Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5362657 | Applied Surface Science | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Superhydrophobic and transparent zinc oxide (ZnO) thin films were deposited by a simple and cost effective spray pyrolysis technique (SPT) onto the glass substrates at 723Â K from an aqueous zinc acetate precursor solution. The solution concentration was varied from 0.1 to 0.4Â M and its effect on structural, morphological, wetting and optical properties of ZnO thin films was studied. The synthesized films were found to be polycrystalline, with preferential growth along c-axis. A slight improvement in the crystallite size and texture coefficient is observed as the concentration of the solution is increased. SEM micrographs show the uniform distribution of spherical grains of about 60-80Â nm grain size. The films were specular and highly transparent with average transmittance of about 85%. The spectrum shows sharp absorption band edge at 381Â nm, corresponding to optical gap of 3.25Â eV. The samples of texture coefficient less than 90% and roughness less than 75Â nm are hydrophobic and above these values they become superhydrophobic in nature. The hydrophobicity coupled with high transmittance is of great importance in commercial application such as transparent self-cleaning surfaces, anti-fog, anti-snow, fluid microchips and microreactors.
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Authors
N.L. Tarwal, P.S. Patil,