| Literature DB >> 28788247 |
Lung-Chien Chen1, Cheng-An Hsieh2, Xiuyu Zhang3.
Abstract
CuZnO (CZO) films have attracted increasing amounts of attention due to their promising potential applications in semiconductor devices. ZnO shows n-type conductivity, and attempts have been made to dope several elements in ZnO to improve the electrical properties. This study investigated the electrical property transitions of CZO films and determined the copper concentration at which the conductivity of CZO films will change from n-type to p-type. In this study, CZO films were fabricated by ultrasonic spray pyrolysis with copper acetate, zinc acetate, and ammonium acetate precursor solution. The concentrations of Cu ions in the CZO films were controlled by the concentration ratios of copper acetate to zinc acetate in the precursor solutions. In addition, these samples were analyzed by Hall effect measurements, X-ray diffraction, transmittance measurements, and photoluminescence measurements. The results show that the conductivity of the CZO film changes from n-type to p-type when the copper ion concentration in the film is 5%.Entities:
Keywords: CZO; Raman analysis; XRD; photoluminescence
Year: 2014 PMID: 28788247 PMCID: PMC5512636 DOI: 10.3390/ma7117304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1SEM images of (a) Zn0.98Cu0.02O; (b) Zn0.96Cu0.04O and (c) Zn0.94Cu0.06O. (d–f) show the images in (a–c) at five times greater magnification, respectively.
Figure 2XRD patterns of CuZn1−O (x = 0–0.06).
Hall effect measurements of CuZnO (CZO) thin films.
| Sample | Mobility (cm2/V·s) | Concentration (cm−3) | R0 (Ω·cm) | Conductivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZnO | 6.96 | 1.347 × 1017 | 6.66 | n |
| Cu0.03Zn0.97O | 1.06 | 2.599 × 1017 | 22.76 | n |
| Cu0.04Zn0.96O | 0.79 | 3.016 × 1018 | 2.619 | n |
| Cu0.05Zn0.95O | 0.692 | 5.517 × 1018 | 1.634 | p |
Figure 3(a) Absorption curves and (b) optical transmittance spectra.
Figure 4Raman spectra of CuZn1−O (x = 0–0.06).
Figure 5Photoluminescence spectra of CuZn1−O (x = 0, 0.02, 0.05).