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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2011
Vacancy-type defects in ion implanted Si were studied by a monoenergetic positron beam. The depth-distributions of the defects were obtained from measurements of Doppler broadening profiles of the positron annihilation as a function of incident positron energy. The results showed that a size of vacany-clusters introduced by 150-keV P+-ion implantation was found to be smaller than that introduced by 2-MeV P+-ion implantation. This was attributed to an overlap of collision cascades in low-energy (150 keV) ion implanted specimens. From isochronal annealing experiments for 80-keV B+- and 150-keV P+-ion implanted specimens, the defected region was removed by 1200 °C annealing, however, for 2-MeV P+-implanted specimen, two-types of oxygen-vacancy complexes were found to coexist even after 1200 °C annealing.