Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5360193 | Applied Surface Science | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Gallium doped zinc oxide (ZnO:Ga) thin films were grown on glass substrates using RF magnetron co-sputtering, followed by H2 ambient annealing at 623Â K to explore a possibility of steady and low-cost process for fabricating transparent electrodes. While it was observed that the ZnO:Ga thin films were densely packed c-axis oriented self-textured structures, in the as-deposited state, the films contained Ga2O3 and ZnGa2O4 which had adverse effect on the electrical properties. On the other hand, post-annealing in H2 ambient improved the electrical properties significantly via reduction of Ga2O3 and ZnGa2O4 to release elemental Ga which subsequently acted as substitutional dopant increasing the carrier concentration by two orders of magnitude. Transmittance of the ZnO:Ga thin films were all over 90% that of glass while the optical band gap varied in accordance with the carrier concentrations due to changes in Fermi level. Experimental observation in this study suggests that transparent conductive oxide (TCO) films based on Ga doped ZnO with good electrical and optical properties can be realized via simple low-cost process.
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Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
Sungyeon Kim, Jungmok Seo, Hyeon Woo Jang, Jungsik Bang, Woong Lee, Taeyoon Lee, Jae-Min Myoung,