Doping density, not valency, influences catalytic metal-assisted plasma etching of silicon†
Abstract
Metal-assisted plasma etching (MAPE) of silicon (Si) is an etching technique driven by the catalytic activity of metals such as gold in fluorine-based plasma environments. In this work, the role of the Si substrate was investigated by examining the effects of the dopant concentration in both n- and p-type Si and the dopant atom type in n-type Si in SF6/O2 mixed gas plasma. At the highest dopant concentrations, both n- and p-type Si initially exhibit inhibition of the MAPE-enhanced etching. As the etch progresses, MAPE initiates, resulting in catalytic etching of the underlying Si at the metal–Si interface. Interestingly, MAPE-enhanced etching increases with decreasing doping concentrations for both n- and p-type Si substrates, distinct from results for the similar but divergent, metal-assisted chemical etching of silicon in liquid. Our findings show that the metal–Si interface remains essential to MAPE, and surface enrichment of the dopant atoms or other surface chemistries and the size of metal nanoparticles play roles in modulating catalytic activity.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Materials Horizons HOT Papers and Celebrating 10 Years of Materials Horizons: 10th Anniversary Collection