The electron beam induced current (EBIC) mode of a scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a widely used technique for the quantitative assessment of minority carrier diffusion length and surface recombination.… Click to show full abstract
The electron beam induced current (EBIC) mode of a scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a widely used technique for the quantitative assessment of minority carrier diffusion length and surface recombination. Point source (one-dimensional) and extended source (two-dimensional) analytical models are two widely used approaches to assess this information in geometry where the electron beam (e-beam) is parallel to the p-n junction. In this article, a two-dimensional (2D) analytical model is evaluated and compared with 2D finite element numerical simulations, where the electron beam-solid interaction is modeled using a Monte Carlo simulation coupled with a drift-diffusion solver. The simulations are computed for both low and high level injection conditions. The effect of an e-beam injection level on the shape of EBIC profiles is analyzed to evaluate limitations of the analytical models.
               
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