کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5363487 | 1503696 | 2013 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Doping tin dioxide (SnO2) with pentavalent Sb5+ ions leads to an enhancement in the electrical conductivity of this material, because Sb5+ substitutes Sn4+ in the matrix, promoting an electronic density increase in the conduction band, due to the donor-like nature of the doping atom. Results of computational simulation, based on the Density Functional Theory (DFT), of SnO2:4%Sb and SnO2:8%Sb show that the bandgap magnitude is strongly affected by the doping concentration, because the energy value found for 4Â at%Sb and 8Â at%Sb was 3.27Â eV and 3.13Â eV, respectively, whereas the well known value for undoped SnO2 is about 3.6Â eV. Sb-doped SnO2 thin films were obtained by the sol-gel-dip-coating technique. The samples were submitted to excitation with below theoretical bandgap light (450Â nm), as well as above bandgap light (266Â nm) at low temperature, and a temperature-dependent increase in the conductivity is observed. Besides, an unusual temperature and time dependent decay when the illumination is removed is also observed, where the decay time is slower for higher temperatures. This decay is modeled by considering thermally activated cross section of trapping centers, and the hypothesis of grain boundary scattering as the dominant mechanism for electronic mobility.
⺠Decay of photo-induced conductivity in Sb-doped SnO2, with different light sources, above and below the matrix bandgap. ⺠Modeling of the decay and evaluation of the capture energy. ⺠Electronic structure evaluation according to Density Functional Theory. ⺠Evaluation of competing mechanisms: trapping by thermally activated defects and time-temperature dependent mobility.
Journal: Applied Surface Science - Volume 267, 15 February 2013, Pages 164-168