Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1666978 Thin Solid Films 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper presents a pulsed laser crystallization technique, enabling large area crystallization of amorphous Si to produce grains having well-defined size and orientation. The method is developed by first determining the parameters influencing crystallization induced by single laser pulses of circular cross-sectional profile. In a second step, crystallization by overlapping round spots is examined. The experiments reveal three zones characterized by distinctly different crystallized morphologies following the laser irradiation. One of these zones corresponds to the regime of lateral crystal growth, wherein grains are driven towards the center of the spot by the radial temperature gradient. These findings are then applied to processing via line beam profiles that facilitate large area crystallization upon rapid translation of the specimen. Crystallization of extended areas hinges on the determination of the crystal growth length for a single spot. The pitch between successive pulses is then set on the basis of this information. It is shown that the pulse energy has only a weak effect on the crystal growth length.

► Investigated lateral crystal growth in laser annealing of thin silicon films ► Examined effects of laser beam profile and pulse energy on crystallization ► Showed the dependence of lateral crystal growth length on laser fluence ► Demonstrated large area film crystallization using overlapping laser pulses

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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