Phosphorous diffusion in silicon has been investigated for room-temperature implants of low energy (5, 10, and 30 keV) and fluence between 1x10(14) and 5x10(15) cm(-2), followed by rapid thermal annealing in the temperature range of 600-1000 degrees C. Depth profiles were extracted by time-of-flight secondary-ion-mass spectroscopy. For 5-keV energy implants below 1x10(15) cm(-2) fluence, phosphorus preferentially diffused outwards, i.e., toward the sample surface. Nuclear reaction analysis in combination with chemical stripping of the oxide shows that as much as 50% of the P in annealed samples can accumulate at the surface oxide during a 30-s anneal. At all implant energies, indiffusion of P dominates in the regimes of higher fluence, higher anneal temperature, and longer anneal times. (c) 2005 American Institute of Physics.