| Literature DB >> 21711501 |
María Arroyo-Hernández1, Raquel Alvaro, Sheila Serrano, José Luis Costa-Krämer.
Abstract
The catalytic effect of gold seed particles deposited on a substrate prior to zinc oxide (ZnO) thin film growth by magnetron sputtering was investigated. For this purpose, selected ultra thin gold layers, with thicknesses close to the percolation threshold, are deposited by thermal evaporation in ultra high vacuum (UHV) conditions and subsequently annealed to form gold nanodroplets. The ZnO structures are subsequently deposited by r.f. magnetron sputtering in a UHV chamber, and possible morphological differences between the ZnO grown on top of the substrate and on the gold are investigated. The results indicate a moderate catalytic effect for a deposited gold underlayer of 4 nm, quite close to the gold thin film percolation thickness.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21711501 PMCID: PMC3211855 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-6-437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1AFM pictures showing the morphology variations-grain size and roughness-due to thermal annealing for a 3-nm gold thickness film. Left images are before and right ones are after the annealing.
Figure 2XRD pattern of a 3-nm nominal thickness gold film before (orange) and after (black) thermal annealing.
Figure 3SEM top views comparing the ZnO structures grown directly onto the substrate and onto an annealed ultra thin gold film of different thicknesses.
Figure 4SEM tilted images and cross-sectional views of ZnO structures grown on 2 and 4 nm gold film nominal thickness.
Figure 5XRD diffraction spectra of ZnO structures grown on 2 nm (orange) and 4 nm (black) gold film nominal thicknesses.