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Published August 3, 2006 | public
Journal Article

Chemical and Electrical Passivation of Single-Crystal Silicon(100) Surfaces through a Two-Step Chlorination/Alkylation Process

Abstract

Single-crystal Si(100) surfaces have been functionalized by using a two-step radical chlorination−Grignard (R= MgCl, R = CH_3, C_2H_5, C_4H_9, C_6H_5, or CH_2C_6H_5) alkylation method. After alkylation, no chlorine was detectable on the surface by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and the C 1s region showed a silicon-induced peak shift indicative of a Si−C bond. The relative intensity of this peak decreased, as expected, as the steric bulk of the alkyl increased. Despite the lack of full alkyl termination of the atop sites of the Si(100) surface, functionalization significantly reduced the rate of surface oxidation in air compared to that of the H-terminated Si(100) surface, with alkylated surfaces forming less than half a monolayer of oxide after over one month of exposure to air. Studies of the charge-carrier lifetime with rf photoconductivity decay methods indicated a surface recombination velocity of <30 cm s^(-1) for methylated surfaces, and <60 cm s^(-1) for Si surfaces functionalized with the other alkyl groups evaluated. Soft X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic data indicated that the H−Si(100) surfaces were terminated by SiH, SiH_2, and SiH_3 species, whereas Cl−Si(100) surfaces were predominantly terminated by monochloro (SiCl and SiHCl) and dichloro (SiCl_2 and SiHCl_2) Si species. Methylation produced signals consistent with termination by Si−alkyl bonding arising from SiH(CH_3)-, SiH_2(CH_3)-, and Si(CH_3)_2-type species.

Additional Information

© 2006 American Chemical Society. Received 22 November 2005. Published online 12 July 2006. Published in print 1 August 2006. We gratefully acknowledge the NSF, grant CHE-021358, for support of this work. This work was carried out in part at the National Synchrotron Light Source, Brookhaven National Laboratory, which is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Division of Materials Sciences and Division of Chemical Sciences, under contract DE-AC02-98CH 10866, and the Beckman Institute Molecular Materials Research Center at the California Institute of Technology.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023