Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1672337 Thin Solid Films 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Electrodeposited wurtzite ZnO thin films exhibit shifts in their optical absorption edges with changes in thickness (0.2-2 μm), deposition potential (− 0.80 V to − 1.50 V), and aging time (days to months under ambient conditions). Increases in absorption edge energy are consistent with H+ incorporation as a shallow donor (Burstein-Moss effect) due to deposition in the presence of electrochemically evolved hydrogen. Diffuse reflectance spectroscopic data and Raman spectroscopic data show both potential- and thickness-dependent changes in defect levels and absorption edges, which suggests that H+ can be trapped in secondary defects. Such defects also increase the diffusion time for H+ and lead to the observed decay in absorption edge energy with aging.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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