primary damage is disappeared utterly. Higher-dose implants create a large number of stable dislocation loops, which trigger the silicon amorphous. The high density of these loops locates at the interface region between amorphous and crystalline silicon (amorphous/crystalline interface) by a solid-phase epitaxy growth process. These defects are referred to as the end-of-range (EOR) defects situated at the amorphous/crystalline (a/c) interface, as depicted in Figure 3(b). This is because a large amount of damage locates below the threshold of amorphization beyond the a/c interface. The amount of damage beyond the a/c interface can be possible depending on the damage limitation that crystal can contain without being amorphous. This damage includes the most significant amount of {311} defects and a range of dislocation loops in a narrow area just below the a/c interface on the crystalline side [6, 31].
The secondary damage is very stable, even annealing by RTA anneal at a temperature of 1000°C. The loops increased the size from 10 nm to around 20 nm of radios during annealing; this happens to conserve the total number of interstitials trapped in the loops and make these loops hard to remove. When the temperature of RTA is high enough, the EOR dislocation loops can be removed; for example, it is revealed that these loops disappeared at 1100°C for 60 s [6, 32].
To activate the electrical activity, implanted boron atoms must reside in substitutional sites in the semiconductor material lattice. Moreover, the broken bonds in the lattice matrix must be cured to return the mobility of the electrical carrier [6, 20]. This is a principle to achieve high levels of dopant activation. The activation of ions, therefore, depends on the level of damage in the lattice after implantation and post-annealing treatment. The levels of damage can be classified into three types: low levels of damage, very high levels of damage that occur in amorphization, and the mid-levels of damage below the amorphization threshold where partial disorder occurs. Depending on the ion implantation conditions, the primary damage is often at a low level that the annealing process can repair completely, and the high dopant activation levels are reached. For instance, post-annealing increases boron implant performance in a diamond. Yuhei Seki et al. carried out the B doping by ion implantation in diamond by 60 keV at room temperature followed by thermal annealing at 1150°C for 2 h. They reported that an excellent doping efficiency reached approximately 80% with the maximum boron concentration of 3.6 × 1019 ions /cm3 (around 200 ppm) [30]. In addition, boron was doped into graphene film assisted by a stopping layer of polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) on top to control the B distribution centered on the graphene sheet. The electrical properties of graphene were enhanced by the increase in charge carrier density corresponding to the rise of concentration ranging from 5 to 50 × 1010/cm2. The roughness of the graphene surface was also increased after the doping process. Moreover, the post-annealing at 1000°C for 10 s improved the boron doping performance by increasing approximately 13 times the boron activation in graphene, which proves the importance of the annealing step after ion implantation [13].
Oppositely, at extremely high levels of damage that take place in amorphization, the annealing cannot treat and deal with the amorphous region, so a nearly practical method to remove damage and recrystallize lattice to achieve high dopant activation is solid-phase epitaxial regrowth (SPER) [6]. SPER can regrow the lattice of the substrate, which is amorphous by layer-by-layer epitaxial restructure starting from the amorphous/crystalline interface. Its mechanism is similar to the crystallization process in which a crystal solid is formed from either a melted liquid phase or gas phase deposited onto a crystalline substrate, except that SPRE occurs from a solid phase rather than a liquid or gas phase. The regrowth eliminates the damage in the amorphous area and limits the dopant diffusion at a low temperature. Most of the dopant atoms’ broken bonds are recovered onto lattice sites in the amorphous regions during the SPER process, increasing the activated dopant concentration to create electrical carriers [6, 26, 33, 34, 35]. For example, the experiment simulation about the effect of low-temperature SPER with boron activation in pre-amorphized Si was carried out by Aboy et al. They calculated the active B concentration reached up a few times 1020 cm−3 and the minimal diffusion after effective SPER treatment [26]. However, the boron activation levels can be dropped drastically as the boron dose is increased [33]. At a high concentration of implanted boron, it is challenging to recrystallize amorphous layers and fully active boron ions in pre-amorphized silicon [35]. However, it has been found that a fully amorphized region is much easier in many cases to repair than a partially damaged region.
The third type of damage level, which lies below the amorphization threshold, is much more difficult to be cured by annealing because this region contains secondary defect forms that make the annealing treatment more complex [6, 36]. The activation process behaves correspondingly to a temperature that indicates the complex interactions between the dopants and the defects [37, 38, 39]. At very low doses, boron ions are almost activated even after annealing at a very low temperature, and it is quickly fully active after increasing temperature. However, it is very slow to activate boron in higher doses. A publication by Chang et al. described boron activation at low temperatures below 400°C and concluded that boron activated increasingly during annealing, but the active boron percentage was dropped with increasing implant doses [37]. The observation of boron activation was investigated in the research of Seidel TE et al. Boron implantation process creates deep-level traps of damage that increase the resistivity of silicon, and a fraction of these traps is disappeared after annealing at 400°C, decreasing resistivity and enhancing the boron activation, but a “reverse annealing” phenomenon occurred between at 450°C and 500°C, which reduced the carrier concentration in silicon. This phenomenon is explained by the competition between silicon interstitials and boron atoms in institutional lattice sites or by the pairing of boron atoms with interstitials to form inactive complexes. Then annealing at temperatures beyond 550°C, the activation process gained a gradual rise to reach the complete activation level at the highest anneal temperatures [40]. The complexation of the thermal annealing is affected by the diffusion of boron atoms in silicon. The damage can exist longer at low temperatures and increase the boron diffusion, whereas, at high temperatures, the damage is eliminated faster [36]. Huang et al. described the “reverse annealing” phenomenon at low-temperature annealing (525–800°C) in boron-implanted silicon and explained that the occurrence of reverse annealing is due to the formation of boron-silicon interstitial complexes and enhancement of boron diffusion that related to silicon self-interstitials [41]. In addition, the enhancement of boron diffusion is also observed during annealing treatment at a higher temperature, which is caused by the complex damage in the region below the amorphous/crystalline interface [38, 42].
Although the annealing is essential for boron implantation, annealing at higher temperatures to active implanted boron atoms can cause the diffusion process, which makes it difficult to generate the shallow junctions. The restraining of boron diffusion is important to obtain higher boron activation. However, the presence of the excess interstitials causes a transient enhancement in the dopant diffusion called transient-enhanced diffusion (TED) [43, 44]. TED often occurs during annealing at low temperatures, wherein boron atoms diffuse faster than annealing at a higher temperature. Jain et al. found out that annealing boron implanted Si substrate at 800°C made boron diffusing much faster than normal thermal diffusion. This enhanced diffusion is temporary and stops when it reaches saturation. They explained that during low-temperature annealing, Si interstitials kicked the substitutional boron atoms out of lattice sites; boron atoms can diffuse easily. Besides, the combination of interstitials and boron atoms created highly mobile complexes. Therefore, the main reason that caused the diffusion of boron is the excess Si interstitials resulting from implant damage and surface oxidation. Suppose the annealing process is conducted at higher temperatures. In that case, the interstitial and interstitial-boron clusters are unstable, and the pairing of interstitials and boron atoms is decreased, leading to the retardation of TED. Therefore, in post-annealing processes, rapid thermal annealing is likely to prevent the TED phenomenon [19, 38, 45, 46]. Two typical analysis methods are used to determine the quality of semiconductors after boron implantation and post-annealing treatment, which are thermal wave measurement [47] and the sheet resistance measurement [48]. However, both methods are ineffective in measuring the thickness of ultra-shallow junction produced at low-energy implantation due to the beyond resolution limit [49].
Most implant energies range from 30 keV to 200 keV; fabricating a junction shallower than 100 nm usually requires low energy, for example, below 100 eV. At low energy, it is difficult to implant ions into the substrate. It requires an economically feasible approach and the progression of technology generations. The reason most implants cover the range above 30 keV is that this is a low-energy limit that is required for extraction voltage for the ions from the source plasma. Moreover, extracted ions are usually accelerated to higher energies; a deceleration can cause tricky problems in engineering and require optimization for machine design. However, the high doses cannot be implanted at very low energies because of sputtering off surface atoms of the incoming ions and resulting in a self-limiting dopant dose. Besides, the profiles are affected by transient enhanced diffusion (TED), which reduces activated ions in materials, and it can be recovered by annealing and still can obtain junctions with the depths around a few tens of nanometers [50]. Collart et al. reported that the boron atoms are difficult to activate in silicon if implanting at lower energies. During ion implantation at the low ion energy of 100–1 eV, the boron penetrated the silicon creating a profile with a depth of around 100–200 nm. However, most of the profile depth disappeared after the rapid thermal annealing at around 1000°C. This is explained by the fact that boron is trapped and deactivated at the surface during the implanted process, and annealing enhances the diffusion of boron, leading to the removal from the substrate [19]. On the other hand, implant with high energy with MeV range is often achieved simply. This technique is applied to form the deep well in CMOS technology to achieve super-junction power [6, 51].
Ion implantation is a doping process conducted at low temperatures, in specific areas, and with an exact dopant dosage. It is easy to turn the depth/ions selection. By changing fluence and accelerating the energy of the ion beam, the dosage and implant energy can be controlled and modified for requirements. Besides precise dose control, the dopant profile (peak depth and spread range) can also be adjusted better than the diffusion method, in which peak concentration is always defined near the surface. Ion implantation has been known as an exceptionally clean surface treatment technique. There is truly little or no contamination during implantation because boron ions were collected from beam analysis, and other contaminant ions were removed before penetrating the target. Moreover, it normally operates in a high vacuum environment, so the atmosphere’s impurities cannot affect the surface. Boron ions penetrate and replace the lattice sites of materials to activate the electrical properties. Therefore, the implanted substrates are not sensitive to either surface treatment or surface cleaning procedures.
The ion implantation process requires specialized and relatively expensive equipment, such as a modern ion implanter, which costs about 2–5 million dollars depending on the model and size (the price reported in 2003) [8]. The costs of operation and maintenance for ion implantation are also high because it demands a high vacuum environment during operating and periodic maintenance to avoid contamination and technical issues [52].
However, ion implantation with a larger amount of dose at high energy causes severe damage to semiconductor material lattice, for example, the amorphization in silicon or the graphitization in a diamond that cannot repair by a normal post-implant anneal. For example, using a high-energy boron beam at 8 MeV of B3+ and fluence of 570 × 1014 ions/cm2 caused the total disappearance of diamond peak by loss of diamond structure, and the annealing at 1000°C for 1 h is reported to not be able to heal its structure [20]. Moreover, a boron implant at a higher dose is reported to create the secondary defects as stable dislocation loops, which can remain and can trigger the silicon amorphization after annealing at 1000°C [6].
Boron implantation is the most convenient method recently applied to dope boron in semiconductors. However, it is very difficult or sometimes impossible to obtain very shallow. Because the shallow implantation is very complicated and requires an optimal process of ion implantation and appropriate post-annealing to control various phases involving the collision between doped ions and lattice matrix, destruction of the matrix, projection of implanted ions, and the restructure (recrystallization) and dopant atom activation and diffusion [53]. In particular, boron implantation is challenging to create ultra-shallow junction because of two main impediments: transient enhanced diffusion and Si interstitial/boron-interstitial typed clusters because the increase of excess interstitials in silicon lattice leads to enhancement of the boron diffusion rate, which related directly to boron inactivation and the loss of boron out of substrate [3, 19, 54]. Around 20% of the implanted boron resides at substitutional lattice sites, and the rest of the boron ions produce pure boron clusters and silicon-boron clusters [12, 54]. Both are caused by silicon interstitial supersaturation, which is a consequence of implant damage and creates extended defects that tend to agglomerate and form interstitial silicon clusters [3, 12]. Therefore, forming an ultra-shallow junction requires not only the optimization for the implanter to control low energy in the implantation process but also the need to manage the boron diffusion and defect clusters during annealing.
Ion implantation is a standard method that typically introduces ions into the top side of the flattened substrates or films. However, it is very directional. Therefore, it can introduce boron ions into the sidewall of multi-gate devices such as fin field-effect transistors
The dimensions of electronic devices have been shrunken to the nanoscale following the semiconductor generation node. The traditional planar structure devices are hard to realize generation nodes (<10 nm). 3D finFET structure device is proved to achieve better performance and minimize the fabrication difficulties. During progressive doping, ion implantation is typically used for FinFET fabrication, but it faces challenges from crystal damage for such fin structure and limitations of dimensional geometry [57]. Monolayer doping (MLD) was suggested first by Javey et al. in 2008 as a substitute doping technique to obtain ultra-shallow junctions [58, 59]. They successfully fabricated sub-5 nm junction depths, which can be down to approximately 2 nm of depth with low sheet resistance (lowest value ∼825 Ω/sq) via phosphorous monolayer doping method using diethyl 1-propylphosphonate (DPP) to obtain 70% active phosphorous dopant after RTA with temperatures ≥950°C.
The monolayer doping process consists of two main stages: self-assembly of molecules onto the surface to form monolayers and thermal annealing process to diffuse and active dopants. In the self-assembled monolayer phase, the dopant-containing molecules are grafted onto a semiconductor surface via a covalent bond between the terminated functional groups of molecules and the termination modified surface. Next phase, a capping layer was applied to prevent uncontrolled loss of the dopant molecules upon heating. A thermal annealing process was conducted to drive the dopants into the semiconductor substrate that simultaneously activates dopant atoms. The masking layer was then removed to obtain a thin doped layer or junction [58, 60]. MLD demonstrated that it causes no lattice damage and is capable of doping impurities into dimensional structures due to the conformal nature of the monolayer assembly process that avoids the shadow effects occurring in ion implantation. There are various elements that were doped into semiconductor substrate by MLD to obtain ultra-shallow doping including phosphorus [58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 64], boron [58, 60, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69], nitrogen [70], sulfur [71, 72, 73], arsenic [74], antimony [75].
Monolayer contact doping (MLCD) is an innovative method based on monolayer doping (Figure 4a). In this MLCD technique, the dopant-containing monolayer is formed onto a thermal oxide wafer (Si + SiO2) as a donor substrate by a self-assembly process. The donor substrate is then brought into contact with the target substrate (typically with intrinsic silicon substrate), afterward, annealed using the RTA process. Under the annealing process, the molecular monolayer occurs by the thermal decomposition, and dopant atoms from monolayer fragments diffuse into donor and target substrates. This indicates that both monolayer and contact doping arise simultaneously onto donor and target substrate, respectively. Due to direct contact between two substrates during annealing, MLCD does not need a capping layer of SiO2 to avoid the out-diffusion of dopant atoms. MLCD can apply to conventional top-down or bottom-up semiconductor processes and doping impurities in nanoscale structures such as silicon nanowires. This method allowed control of surface doping with nanometer-scale structures. The first report on MLCD was published by Hazut et al. in 2012. They used phosphorus-containing molecules (phosphine oxides) for MLCD onto the target silicon substrate. They obtained a level of dopant concentration higher than 5 × 1020 cm−3 with a depth of dopant profile around 30–40 nm and sub-10 nm at short annealing times [76]. Subsequently, MLCD is utilized widely to dope materials such as phosphorus [77], boron [66, 76], sulfur [78] to obtain an ultra-shallow doping layer with nanometer scales for semiconductor applications. However, to achieve a high dopant concentration in the target substrate, the minimization of dopant diffusion in the donor substrate is required to focus dopant atoms on the target substrate. MLCD was applied to fabricate parallel p-n junctions on NWs by one-step doping. Boron and phosphorus were doped simultaneously onto two sides of NWs, achieving high dopant concentrations with P-doped and B-doped poles respectively of 2.6 × 1019 cm−3 and 1.0 × 1020 cm−3 concentration [79].
Schematic of (a) parallel p-n junction configuration formation across oriented NWs by a one-step contact doping process printed with permission from ref. [
To control the doping areas, remote monolayer doping (R-MLD) is developed with the principle of monolayer contact doping, but there is a distinct feature that R-MLD is performed without the contact between donor and target substrate. In R-MLD, the target substrate is covered partially by a thin separator mask with microscale thickness. There are unmasked areas and masked areas on the target substrate. Therefore, the donor substrate with dopant-containing monolayers cannot contact directly with the target substrate due to having a gap between these substrates. During the rapid thermal annealing, the monolayer source is fragmented at elevated temperature to generate volatile fragments, which subsequently evaporate into the gas phase to react with the oxide surface at the substrate surface. Annealing with the RTA process causes dopant diffusion through the native oxide and is activated and incorporated into the semiconductor surface [68, 80]. Hazrat et al. described the R-MLD process using diphenyl phosphine oxide for phosphorus doping with a silicon wafer in which the target substrate was patterned by an AZ4562 photoresist as a separator mask. RTA process was implemented at 1000°C in 6 s and 30 s for additional annealing. Although the diffusion of gas-phase dopant between the mask and target substrate was observed, the phosphorus incorporation efficiency into the target silicon substrate reached 70%. Moreover, boron doping using phenylboronic acid was carried out with the same procedure to compare with phosphorus doping using tetraethylmethylene diphosphonate (40% of incorporation efficiency). The SEM of doping profiles showed a higher contrast for boron onto the target silicon wafer compared with phosphorus. This indicated that tiny boron atoms are diffused into the mask layer during R-MLD. R-MLD process is shown in Figure 4(b) [80].
A modification of MLD reported by Ye et al. is monolayer contact doping (MLCD). They modified the MLD technique by forming boron-containing SAM onto a thermal oxide silicon substrate instead of directly onto the target substrate. This source substrate is subsequently brought into contact with the target substrate, upon which the dopant is driven into the target substrate by thermal annealing. Therefore, the thermal oxide substrate was an efficient capping layer for annealing. Carboranyl-alkoxysilane was used as a boron-rich source and easily created SAM without using harsh reaction conditions owning to the active silane headgroups. The higher boron-doped concentration was achieved compared with normal MLD by carborane alkene under the same RTA condition (more than two times) [65]. Moreover, the MLCD method reduced the boron diffusion to only 2%, which is advantageous for reusing the source substrate [66].
An investigation by Park et al. demonstrated that surface states of the target substrate significantly influence the boron doping efficiency using monolayer doping. The good boron doping levels were achieved with a non-damaged clean surface, but the boron incorporated level dropped approximately an order of magnitude on the damaged surface. However, treatment processes to heal the surface state effectively boron doping by MLD. The doping levels on these treated surfaces were much higher than the damaged surface but still lower than the pristine and undamaged surface. The different orientations of silicon substrate also affect the boron doping performance. The 100-oriented silicon was observed as a two times higher doping level than the 110-oriented silicon. That is because of the dependence of the ratio of hydrogen terminations on orientations. The (110) surface has a lesser number of active reaction sites for monolayer formation compared with the (100) surface [81].
Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) are monolayers formed by the self-organization of organic molecules in a solution or vapor environment onto the solid substrate through chemical interaction between head groups of molecules and functional groups of solid surfaces. [82]. Self-assembly is a process in which molecules graft spontaneously onto a semiconductor substrate by chemical adsorption between head groups of molecules and specific terminations on the substrate surface. During assembling, the tail (back bond) of molecules interacted with each other under a balanced state to create a well-organized and stable monolayer [83]. Therefore, depending on the head groups of dopant-containing molecules, the semiconductor surface requires particular and suitable terminations. For instance, terminal alkene (C〓C) or alkyne (C☰C) (unsaturated organic compounds) can attach to the hydrogen-terminated surface, and alkyl silane groups (Si▬(OR)3) can bond with the hydroxyl-terminated surface. If the semiconductor substrate is a silicon wafer, these processes with hydrogen and hydroxyl terminations as known as hydrosilylation [57, 84] and silanization [66, 85], respectively. In some cases, the SAM formation can create by the non-covalent interaction of head groups of molecules with terminated groups of a substrate. For example, phosphine oxide groups of the phosphorus-containing molecules can form the phosphorus dopant SAM by a non-covalent bond on to hydroxyl-terminated substrate [76].
In monolayer doping on silicon, the hydrosilylation process primarily conducts the self-assembled monolayers. In this process, silicon must be cleaned and the native oxide removed to create hydrogen termination by an aqueous solution of HF or NH4F [86]. The silicon wafer was then incubated in the molecular-containing solution. Relying on the molecular type, different conditions, including heating or irradiation with light, were added to promote the reaction. For example, the dopant-alkene molecules bind covalently with hydrogen-terminated silicon to form the C▬Si bond onto the silicon surface under a traditional heating condition of 150–200°C or under irradiation with UV light, visible light [87, 88, 89]. This hydrosilylation process between saturated compounds and hydrogen-terminated silicon was demonstrated following a radical-chain mechanism [90].
On the other hand, SAM was also produced by the silanization process, a conventional method used to cover the solid substrate with organofunctional alkoxysilane molecules [85]. In this process, the solid substrates are required hydroxyl terminal groups that can react with alkyl silane to form a covalent Si▬O▬Si bond. The substrate surface must be cleaned to remove organic residues and generate sufficient hydroxyl groups. Numerous methods are used to clean surfaces consisting of a wet etching by combinations of acid, bases, and organic solvents at different temperatures or irritation with UV light and O2 plasma [91, 92, 93]. The most widely used cleaning method is called Piranha cleaning, which is a mixture of sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The silane molecules are hydrolyzed into silanol groups, which react with a hydroxyl-terminated surface via the condensation reaction:
The self-assembly using silanization was performed using vapor-phase deposition and solution-phase deposition. The cleaned substrate is dipped in molecular solution in the solution-phase deposition. For the vapor-phase deposition, the hydroxyl-terminated substrate was kept under a vacuum environment where molecular liquid can be evaporated into molecular gases and assembled onto the substrate. The reactivity of molecules with hydroxyl-terminated surfaces depends on the molecule’s properties [94, 95].
The thermal annealing is used to decompose the dopant-carrying molecules and drive dopant atoms into the substrate, creating a thin doped surface layer. Ultra-shallow doping by MLD required a higher solid solubility and a lower diffusivity of dopant to prevent the deeper dopant profile. Besides, solubility and diffusivity factors proportionally correlate to the temperature of the annealing process. The enhancement of boron diffusivity happens at elevated temperatures of annealing. Therefore, controlling the annealing process at a suitable temperature and time is essential for MLD.
The thermal annealing techniques include rapid thermal annealing (RTA), furnace thermal annealing (FTA), and microwave annealing (MWA), which RTA is a favorite in MLD. The report of Ho et al. investigated the boron diffusion at different annealing temperatures during the RTA process. The results showed the sharp boron diffusivity at a higher temperature induced a more profound depth of boron profile. For example, the boron profile depth obtained at an annealing temperature of 950°C was around 18 nm, but that was deeper, around 43 nm at 1000°C for 5 s of RTA. The increase of boron diffusion can cause a decrease in the boron doping level. For instance, the number of the diffused boron atoms into silicon lattice after RTA is estimated at around 33% of the total number of boron atoms onto surface lattice before spike annealing [58]. The high temperature of annealing can promote a more active dopant into the substrate. Besides, the annealing time is also necessary to control the dopant profile depth. The short annealing time can prevent dopant atoms from being driven deep into the substrate. Therefore, RTA at high temperatures with a temperature ramping rate above 50°C/s is favorable in MLD [57, 59]. Furthermore, Ye and coworkers note that the annealing time reported having a smaller effect on the active dopant concentration than the annealing temperature. The doping concentration at 1000°C for 15 s of annealing time was observed to be nearly the same as observed for 6 s. However, increasing the annealing temperature from 1000°C to 1050°C appears to significantly change the highest dopant concentration. This can be explained by the dependency of boron solubility upon temperature: the higher the temperature, the greater the solubility of boron [65].
Hence, an ultra-shallow junction can be obtained by optimization of the RTA process with lower temperatures and shorter times. The report in 2009 by Ho and coworkers exhibited the successful fabrication of shallow junctions using boron-containing molecules to obtain the depts of around 1–2 nm, which is even shallower than phosphorus MLD (sub-5 nm) at the same annealing conditions due to the lower diffusivity of boron compared with phosphorus. The sheet resistance of the boron-doped layer is reported, that is, higher than ∼104 Ω/sq. [59]. The boron diffusion was reported that is lower than phosphorus atom diffusion, which was investigated by Ye et al. [62, 69]. In the same MLD conditions, the boron can achieve shallower depth around sub-5 nm but phosphorous at nearly sub-10 nm. The surface concentration of boron is higher than the surface concentration of phosphorous. [59].
A furnace thermal annealing at 1000°C for 5 min was used for MLD of the mixture of dopant-containing molecules and blank precursors [62, 69]. The boron profiles were investigated by using dynamic secondary ion mass spectroscopy (D-SIMS). The authors found out that the boron atoms diffuse around 125 nm deeper than RTA at short times of 5 s (43 nm at 1000°C) with boron-containing molecules only. The boron diffusivity is decreased when using the molecules mixture. Several reasons contributed to boron diffusions, such as temperature, annealing time, molecule doses and types, and the contamination in the monolayer. That makes the diffusion of the atoms from the monolayer into silicon a complex process. Despite the lower diffusivity of boron in the SiO2 capping layer than in silicon substrate, the amount of dopant lost in the capping layer remains unclear and requires a particular investigation.
Hsu et al. did an investigation of the boron dopant profile not only on the silicon substrate but also on the capping oxide. They designed an alternate annealing process using microwave annealing (MWA) for boron monolayer doping to compare with RTA, as shown in Figure 5. The boron atoms were found to cannot fully activate after microwave annealing compared with RTA at 900°C. Hence, the insufficient thermal budget of the MWA process limited the replacement of boron atoms in silicon lattice leading to the formation of boron deactivated clusters in silicon. However, the shallower junction is obtained by MLD using microwave annealing with a junction depth of 5.1 nm compared with 7.1 nm of junction depth using RTA annealing. The sheet resistance of the MWA junction is reported that is higher than that of the RTA junction because of the lower boron activation level with MWA. Moreover, they also measured the dopant profile at SiO2/silicon interface using PCOR-SIMS and calculated that less than 20% of boron atoms diffused in the silicon target substrate [67]. This enhanced SIMS technique allows a more comprehensive understanding of the boron dopant distribution at the interface.
Schematic of monolayer doping using microwave annealing and rapid thermal annealing. Printed with permission from Ref. [
After assembling the monolayer, a capping layer of SiO2 was deposited onto a substrate to block the dopant-containing monolayer from exposing directly during the thermal annealing process that can cause an out-diffusion of dopants. The capping layer is essential in MLD to prevent dopant atoms from escaping into the surrounding environment during thermal annealing [57, 58, 59, 69]. Javey et al. investigated MLD without depositing a capping layer and found that boron atoms were lost significantly after annealing [58]. SiO2 is a typical material used as capping layer in MLD that can be prepared using different deposition techniques including evaporation [58, 59, 68], sputtering [65], and spin coating [69, 96], atomic layer deposition [68]. The capping layer was reported that affects the dopant incorporation in the substrate. The oxygen deficiency in the capping layer, formed during the evaporation and sputtering process, decreases the dopant incorporation. Gao and workers investigated that some oxygen atoms that escaped from the oxide capping layer during annealing can diffuse into the silicon substrate and attach with boron dopants inducing boron deactivation slightly at nearly 1% [60].
The initial reports of boron MLD demonstrated that capping a layer of oxide before the annealing process is required to confine the escapes of dopant atoms from the surface into the surrounding environment [57, 58, 59, 69]. However, a recent study stated that the oxide capping layer affects boron activation in the target substrate. It can damage the boron-containing monolayer due to elevated temperatures during the deposition of SiO2. Therefore, in some instances, a higher doping level can be achieved without employing the capping layer. A series of experiments were conducted by Tzaguy et al. to compare the boron doping levels and the effects of the SiO2 capping layer on phenylboronic acid (PBA) monolayer doping using different techniques including MLD, MLCD, and R-MLD. The results showed that the doping techniques without a SiO2 capping layer enabled the lower sheet resistance values than doping with an oxide cap layer. This is because the oxide capping layer in MLD functioned as a barrier to prevent the out-diffusion of boron atoms during the RTA phase and concurrently entrapped a part of boron atoms in the deposited SiO2 layer. In addition, the PBA monolayer was formed by non-covalent assembly onto the surface. During thermal evaporation deposition of the oxide layer, the PBA monolayer decomposed and evaporated into fragments encapsulated in the oxide capping layer [68].
To avoid the oxide capping during MLD, simplified trends have recently been reported, such as self-capping monolayer doping or non-capping using monolayer contact doping or remote monolayer doping. Self-capping MLD process was studied by Alphazan and workers using hepta-isobutyl-polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane triester of phosphorus that provides phosphorus atoms and the silsesquioxane cage as a self-capping layer for phosphorus monolayer doping [61]. In nanoscale doping, a capping layer can cause adverse impacts during fabrication. For example, capping an oxide layer for boron MLD in highly porous nanowires (NWs) was reported that cause surface damage to NWs during the removal step after annealing. Veerbeek and coworkers utilized the MLCD and MLD with an external capping layer as alternative techniques to escape surface damages and obtain higher doping concentrations [97].
As mentioned above, the molecule types are important and affect the monolayer doping performance. The self-assembly procedure, the monolayer coverage efficiency, and molecular size are the initially critical factors in determining the dopant density on the surface. The boron-containing molecule used first as well as popularly for boron MLD is allylboronic acid pinacol ester (ABAPE) [58, 59, 60, 62, 67, 69, 76, 81]. ABAPE precursor possesses a boron atom and a terminal alkene that can form a covalent bond with a hydrogen-terminated semiconductor surface. Ho and coworkers reported the first research on boron MLD using the ABAPE molecule. The authors successfully achieved a high boron doping level of 5 × 1020 cm−3 near the silicon surface. The boron atoms rapidly diffused into silicon lattice during the spike annealing process. The sheet resistance of samples decreased around 100 times after MLD. The resistivity was extremely affected by tuning temperature rather than the time of annealing.
The performance of B-MLD depends on the number of boron atoms carried on molecules. A precursor that contains more content of dopant atoms can obtain a higher doping level compared with molecules that hold lower content of dopant. Therefore, the doping levels can increase significantly by designing a specific precursor containing more than one boron atom. For instance, MLD using carborane derivative CB-(Me, allyl) precursor, which has a carborane cluster with 10 boron atoms and alkene groups as boron-containing alkene molecules, was performed by Huskens et al. on hydrogen-terminated silicon (Figure 6a). The result of boron activation using carborane derivatives was around 10 times higher boron doping levels compared with using ABAPE molecules that have only a single boron atom [65]. The annealing time does not affect the active dopant concentration, while annealing temperature plays a role. The doping concentration at 1000°C for 15 s of annealing time was observed that stays unchanged compared with using 6 s annealing time. However, increasing the annealing temperature from 1000°C to 1050°C significantly enhanced the successful doping concentration. This can be explained by the dependence of boron solubility upon temperature; the higher the temperature increases the solubility of boron. The sheet resistance was examined by carboranyl molecular doping is lower than 20 times that of ABAPE doping, which indicated higher conductivity obtained by carboranyl molecule [65].
Schematic depiction of boron monolayer doping process (a) using carborane derivative printed with permission from Ref. [
The dose and concentration of boron-bearing molecules impact boron doping efficiency. The areal dose control of boron doping was designed firstly by Ho and coworkers [58]. The different ratios of dopant molecules were controlled by mixing dopant-carrying molecule (ABAPE) with a blank precursor (1-undecene), an alkene containing only C and H, for hydrosilylation, as illustrated in Figure 6b. The authors found that the boron concentration on the surface is proportional to the fraction of dopant-containing molecules in the mixture. The sheet resistance of samples correlates to the monolayer doping dose and delivers an approach to control the electrical properties of the semiconductor substrate. A more detailed report by Ye et al. about the relation between the precise control of boron dose with the monolayer composition and thermal annealing. It has been found that the monolayer configuration is also proportional to the dose ratio of dopant-carrying molecules. Ye and workers also explored that the higher boron concentration at the surface can prohibit the driving boron atom into the silicon. The boron diffusion from the surface into the substrate increases with the decrease of the concentration of boron-containing monolayer [62].
Similarly, Fu et al. carried out experiments to control the dopant dose and observed the impacts of dopant concentration on the boron activation and photo responses [69]. Reducing the half dose of ABAPE molecules by mixing with 1-undecene decreased the activation rate of boron from 91.4% to 54.2%. Besides, they also reported that the higher ratio of carbon interstitials in silicon contributed by 1-undecene can bound with substitutional boron atoms to form defect clusters. These carbon-boron clusters complex the boron diffusion and prevent the boron occupation in the substitutional sites leading to the reduction of boron activation. Besides, the formation of carbon-boron cluster defects was reported only when the MLD process used the molecular mixture. In a previous study by Gao et al., it was noted that the atmospheric carbon contaminants formed carbon-related defects, including CsH and CsOH, which only capture minor electron carriers and have a limited impact on boron activation [60]. However, the effects of carbon contaminants are worse on phosphorus monolayer doping, which can deactivate at least 20% of the phosphorus atoms [98]. They successfully doped boron by MLD, reaching around 95% of electrically active boron atoms with sheet resistance lower than 90 times [60].
Furthermore, monolayer sources have distinct characteristics involving decomposition features, fragmentation details, surface chemistries, and covalent or non-covalent assemblies onto the surface. Therefore, the difference in structure and head groups of dopant-bearing molecules can impact the doping levels at nanometer-scale structures. For example, boron MLCD using phenylboronic acid (PBA) and chlorodicy-clohexylborane (CDB) formed respectively non-covalent monolayer and covalent monolayer, both showed high boron doping levels in silicon nanowires (NWs). The average boron doping level of CDB-MLCD was higher than that of PBA-MLCD. However, the resistivity of the PBA-MLCD-doped NWs was lower compared with CDB-MLCD. The reason was explained because the thermal fragmentation of CDB monolayer was complicated and uncompleted during different periods of thermal annealing that created carbon-boron complexes resulting in the formation of silicon-carbide clusters increasing the boron diffusion [68].
Monolayer doping allows achieving an ultra-shallow boron dopant profile with a depth of sub-10 manometers applied to fabricate ultra-shallow p-n junction with depths <10 nm that are very difficult to obtain by traditional techniques. The boron atoms are driven into the semiconductor from the surface substrate during the annealing process. Therefore, the boron penetration is shallower and limited depending on the solubility and diffusivity of the boron monolayer, which annealing conditions can control. Due to the self-assembly of boron molecules onto surfaces in a vapor or solution phase by chemical interaction, there is no geometry limitation of boron monolayer doping. It is appliable to fabricate in 3D structures such as FIN with narrow side-well or nanowires with a round shape, which cannot be obtained by ion implantation or CVD techniques. Moreover, monolayer doping is capable of controlling the doping with different doping scales that are highly versatile for various applications from nanoscale fabrication such as FinFETs or nanowire-FETs to larger-scale production of MOSFETs. Ho and coworkers were successful in fabricating p+/n USJs on a 4 inch scale of the silicon wafer. This promises an innovation of boron doping in larger-scale fabrication with uniformity of boron profile [58, 79]. It also can control the specific boron doping areas by novel monolayer contact doping or remote monolayer doping processes to avoid the out-diffusion in the capping layer during annealing. Monolayer contact doping is applied for co-doping to fabricate a parallel p-n junction Si NWs using B and P-containing molecules.
Furthermore, unlike boron ion implantation, boron MLD does not cause any lattice damage during doping and annealing. This damage-free MLD is beneficial for limiting annealing time and avoiding the undesired leakage of boron atoms. The MLD process is a simple method that does not require any specialized and costly equipment. With diverse boron-carrying molecules, the monolayer formation is able to be carried out in different vapor or solution deposition methods that can easily carry out without harsh conditions. The self-assembled monolayers are highly uniform onto silicon substrate due to the self-limiting reaction of molecules, making molecular quantities well-defined with accuracy. The areal dopant dose can be tuned by various methods, such as doping a mixture of two molecules or using different types of molecules. Consequently, the boron monolayer doping can be precise by combining the RTA condition and molecular design of the precursors that are unable to a wide range of doping profiles to satisfy the specific requirements for various applications [58].
However, monolayer doping remains a limitation. Due to the self-limitation source of monolayer onto the surface and escaping of boron atoms into the capping oxide layer, the actual boron concentration is much lower compared with doping by ion implantation and CVD. A low boron doping efficiency of ~33% [58] depending on MLD conditions was measured because of the higher boron diffusivity in oxide capping and self-limiting source of boron monolayer. Due to the dependence of solubility and diffusivity on temperature, the balance of controlling the temperature to achieve higher dopant incorporation and shallower profile depth is challenging. The sheet resistance of junction fabricated by monolayer doping remains quite high, ranging from 103 to 104 Ω/sq. The carbon or oxygen-related defects form an annealing process that can decrease the boron incorporation into the substrate as well as doping performance. But the boron doping concentration is possible to increase by increasing the number of boron atoms carried in molecules [65, 66]. Moreover, the semiconductor surface’s monolayer formation process is highly sensitive and can easily be removed. Therefore, the cleaning and capping removal processes require a careful operation [67].
As explained above, ion implantation is not feasible to dope boron on the sidewalls of finFET structures due to irreparable crystal damage [99]. Homogeneous and conformal doping is required for small dimension devices. CVD doping can be used for 3D structures, but this method needs to control parameters, including the growth temperature, reactor pressure, and precursor dose. Therefore, CVD doping is challenging in mass production to generate uniform thin layers [100]. Due to the ability to doping a thin uniform layer of boron in 3D structures, MLD promises a practical technique applied in the semiconductor industry to fabricate small electronic devices such as CMOS or finFET with affordable expense. Monolayer doping sulfur on CMOS device designed by Barnett et al. using ammonium sulfide, (NH4)2S as sulfur monolayer source. A uniformly doped ultra-shallow junction with 9 nm of depth and low sheet resistance of 164 Ω/sq. was achieved without damage to the substrate [99]. Ang and coworkers first applied MLD to fabricate ultra-shallow junction in 20 nm finFET with phosphorous MLD. The authors successfully produced a 5 nm- n+/p junction with a sheet resistance of 8.3 × 103 Ω/sq. [101]. The 3-D finFET devices recently require a channel thickness scaled down to sub-10 nm [101] (Figure 7a). Boron and phosphorus co-monolayer doping was used to create a conform thin shell doping on polysilicon junctionless finFET devices [102, 103]. The ultra-shallow doping profiles of n-and p-type were obtained with sub-5 nm of depths. The FinFETs showed excellent gate control with Ion/Ioff ~ 106, lower off-current, and an exceptional subthreshold slope of 67 mV/dec [102]. The recent publication uses conformal monolayer doping to prepare devices with complex-geometry structures, allowing for the formation of multilayer Ge nanosheet gate-all-around field-effect transistors (Figure 7b). This can overcome the limitation of the Wrap-Around Contact method normally used for epi source/drain formation [104].
The graphic diagram of monolayer doping of the five-stacked Ge nanosheets FET printed with permission from Ref. [
Electrical energy generation in solar cells depends on splitting holes and electrons efficiently at a p-n junction. Therefore, MLD plays a vital role in the manufacture of silicon solar cells. Boron is introduced in silicon to generate p-type semiconductors that allow the transport of electrons from one atomic layer to another. The boron-doped silicon is used to increase conduction efficiency and lower the production expense of solar panels by focusing on growing surface-to-volume ratios and p-n junction dimensions. Therefore, the solar cells can absorb the larger light converted into energy to separate more electron-hole pairs. Moreover, the non-planar doping capability of MLD makes it ideal for this application [105]. In the report of Garozzo et al., MLD was utilized to fabricate a doped layer covering the entire nanohole surface of solar cells. The radial junctions were formed inside the nanoholes with a carrier concentration of around 1019 cm−3 for both n-/p- type doping [106].
Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) or solid-phase doping (SPD) is one technique to grow a thin film layer that involves a chemical reaction of the volatile molecule containing atom precursors. The principle of this method is the interaction between the vapor gas of the precursors with the substrate surface that is heated inside the reaction chamber. Resulting in a condensation layer that grows on the substrate surface and unreacted vapor gas that is later removed. This method is broadly used due to its potential for mass production and flexible controllability of growth parameters (temperature, pressure, precursor concentration, substrates) during the process [107].
The mechanism of this technique is to break the bond between each volatile molecule and leave the targeted atom precursor that is later reassembled as a layer of the atom. A high temperature is needed to break chemical bonding depending on each chemical bonding of the molecules. Then it becomes reasonable why this method needs a quite high temperature.
The formation of the Boron-Si junctions is summarized in Figure 8. The H atom on the passive silicon surface (Si▬H) is first desorbed to provide a free H-Si dangling bond. H then releases in the form of H2 after borane deposition due to the B▬Si bond that formed. Incoming borane develops bonding with Si-B as a boron cross-link over the silicon surface. Thus, a boron layer formed on the silicon surface.
Chemical interaction scheme of CVD boron deposition printed with permission from ref. [
The junctions of boron-doped silicon can be introduced using two methods:
Boron sources that are usually used are boron hydrides (diborane), boron halides (boron trichlorides), and organoboron (triethyl boron). Boron sources are chosen depending on which precursor and gas environment that used. Even though diborane seems an upcoming boron source, it only contains hydrogen apart from boron. It is known that diborane (B2H6) has a toxic, flammable, and explosive nature, so it needs a handful of treatments. Boron halides (BCl3) are expected to be a safe boron source because it is nonflammable and less toxic. Otherwise, boron trichlorides (BCl3) will not be suitable as a precursor for BN (boron nitride) since it will produce NH4Cl as the HCl reacts with NH3, which can damage the vacuum pump. At the same time, the hydrogen chloride is corrosive to a metallic substrate. The organoboron (such as B(CH3)3 and B(C2H5)3) seems an excellent precursor to obtaining B4C (boron carbides) because it can act as a boron and carbon source at the same time [110].
Sarubbi et al. demonstrated that diborane has selectively deposited only on Si with ⁓6 nm thickness at 500°C for 10 min diborane exposure as TEM result does not observe any B deposited on the slope or flat SiO2 surface. The SIMS profile of the B layer formed by CVD after HNO3 treatment has a concentration peak of 6 × 1020 cm−3 and shows a 5.9 × 104 Ω/sq. sheet resistance. They also mention that it has a 2.44 × 10−2 A/μm−2 saturation current density and a 13 nm junction depth [111]. Mok et al. in 2013 demonstrated the pure boron deposition using B2H6 as a boron source and H2 as a carrier at 700°C for 9 min of deposit time. It was found that nanometer-thick pure B layers, upon annealing in the presence of oxygen, function as a catalyst for silicon oxide growth. Based on the HRTEM result, the pure B is successfully doped on the surface (100) with 2.9 nm thickness and 2.1 nm on the surface (111) after TMAH texturing. They also reported the effect of oxygen concentration on the oxide forming. The thickness changes to 24.4 nm (100) and 23.4 nm (111) after furnace anneal at 950°C for 30 min in nitrogen ambient. For dry oxidation at 950°C for 30 min in 14% oxygen concentration, the thickness is changed to 37.6 nm (100) and 43.4 nm (111). They also mention that an ample oxygen supply during annealing results in boron depletion of the boron-doped Si surface due to enhanced oxidization, resulting in a lower surface concentration and higher sheet resistance. The sample that was processed in nitrogen condition and then etched using HNO3 and HF had 61.2 Ω/sq. sheet resistance compared with the sample that was processed using in the presence of oxygen condition, which had 205 Ω/sq. sheet resistance that measured at 105 cm−3 of carrier concentration [112]. Higher oxygen concentrations of O2 lead to increased growth of an intermediate SiO2 layer, which acts as a diffusion barrier and results in an increase in sheet resistance with increasing O2 [113].
In 2020, Muroi et al. [114] used BCl3, H2, and SiHCl2 as gas precursors on the silicon surface. They observe the deposition and etching behavior at different temperatures. Boron adsorption occurs at a temperature lower than 800°C, the deposition occurs at 900–1000°C, and at a temperature higher than 1000°C, they observe etching behavior due to chlorosilanes that occur in gaseous form. In their further research in 2021 [115], they reported using a similar boron gas source at 800°C. The etching does not occur on the surface based on the HRTEM result that demonstrated the dense film without void. The work that was done by Taniguchi and Inasawa using BCl3 as a boron source in 2020 showed that the presence of boron-doped silicon nanowires could change sheet resistivity from 105 Ωcm to be in the range of 10−3–101 Ωcm [116].
B dopants’ diffusion can occur under severe conditions, often simultaneous, such as very large concentration gradients, non-equilibrium point defect density, amorphous-crystalline transition, extrinsic doping level, co-doping, B clusters formation and dissolution, ultra-short high-temperature annealing [117]. The vacancies (V) and self-interstitials (I) are intrinsic point defects significant for dopant diffusion. In germanium, both p-type and n-type are mediated by the vacancies. Boron has a slow diffusion rate compared with other p-type dopants, which helps form ultra-shallow doped regions in Ge. The slow diffusion of B is associated with a high diffusion activation enthalpy that exceeds the activation enthalpy of self-diffusion by more than 1 eV. This indicates that B atoms are not likely associated with vacancies, thus meaning that B diffusions are via self-interstitials [118]. Tu et al. [119] successfully introduced a 5 nm thickness of the boron layer in epitaxial Ge on Silicon with a peak surface of 7 × 1021 cm−3 boron concentration.
In their report, Liu et al. said a pure boron layer deposited using the CVD method could be used as an a-Si mask to protect from TMAH and KOH etching for long hours of exposure [120]. Other literature also shows the potential ability of boron-doped CVD as anti-corrosion on mild steel [121], used to reduce diamond growth rate to achieve a certain thickness of diamond [122, 123], used to develop boron carbide [124], boron nitride [107, 125], and also to fabricate the uniform p-type doping of silicon nanowires [109, 126], it also found that boron can be used to make a superconductor by heavily doped boron on diamond [127].
There are many advantages of the boron deposition using the CVD method, namely able to control the growth parameters, it can deposit a single diffusion source only on one side of the wafer, so it can be used to introduce different doping profiles and structures of the diffusion source to achieve dopant concentration profiles next to each other [128]. It also requires fewer steps than other methods and allows better tunings of dopant profiles. It has a lower thermal budget as in-situ B-doped Ge can be grown at low temperatures (400°C), and B is already activated during growth, so it does not need activation annealing [129]. Unlike ion implantation, B doped using CVD does not destroy the structure due to annealing. Other advantages are that it can perform ultra-shallow junction, it can be used to develop boron sheets (2D structure) or boron carbide or boron nitride (3D structure), and the deposit does not depend on the position or flat surface. It is known that it can perform deposits on silicon wires [116, 130]. Furthermore, high-energy boron ion implantation in diamond enhanced the concentration of active boron up to for CVD method 1021–1022 ion/cm3 to reach superconductor, while normally concentration of boron is around 1019 for boron ion implantation [30]. Therefore, a nanometer-thin boron amorphous layer can be created on the surface of crystalline silicon through a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process in the temperature range from 700°C to 400°C [108].
Besides its promising advantages, introducing boron using CVD has a few shortcomings. Such as it is lack of a precursor that is highly volatile and, nontoxic and nonpyrophoric, it needs metal boride compounds that can form on the catalytic substrate and the toxicity of boron gas source that used must be concerned and controlled tightly. The boron will continue to diffuse at higher temperatures, so it must be suppressed [131]. The solid solubility of the dopant at operating temperature also becomes a shortcoming because it will be related to dopant concentration [132]. Unproperly removes oxide and boron-rich layer from the surface leading to poor surface passivation [113].
In semiconductor manufacture, boron doping is a crucial technique to introduce boron atoms into a semiconductor to modify its physical properties. There are intrinsic semiconductor materials, including silicon (Si),germanium (Ge), and compound semiconductors, which is combinations of elements such as group II–VI (ZnSe, ZnTe, CdS, CdTe), group IV-VI (PbS, PbSe, PbTe) of the periodic table, group III–V (AlN, GaAs, InGaN, InP, InGaAlP), or elements in the same group IV–IV (SiC, SiGe), other advanced materials including carbon nanotube, diamond, 2D materials (graphene, hexagonal boron nitride), etc. In intrinsic semiconductors, their atoms connect by sharing electrons to create stable covalent bonds. Generating conduction in a semiconductor requires energy to break the crystal bond and create conduction electrons moving around in a crystal and leaving holes. For example, silicon requires approximately 1.12 eV of energy to free an electron at room temperature. This energy is called bandgap energy or energy gap (Eg), which is necessary energy to excite an electron trapped in the valence band to the electrical conduction band. Silicon doped by boron is introduced a more significant number of conduction electrons and mobile holes that can lift the valence band close to the conduction band, decreasing the bandgap energy of boron-doped silicon to 0.045 eV [133]. The number of holes (positive charge carriers) rises with the increased amount of active boron concentration. In p-type semiconductors, the conduction is attributable to an enormous number of holes; therefore, holes and electrons are referred majority carriers and minority carriers, respectively.
The electrical conductivity of boron-doped silicon depends on the amount of boron and temperature. According to the calculation modeling of hole mobility on boron concentration of Masetti and coworkers, the hole mobility of boron-doped silicon can be estimated around 424–25 cm2/Vs, correlating with the range of 1014–1021 cm−3 for boron concentration. The higher the boron concentration, the lower the carrier mobility and resistivity [134]. Moreover, boron doping improves the hardness property of silicon, the hardness increases with increasing boron-doped concentrations. For example, the hardness at boron concentration of 1.3 × 1020 atoms/cm3 was 30% higher than that at 2.9 × 1017 atoms/cm3 [135]. The thermal conductivity of boron-doped silicon (with a B concentration of 5 × 1020 atom/cm3) was lower than undoped silicon at 300 K. Lee et al. found that the mass disorder effect is the main reason for the thermal transport suppression in boron-doped Si [136]. Like silicon, germanium (Ge) is an intrinsic semiconductor as silicon with a bandgap of 0.67 eV [137]. Introducing boron in Ge causes changes in electrical, mechanical, and thermal properties that are approximate to boron-doped silicon. The carrier mobility in boron-doped Ge monocrystals decreases with the increase of boron concentrations. The elasticity limit of Ge enhances after doping with low boron concentration. The mechanical property of boron-doped Ge at high boron concentration [138]. Si and Ge are primary materials for the semiconductor industry. Boron-doped Si and Ge show highly electrical conductivity that more effective for application in the electronic device fabrication including diodes [139], transistors [104], integrated chips/circuits [140], microcontrollers [141] and other applications for sensors [142, 143], light-emitting diodes (LEDs) [144], energy storage such as solar cells [145, 146, 147], photovoltaic devices [139, 148], capacitors [149], etc.
Boron doped in carbon nanotubes using CVD doping method that lowered HOMO-LUMO bandgap, featured for chemical reactivity and kinetic stability, of CNTs from 0.56 eV of original CNTs to Eg ~ 0.44 eV of B-CNTs after doping [150]. Introducing boron into CNTs increases the defects that break inertness and improves the reactivity in CNTs. The changes in electrical properties of CNTs varied depending on the boron concentrations. Yi and coworkers investigated that the acceptor state after doping boron was located at 0.16 eV above the Fermi energy for the ratio of B/C ~ 1/80 [151]. Boron doping improves the metallic property of CNTs. Moreover, the mechanical and thermal properties of CNTs were modified after doping with boron. The rupture stress of the B-CNTs was reduced compared with pristine CNTs, but at higher temperatures, B-CNTs showed drawbacks on maximum stress [152]. The thermal conductivity of B-CNTs depends on the temperature. At low temperatures, the thermal conductivity decreases with a rise in boron concentration in zigzag CNTs. However, the thermal transport enhances with increased boron concentrations at higher temperatures [153]. Boron-doped CNTs were applied in various application from hydrogen energy storage [154, 155, 156], catalysis [157], electrocatalysis [158], sensors [157, 159, 160].
Similarly, boron was introduced into graphene to modify its physical, chemical, mechanical, and electrical properties. The nature of graphene structure changes from ductile to brittle after being doped with boron. The thermal conductive property of graphene is reported to weaken after boron doping. Thermal conductivity dropped around 60% after introducing 0.75% boron concentration in graphene. Pristine graphene is a zero-gap semiconductor with semi-metallic property [161]. Boron-doped graphene monolayer shows a p-type semiconductor behavior with a high carrier mobility level of approximately 800 cm2/Vs at ambient temperature [162]. Wu et al. fabricated B-doped Graphene-based back-gate FETs with mobilities of 450–650 cm2/Vs [163]. Graphene doped with boron exhibits excellent electrochemical properties for diverse applications, including electrocatalysis [164], energy storage (batteries, supercapacitors) [165], sensors [166], and photovoltaics [167]. B-doped graphene can obtain a small band gap of 0.05 eV combined with n-type silicon to fabricate a p-n junction for solar cell application. The B-graphene/silicon-based solar cell showed a higher short-circuit current density of 18.8 mA/cm [168].
The sp3-hybridized diamond is an insulation material with a wide bandgap of 5.47 eV and extremely high resistivity of roundly 1012 Ω/cm. Doping with boron turns an insulative pure diamond into a conductive p-type semiconductor. After introducing boron into the diamond, the acceptor level is quite deep, around 0.37 eV above the valance band. Boron doped diamond shows high-level conductivity and enhanced electron transport compared to undoped diamond. The average boron doping level in diamond ranges from 1018 to 1020 atoms/cm3 [169, 170]. The hole mobility of boron-doped diamond was examined, reaching the maximum of about 2000 cm2/Vs at ambient temperature [170]. Heavy boron-doped diamond with a higher boron concentration of 1021–1023 atoms/cm3 for superconductivity can obtain at high pressure (105 atmospheres) and temperature (2500–2800 K) [171]. The sheet resistance of B-doped diamond was dropped from 1014 to about 1010 Ω/sq. [30]. Doping boron in diamond also changes its physical and mechanical properties. Similar to B-CNTs and B-doped graphene, B-doped diamond exhibits a comparable tendency in thermal conductivities [172]. The higher the boron-doped concentration, the weaker the thermal transport. The surface area of a diamond is larger after doped with boron. B-doped diamond is electrode material for numerous fields of electroanalysis [173], electrochemical energy storage [174, 175], and sensors [171, 176].
Apart from the above materials, doping boron is applied to improve the mechanical property of semiconductor compounds. Boron doping using ion implantation has been proven to change the roughness, hardness, stress/strain of materials, and other morphological characteristics of materials. The Zinc Selenide (ZnSe) thin films were implanted with boron ions at 75 keV and ranging in doses from 1012 to 1016 ions/cm2 in the research of Venkatachalam et al. that revealed the increase of film surface roughness and the decrease in the optical band gap value while increasing the dose of boron ions [177]. The hardness and elastic modulus of the hosts were also increased in some substrates of 60NiTi/NiTi after being doped by boron atoms [9, 178]. This is accounted for by replacing boron atoms in lattice matrix to create new nanocrystals, for example, TiB2 in B-doped 60NiTi [9]. In addition, a study by Zhu et al. proved boron ion implantation can enhance a hardening effect in the TiAlN. This hardening resulted from of the increase of excess stresses and the formation of new forms (TiB2 and BN nanocrystals) in the structure after the boron implants [179]. Similarly, boron ion implantation at 150 KeV and a fluence of 1 × 1015 ions/cm2 in hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) induced the formation of c-BN nanocrystals due to the collisions of ions with the radical atoms and created the displacement of these atoms out from the lattice positions, which generated an atomic vacancy and temporary accumulation of defects in the interstitial site in h-BN. This increases the stress/strain level in h-BN and increases the electron density in the interatomic and interlayer places in the material [27]. Additionally, boron implants modified the structure of two-dimensional carbon-fiber-reinforced carbon-carbon (C/C) composites to generate the boron carbide composition, improving resistance during exposure to air at high temperature [180].
By doping with different atoms, materials can significantly improve stability or change their properties. Boron doping affects Si, Ge, graphene, boron nitride, etc., especially tuning their electrical properties effectively. With the advancement of the semiconductor device, 3D monolithic integration that employs multiple vertically stacked devices for higher device density appears to have lower power consumption and provides a platform for heterogeneous integration of different active semiconductor layer materials. Therefore, the ability to prepare devices with geometry design is highly desired, such as FinFET, Gate-all-around FET, and nanosheets FET. Proper doping techniques must be decided to dope such dimension channels with shallow junction formation uniformly. Herein, this chapter investigates currently available methods and compares their performance, as shown in Table 1. The monolayer layer doping appears to overcome the limitation of the ion implantation for their better conformal doping profile and capable shallow junction formation.
Features | Ion implantation | Monolayer doping | Chemical vapor deposition doping |
---|---|---|---|
Profile depth (nm) | <10 nm to 10 μ | <100 nm | <3000 nm |
Boron concentration (cm−3) | 1013–1021 | 1017–1020 (decreasing from the surface) | 1015–1021 |
Boron activation (% in boron activation) | 80% | 91–54% of boron concentration | N/C |
Sheet resistance (Ω/sq) | <103 | 103–3 × 104 (depending on B concentration) | <105 |
Advantages | Easy to tune the depth/ions selection | Easy to obtain ultra-shallow junction | Fewer process steps than other methods |
Nonsensitive to surface cleaning procedures | Larger scale fabrication, mass production | In-situ doped Si/Ge | |
Higher doping efficiency | Simple and affordable process | ||
Good reproductivity on doping profile | No geometry limitations | ||
Uniform doping layer | |||
Disadvantages | Severe damage to substrate (amorphization), high diffusion | Low doping efficiency | Using toxic, pyrophoric gases |
Expensive costs in equipment and operation | Difficult control between diffusion depth and incorporation | Expensive costs in equipment and operation | |
Hard to get ultra-shallow or deeper doping | Sensitive to surface treatment | Poor surface passivation after doping | |
Geometry limitation (for the sidewall of fins) | Potential contaminations of C/O elements | ||
non-uniform doping layer (increased roundness) |
Comparison of three different boron doping techniques.
This work was supported by I-Dream Grant (13111F1201) from Taiwan Semiconductor Research Institute (TSRI) and National Applied Research Laboratories (NARLabs).
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Currently, he is a professor of Orthodontics. He holds a Certificate of Advanced Study type A in Technology of Biomaterials used in Dentistry (1995); Certificate of Advanced Study type B in Dento-Facial Orthopaedics (1997) from the Faculty of Dental Surgery, University Denis Diderot-Paris VII, France; Diploma of Advanced Study (DESA) in Biocompatibility of Biomaterials from the Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy of Casablanca (2002); Certificate of Clinical Occlusodontics from the Faculty of Dentistry of Casablanca (2004); University Diploma of Biostatistics and Perceptual Health Measurement from the Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy of Casablanca (2011); and a University Diploma of Pedagogy of Odontological Sciences from the Faculty of Dentistry of Casablanca (2013). 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She is now a lecturer at the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa, and a principal researcher at the Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office (HE2RO), South Africa. Dr. Moolla holds a Ph.D. in Psychology with her research being focused on mental health and resilience. In her professional work capacity, her research has further expanded into the fields of early childhood development, mental health, the HIV and TB care cascades, as well as COVID. She is also a UNESCO-trained International Bioethics Facilitator.",institutionString:"University of the Witwatersrand",institution:{name:"University of the Witwatersrand",country:{name:"South Africa"}}},{id:"419588",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Sergio",middleName:"Alexandre",surname:"Gehrke",slug:"sergio-gehrke",fullName:"Sergio Gehrke",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y000038WgMKQA0/Profile_Picture_2022-06-02T11:44:20.jpg",biography:"Dr. Sergio Alexandre Gehrke is a doctorate holder in two fields. The first is a Ph.D. in Cellular and Molecular Biology from the Pontificia Catholic University, Porto Alegre, Brazil, in 2010 and the other is an International Ph.D. in Bioengineering from the Universidad Miguel Hernandez, Elche/Alicante, Spain, obtained in 2020. In 2018, he completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Materials Engineering in the NUCLEMAT of the Pontificia Catholic University, Porto Alegre, Brazil. He is currently the Director of the Postgraduate Program in Implantology of the Bioface/UCAM/PgO (Montevideo, Uruguay), Director of the Cathedra of Biotechnology of the Catholic University of Murcia (Murcia, Spain), an Extraordinary Full Professor of the Catholic University of Murcia (Murcia, Spain) as well as the Director of the private center of research Biotecnos – Technology and Science (Montevideo, Uruguay). Applied biomaterials, cellular and molecular biology, and dental implants are among his research interests. He has published several original papers in renowned journals. In addition, he is also a Collaborating Professor in several Postgraduate programs at different universities all over the world.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"342152",title:"Dr.",name:"Santo",middleName:null,surname:"Grace Umesh",slug:"santo-grace-umesh",fullName:"Santo Grace Umesh",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/342152/images/16311_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"SRM Dental College",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"333647",title:"Dr.",name:"Shreya",middleName:null,surname:"Kishore",slug:"shreya-kishore",fullName:"Shreya Kishore",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/333647/images/14701_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Shreya Kishore completed her Bachelor in Dental Surgery in Chettinad Dental College and Research Institute, Chennai, and her Master of Dental Surgery (Orthodontics) in Saveetha Dental College, Chennai. She is also Invisalign certified. She’s working as a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Orthodontics, SRM Dental College since November 2019. She is actively involved in teaching orthodontics to the undergraduates and the postgraduates. Her clinical research topics include new orthodontic brackets, fixed appliances and TADs. She’s published 4 articles in well renowned indexed journals and has a published patency of her own. Her private practice is currently limited to orthodontics and works as a consultant in various clinics.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"SRM Dental College",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"323731",title:"Prof.",name:"Deepak M.",middleName:"Macchindra",surname:"Vikhe",slug:"deepak-m.-vikhe",fullName:"Deepak M. Vikhe",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/323731/images/13613_n.jpg",biography:"Dr Deepak M.Vikhe .\n\n\t\n\tDr Deepak M.Vikhe , completed his Masters & PhD in Prosthodontics from Rural Dental College, Loni securing third rank in the Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences Deemed University. He was awarded Dr.G.C.DAS Memorial Award for Research on Implants at 39th IPS conference Dubai (U A E).He has two patents under his name. He has received Dr.Saraswati medal award for best research for implant study in 2017.He has received Fully funded scholarship to Spain ,university of Santiago de Compostela. He has completed fellowship in Implantlogy from Noble Biocare. \nHe has attended various conferences and CDE programmes and has national publications to his credit. His field of interest is in Implant supported prosthesis. Presently he is working as a associate professor in the Dept of Prosthodontics, Rural Dental College, Loni and maintains a successful private practice specialising in Implantology at Rahata.\n\nEmail: drdeepak_mvikhe@yahoo.com..................",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"204110",title:"Dr.",name:"Ahmed A.",middleName:null,surname:"Madfa",slug:"ahmed-a.-madfa",fullName:"Ahmed A. Madfa",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/204110/images/system/204110.jpg",biography:"Dr. Madfa is currently Associate Professor of Endodontics at Thamar University and a visiting lecturer at Sana'a University and University of Sciences and Technology. He has more than 6 years of experience in teaching. His research interests include root canal morphology, functionally graded concept, dental biomaterials, epidemiology and dental education, biomimetic restoration, finite element analysis and endodontic regeneration. Dr. Madfa has numerous international publications, full articles, two patents, a book and a book chapter. Furthermore, he won 14 international scientific awards. Furthermore, he is involved in many academic activities ranging from editorial board member, reviewer for many international journals and postgraduate students' supervisor. Besides, I deliver many courses and training workshops at various scientific events. Dr. Madfa also regularly attends international conferences and holds administrative positions (Deputy Dean of the Faculty for Students’ & Academic Affairs and Deputy Head of Research Unit).",institutionString:"Thamar University",institution:null},{id:"210472",title:"Dr.",name:"Nermin",middleName:"Mohammed Ahmed",surname:"Yussif",slug:"nermin-yussif",fullName:"Nermin Yussif",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/210472/images/system/210472.jpg",biography:"Dr. Nermin Mohammed Ahmed Yussif is working at the Faculty of dentistry, University for October university for modern sciences and arts (MSA). Her areas of expertise include: periodontology, dental laserology, oral implantology, periodontal plastic surgeries, oral mesotherapy, nutrition, dental pharmacology. She is an editor and reviewer in numerous international journals.",institutionString:"MSA University",institution:null},{id:"204606",title:"Dr.",name:"Serdar",middleName:null,surname:"Gözler",slug:"serdar-gozler",fullName:"Serdar Gözler",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/204606/images/system/204606.jpeg",biography:"Dr. Serdar Gözler has completed his undergraduate studies at the Marmara University Faculty of Dentistry in 1978, followed by an assistantship in the Prosthesis Department of Dicle University Faculty of Dentistry. Starting his PhD work on non-resilient overdentures with Assoc. Prof. Hüsnü Yavuzyılmaz, he continued his studies with Prof. Dr. Gürbüz Öztürk of Istanbul University Faculty of Dentistry Department of Prosthodontics, this time on Gnatology. He attended training programs on occlusion, neurology, neurophysiology, EMG, radiology and biostatistics. In 1982, he presented his PhD thesis \\Gerber and Lauritzen Occlusion Analysis Techniques: Diagnosis Values,\\ at Istanbul University School of Dentistry, Department of Prosthodontics. As he was also working with Prof. Senih Çalıkkocaoğlu on The Physiology of Chewing at the same time, Gözler has written a chapter in Çalıkkocaoğlu\\'s book \\Complete Prostheses\\ entitled \\The Place of Neuromuscular Mechanism in Prosthetic Dentistry.\\ The book was published five times since by the Istanbul University Publications. Having presented in various conferences about occlusion analysis until 1998, Dr. Gözler has also decided to use the T-Scan II occlusion analysis method. Having been personally trained by Dr. Robert Kerstein on this method, Dr. Gözler has been lecturing on the T-Scan Occlusion Analysis Method in conferences both in Turkey and abroad. Dr. Gözler has various articles and presentations on Digital Occlusion Analysis methods. He is now Head of the TMD Clinic at Prosthodontic Department of Faculty of Dentistry , Istanbul Aydın University , Turkey.",institutionString:"Istanbul Aydin University",institution:{name:"Istanbul Aydın University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"256417",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Sanaz",middleName:null,surname:"Sadry",slug:"sanaz-sadry",fullName:"Sanaz Sadry",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/256417/images/8106_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Istanbul Aydın University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"240870",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Alaa Eddin Omar",middleName:null,surname:"Al Ostwani",slug:"alaa-eddin-omar-al-ostwani",fullName:"Alaa Eddin Omar Al Ostwani",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/240870/images/system/240870.jpeg",biography:"Dr. Al Ostwani Alaa Eddin Omar received his Master in dentistry from Damascus University in 2010, and his Ph.D. in Pediatric Dentistry from Damascus University in 2014. Dr. Al Ostwani is an assistant professor and faculty member at IUST University since 2014. \nDuring his academic experience, he has received several awards including the scientific research award from the Union of Arab Universities, the Syrian gold medal and the international gold medal for invention and creativity. Dr. Al Ostwani is a Member of the International Association of Dental Traumatology and the Syrian Society for Research and Preventive Dentistry since 2017. He is also a Member of the Reviewer Board of International Journal of Dental Medicine (IJDM), and the Indian Journal of Conservative and Endodontics since 2016.",institutionString:"International University for Science and Technology.",institution:{name:"Islamic University of Science and Technology",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"42847",title:"Dr.",name:"Belma",middleName:null,surname:"Işik Aslan",slug:"belma-isik-aslan",fullName:"Belma Işik Aslan",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/42847/images/system/42847.jpg",biography:"Dr. Belma IşIk Aslan was born in 1976 in Ankara-TURKEY. After graduating from TED Ankara College in 1994, she attended to Gazi University, Faculty of Dentistry in Ankara. She completed her PhD in orthodontic education at Gazi University between 1999-2005. Dr. Işık Aslan stayed at the Providence Hospital Craniofacial Institude and Reconstructive Surgery in Michigan, USA for three months as an observer. She worked as a specialist doctor at Gazi University, Dentistry Faculty, Department of Orthodontics between 2005-2014. She was appointed as associate professor in January, 2014 and as professor in 2021. Dr. Işık Aslan still works as an instructor at the same faculty. She has published a total of 35 articles, 10 book chapters, 39 conference proceedings both internationally and nationally. Also she was the academic editor of the international book 'Current Advances in Orthodontics'. She is a member of the Turkish Orthodontic Society and Turkish Cleft Lip and Palate Society. She is married and has 2 children. Her knowledge of English is at an advanced level.",institutionString:"Gazi University Dentistry Faculty Department of Orthodontics",institution:null},{id:"202198",title:"Dr.",name:"Buket",middleName:null,surname:"Aybar",slug:"buket-aybar",fullName:"Buket Aybar",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/202198/images/6955_n.jpg",biography:"Buket Aybar, DDS, PhD, was born in 1971. She graduated from Istanbul University, Faculty of Dentistry, in 1992 and completed her PhD degree on Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in Istanbul University in 1997.\r\nDr. Aybar is currently a full-time professor in Istanbul University, Faculty of Dentistry Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. She has teaching responsibilities in graduate and postgraduate programs. Her clinical practice includes mainly dentoalveolar surgery.\r\nHer topics of interest are biomaterials science and cell culture studies. She has many articles in international and national scientific journals and chapters in books; she also has participated in several scientific projects supported by Istanbul University Research fund.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Marmara University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"178412",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Guhan",middleName:null,surname:"Dergin",slug:"guhan-dergin",fullName:"Guhan Dergin",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/178412/images/6954_n.jpg",biography:"Assoc. Prof. Dr. Gühan Dergin was born in 1973 in Izmit. He graduated from Marmara University Faculty of Dentistry in 1999. He completed his specialty of OMFS surgery in Marmara University Faculty of Dentistry and obtained his PhD degree in 2006. In 2005, he was invited as a visiting doctor in the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Department of the University of North Carolina, USA, where he went on a scholarship. Dr. Dergin still continues his academic career as an associate professor in Marmara University Faculty of Dentistry. He has many articles in international and national scientific journals and chapters in books.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Marmara University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"178414",title:"Prof.",name:"Yusuf",middleName:null,surname:"Emes",slug:"yusuf-emes",fullName:"Yusuf Emes",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/178414/images/6953_n.jpg",biography:"Born in Istanbul in 1974, Dr. Emes graduated from Istanbul University Faculty of Dentistry in 1997 and completed his PhD degree in Istanbul University faculty of Dentistry Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in 2005. He has papers published in international and national scientific journals, including research articles on implantology, oroantral fistulas, odontogenic cysts, and temporomandibular disorders. Dr. Emes is currently working as a full-time academic staff in Istanbul University faculty of Dentistry Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Istanbul University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"192229",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Ana Luiza",middleName:null,surname:"De Carvalho Felippini",slug:"ana-luiza-de-carvalho-felippini",fullName:"Ana Luiza De Carvalho Felippini",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/192229/images/system/192229.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:"University of São Paulo",institution:{name:"University of Sao Paulo",country:{name:"Brazil"}}},{id:"256851",title:"Prof.",name:"Ayşe",middleName:null,surname:"Gülşen",slug:"ayse-gulsen",fullName:"Ayşe Gülşen",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/256851/images/9696_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Ayşe Gülşen graduated in 1990 from Faculty of Dentistry, University of Ankara and did a postgraduate program at University of Gazi. \nShe worked as an observer and research assistant in Craniofacial Surgery Departments in New York, Providence Hospital in Michigan and Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan. \nShe works as Craniofacial Orthodontist in Department of Aesthetic, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Gazi, Ankara Turkey since 2004.",institutionString:"Orthodontist, Assoc Prof in the Department of Aesthetic, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Gazi",institution:null},{id:"255366",title:"Prof.",name:"Tosun",middleName:null,surname:"Tosun",slug:"tosun-tosun",fullName:"Tosun Tosun",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/255366/images/7347_n.jpg",biography:"Graduated at the Faculty of Dentistry, University of Istanbul, Turkey in 1989;\nVisitor Assistant at the University of Padua, Italy and Branemark Osseointegration Center of Treviso, Italy between 1993-94;\nPhD thesis on oral implantology in University of Istanbul and was awarded the academic title “Dr.med.dent.”, 1997;\nHe was awarded the academic title “Doç.Dr.” (Associated Professor) in 2003;\nProficiency in Botulinum Toxin Applications, Reading-UK in 2009;\nMastership, RWTH Certificate in Laser Therapy in Dentistry, AALZ-Aachen University, Germany 2009-11;\nMaster of Science (MSc) in Laser Dentistry, University of Genoa, Italy 2013-14.\n\nDr.Tosun worked as Research Assistant in the Department of Oral Implantology, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Istanbul between 1990-2002. \nHe worked part-time as Consultant surgeon in Harvard Medical International Hospitals and John Hopkins Medicine, Istanbul between years 2007-09.\u2028He was contract Professor in the Department of Surgical and Diagnostic Sciences (DI.S.C.), Medical School, University of Genova, Italy between years 2011-16. \nSince 2015 he is visiting Professor at Medical School, University of Plovdiv, Bulgaria. \nCurrently he is Associated Prof.Dr. at the Dental School, Oral Surgery Dept., Istanbul Aydin University and since 2003 he works in his own private clinic in Istanbul, Turkey.\u2028\nDr.Tosun is reviewer in journal ‘Laser in Medical Sciences’, reviewer in journal ‘Folia Medica\\', a Fellow of the International Team for Implantology, Clinical Lecturer of DGZI German Association of Oral Implantology, Expert Lecturer of Laser&Health Academy, Country Representative of World Federation for Laser Dentistry, member of European Federation of Periodontology, member of Academy of Laser Dentistry. Dr.Tosun presents papers in international and national congresses and has scientific publications in international and national journals. He speaks english, spanish, italian and french.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Istanbul Aydın University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"260116",title:"Dr.",name:"Mehmet",middleName:null,surname:"Yaltirik",slug:"mehmet-yaltirik",fullName:"Mehmet Yaltirik",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/260116/images/7413_n.jpg",biography:"Birth Date 25.09.1965\r\nBirth Place Adana- Turkey\r\nSex Male\r\nMarrial Status Bachelor\r\nDriving License Acquired\r\nMother Tongue Turkish\r\n\r\nAddress:\r\nWork:University of Istanbul,Faculty of Dentistry, Department of Oral Surgery and Oral Medicine 34093 Capa,Istanbul- TURKIYE",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Istanbul University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"171887",title:"Prof.",name:"Zühre",middleName:null,surname:"Akarslan",slug:"zuhre-akarslan",fullName:"Zühre Akarslan",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/171887/images/system/171887.jpg",biography:"Zühre Akarslan was born in 1977 in Cyprus. She graduated from Gazi University Faculty of Dentistry, Ankara, Turkey in 2000. \r\nLater she received her Ph.D. degree from the Oral Diagnosis and Radiology Department; which was recently renamed as Oral and Dentomaxillofacial Radiology, from the same university. \r\nShe is working as a full-time Associate Professor and is a lecturer and an academic researcher. \r\nHer expertise areas are dental caries, cancer, dental fear and anxiety, gag reflex in dentistry, oral medicine, and dentomaxillofacial radiology.",institutionString:"Gazi University",institution:{name:"Gazi University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"272237",title:"Dr.",name:"Pinar",middleName:"Kiymet",surname:"Karataban",slug:"pinar-karataban",fullName:"Pinar Karataban",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/272237/images/8911_n.png",biography:"Assist.Prof.Dr.Pınar Kıymet Karataban, DDS PhD \n\nDr.Pınar Kıymet Karataban was born in Istanbul in 1975. After her graduation from Marmara University Faculty of Dentistry in 1998 she started her PhD in Paediatric Dentistry focused on children with special needs; mainly children with Cerebral Palsy. She finished her pHD thesis entitled \\'Investigation of occlusion via cast analysis and evaluation of dental caries prevalance, periodontal status and muscle dysfunctions in children with cerebral palsy” in 2008. She got her Assist. Proffessor degree in Istanbul Aydın University Paediatric Dentistry Department in 2015-2018. ın 2019 she started her new career in Bahcesehir University, Istanbul as Head of Department of Pediatric Dentistry. In 2020 she was accepted to BAU International University, Batumi as Professor of Pediatric Dentistry. She’s a lecturer in the same university meanwhile working part-time in private practice in Ege Dental Studio (https://www.egedisklinigi.com/) a multidisciplinary dental clinic in Istanbul. Her main interests are paleodontology, ancient and contemporary dentistry, oral microbiology, cerebral palsy and special care dentistry. She has national and international publications, scientific reports and is a member of IAPO (International Association for Paleodontology), IADH (International Association of Disability and Oral Health) and EAPD (European Association of Pediatric Dentistry).",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"172009",title:"Dr.",name:"Fatma Deniz",middleName:null,surname:"Uzuner",slug:"fatma-deniz-uzuner",fullName:"Fatma Deniz Uzuner",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/172009/images/7122_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Deniz Uzuner was born in 1969 in Kocaeli-TURKEY. After graduating from TED Ankara College in 1986, she attended the Hacettepe University, Faculty of Dentistry in Ankara. \nIn 1993 she attended the Gazi University, Faculty of Dentistry, Department of Orthodontics for her PhD education. After finishing the PhD education, she worked as orthodontist in Ankara Dental Hospital under the Turkish Government, Ministry of Health and in a special Orthodontic Clinic till 2011. Between 2011 and 2016, Dr. Deniz Uzuner worked as a specialist in the Department of Orthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Gazi University in Ankara/Turkey. In 2016, she was appointed associate professor. Dr. Deniz Uzuner has authored 23 Journal Papers, 3 Book Chapters and has had 39 oral/poster presentations. She is a member of the Turkish Orthodontic Society. Her knowledge of English is at an advanced level.",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"332914",title:"Dr.",name:"Muhammad Saad",middleName:null,surname:"Shaikh",slug:"muhammad-saad-shaikh",fullName:"Muhammad Saad Shaikh",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Jinnah Sindh Medical University",country:{name:"Pakistan"}}},{id:"315775",title:"Dr.",name:"Feng",middleName:null,surname:"Luo",slug:"feng-luo",fullName:"Feng Luo",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Sichuan University",country:{name:"China"}}},{id:"344229",title:"Dr.",name:"Sankeshan",middleName:null,surname:"Padayachee",slug:"sankeshan-padayachee",fullName:"Sankeshan Padayachee",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of the Witwatersrand",country:{name:"South Africa"}}},{id:"315727",title:"Ms.",name:"Kelebogile A.",middleName:null,surname:"Mothupi",slug:"kelebogile-a.-mothupi",fullName:"Kelebogile A. Mothupi",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of the Witwatersrand",country:{name:"South Africa"}}},{id:"423519",title:"Dr.",name:"Sizakele",middleName:null,surname:"Ngwenya",slug:"sizakele-ngwenya",fullName:"Sizakele Ngwenya",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of the Witwatersrand",country:{name:"South Africa"}}},{id:"337613",title:"Mrs.",name:"Tshakane",middleName:null,surname:"R.M.D. Ralephenya",slug:"tshakane-r.m.d.-ralephenya",fullName:"Tshakane R.M.D. Ralephenya",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of the Witwatersrand",country:{name:"South Africa"}}},{id:"419270",title:"Dr.",name:"Ann",middleName:null,surname:"Chianchitlert",slug:"ann-chianchitlert",fullName:"Ann Chianchitlert",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Walailak University",country:{name:"Thailand"}}},{id:"419271",title:"Dr.",name:"Diane",middleName:null,surname:"Selvido",slug:"diane-selvido",fullName:"Diane Selvido",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Walailak University",country:{name:"Thailand"}}},{id:"419272",title:"Dr.",name:"Irin",middleName:null,surname:"Sirisoontorn",slug:"irin-sirisoontorn",fullName:"Irin Sirisoontorn",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Walailak University",country:{name:"Thailand"}}}]}},subseries:{item:{id:"18",type:"subseries",title:"Proteomics",keywords:"Mono- and Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis (1-and 2-DE), Liquid Chromatography (LC), Mass Spectrometry/Tandem Mass Spectrometry (MS; MS/MS), Proteins",scope:"With the recognition that the human genome cannot provide answers to the etiology of a disorder, changes in the proteins expressed by a genome became a focus in research. Thus proteomics, an area of research that detects all protein forms expressed in an organism, including splice isoforms and post-translational modifications, is more suitable than genomics for a comprehensive understanding of the biochemical processes that govern life. The most common proteomics applications are currently in the clinical field for the identification, in a variety of biological matrices, of biomarkers for diagnosis and therapeutic intervention of disorders. From the comparison of proteomic profiles of control and disease or different physiological states, which may emerge, changes in protein expression can provide new insights into the roles played by some proteins in human pathologies. Understanding how proteins function and interact with each other is another goal of proteomics that makes this approach even more intriguing. Specialized technology and expertise are required to assess the proteome of any biological sample. Currently, proteomics relies mainly on mass spectrometry (MS) combined with electrophoretic (1 or 2-DE-MS) and/or chromatographic techniques (LC-MS/MS). MS is an excellent tool that has gained popularity in proteomics because of its ability to gather a complex body of information such as cataloging protein expression, identifying protein modification sites, and defining protein interactions. The Proteomics topic aims to attract contributions on all aspects of MS-based proteomics that, by pushing the boundaries of MS capabilities, may address biological problems that have not been resolved yet.",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/18.jpg",hasOnlineFirst:!0,hasPublishedBooks:!0,annualVolume:11414,editor:{id:"200689",title:"Prof.",name:"Paolo",middleName:null,surname:"Iadarola",slug:"paolo-iadarola",fullName:"Paolo Iadarola",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bSCl8QAG/Profile_Picture_1623568118342",biography:"Paolo Iadarola graduated with a degree in Chemistry from the University of Pavia (Italy) in July 1972. He then worked as an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Science of the same University until 1984. In 1985, Prof. Iadarola became Associate Professor at the Department of Biology and Biotechnologies of the University of Pavia and retired in October 2017. Since then, he has been working as an Adjunct Professor in the same Department at the University of Pavia. His research activity during the first years was primarily focused on the purification and structural characterization of enzymes from animal and plant sources. During this period, Prof. Iadarola familiarized himself with the conventional techniques used in column chromatography, spectrophotometry, manual Edman degradation, and electrophoresis). Since 1995, he has been working on: i) the determination in biological fluids (serum, urine, bronchoalveolar lavage, sputum) of proteolytic activities involved in the degradation processes of connective tissue matrix, and ii) on the identification of biological markers of lung diseases. In this context, he has developed and validated new methodologies (e.g., Capillary Electrophoresis coupled to Laser-Induced Fluorescence, CE-LIF) whose application enabled him to determine both the amounts of biochemical markers (Desmosines) in urine/serum of patients affected by Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and the activity of proteolytic enzymes (Human Neutrophil Elastase, Cathepsin G, Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase) in sputa of these patients. More recently, Prof. Iadarola was involved in developing techniques such as two-dimensional electrophoresis coupled to liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (2DE-LC/MS) for the proteomic analysis of biological fluids aimed at the identification of potential biomarkers of different lung diseases. He is the author of about 150 publications (According to Scopus: H-Index: 23; Total citations: 1568- According to WOS: H-Index: 20; Total Citations: 1296) of peer-reviewed international journals. He is a Consultant Reviewer for several journals, including the Journal of Chromatography A, Journal of Chromatography B, Plos ONE, Proteomes, International Journal of Molecular Science, Biotech, Electrophoresis, and others. He is also Associate Editor of Biotech.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Pavia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Italy"}}},editorTwo:{id:"201414",title:"Dr.",name:"Simona",middleName:null,surname:"Viglio",slug:"simona-viglio",fullName:"Simona Viglio",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRKDHQA4/Profile_Picture_1630402531487",biography:"Simona Viglio is an Associate Professor of Biochemistry at the Department of Molecular Medicine at the University of Pavia. She has been working since 1995 on the determination of proteolytic enzymes involved in the degradation process of connective tissue matrix and on the identification of biological markers of lung diseases. She gained considerable experience in developing and validating new methodologies whose applications allowed her to determine both the amount of biomarkers (Desmosine and Isodesmosine) in the urine of patients affected by COPD, and the activity of proteolytic enzymes (HNE, Cathepsin G, Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase) in the sputa of these patients. Simona Viglio was also involved in research dealing with the supplementation of amino acids in patients with brain injury and chronic heart failure. She is presently engaged in the development of 2-DE and LC-MS techniques for the study of proteomics in biological fluids. The aim of this research is the identification of potential biomarkers of lung diseases. She is an author of about 90 publications (According to Scopus: H-Index: 23; According to WOS: H-Index: 20) on peer-reviewed journals, a member of the “Società Italiana di Biochimica e Biologia Molecolare,“ and a Consultant Reviewer for International Journal of Molecular Science, Journal of Chromatography A, COPD, Plos ONE and Nutritional Neuroscience.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Pavia",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Italy"}}},editorThree:null,series:{id:"11",title:"Biochemistry",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72877",issn:"2632-0983"},editorialBoard:[{id:"72288",title:"Dr.",name:"Arli Aditya",middleName:null,surname:"Parikesit",slug:"arli-aditya-parikesit",fullName:"Arli Aditya Parikesit",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/72288/images/system/72288.jpg",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Indonesia International Institute for Life Sciences",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Indonesia"}}},{id:"40928",title:"Dr.",name:"Cesar",middleName:null,surname:"Lopez-Camarillo",slug:"cesar-lopez-camarillo",fullName:"Cesar Lopez-Camarillo",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/40928/images/3884_n.png",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Mexico"}}},{id:"81926",title:"Dr.",name:"Shymaa",middleName:null,surname:"Enany",slug:"shymaa-enany",fullName:"Shymaa Enany",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/81926/images/system/81926.png",institutionString:"Suez Canal University",institution:{name:"Suez Canal University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Egypt"}}}]},onlineFirstChapters:{paginationCount:1,paginationItems:[{id:"83092",title:"Novel Composites for Bone Tissue Engineering",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106255",signatures:"Pugalanthipandian Sankaralingam, Poornimadevi Sakthivel and Vijayakumar Chinnaswamy Thangavel",slug:"novel-composites-for-bone-tissue-engineering",totalDownloads:0,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,authors:null,book:{title:"Biomimetics - Bridging the Gap",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11453.jpg",subseries:{id:"8",title:"Bioinspired Technology and Biomechanics"}}}]},publishedBooks:{paginationCount:1,paginationItems:[{type:"book",id:"10795",title:"Plant Stress Physiology",subtitle:"Perspectives in Agriculture",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/10795.jpg",slug:"plant-stress-physiology-perspectives-in-agriculture",publishedDate:"April 28th 2022",editedByType:"Edited by",bookSignature:"Mirza Hasanuzzaman and Kamran Nahar",hash:"c5a7932b74fe612b256bf95d0709756e",volumeInSeries:11,fullTitle:"Plant Stress Physiology - Perspectives in Agriculture",editors:[{id:"76477",title:"Prof.",name:"Mirza",middleName:null,surname:"Hasanuzzaman",slug:"mirza-hasanuzzaman",fullName:"Mirza 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