| Literature DB >> 31126109 |
Amine Achour1, Mohammad Islam2, Sorin Vizireanu3, Iftikhar Ahmad4, Muhammad Aftab Akram5, Khalid Saeed6, Gheorghe Dinescu7, Jean-Jacques Pireaux8.
Abstract
Although the origin and possible mechanisms for green and yellow emission from different zinc oxide (ZnO) forms have been extensively investigated, the same for red/orange PL emission from ZnO nanorods (nR) remains largely unaddressed. In this work, vertically aligned zinc oxide nanorods arrays (ZnO nR) were produced using hydrothermal process followed by plasma treatment in argon/sulfur hexafluoride (Ar/SF6) gas mixture for different time. The annealed samples were highly crystalline with ~45 nm crystallite size, (002) preferred orientation, and a relatively low strain value of 1.45 × 10-3, as determined from X-ray diffraction pattern. As compared to as-deposited ZnO nR, the plasma treatment under certain conditions demonstrated enhancement in the room temperature photoluminescence (PL) emission intensity, in the visible orange/red spectral regime, by a factor of 2. The PL intensity enhancement induced by SF6 plasma treatment may be attributed to surface chemistry modification as confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies. Several factors including presence of hydroxyl group on the ZnO surface, increased oxygen level in the ZnO lattice (OL), generation of F-OH and F-Zn bonds and passivation of surface states and bulk defects are considered to be active towards red/orange emission in the PL spectrum. The PL spectra were deconvoluted into component Gaussian sub-peaks representing transitions from conduction-band minimum (CBM) to oxygen interstitials (Oi) and CBM to oxygen vacancies (VO) with corresponding photon energies of 2.21 and 1.90 eV, respectively. The optimum plasma treatment route for ZnO nanostructures with resulting enhancement in the PL emission offers strong potential for photonic applications such as visible wavelength phosphors.Entities:
Keywords: SF6 plasma; ZnO nanorods; photoluminescence; red emission; visible emission
Year: 2019 PMID: 31126109 PMCID: PMC6567295 DOI: 10.3390/nano9050794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1SEM microstructures of the as-prepared vertically aligned ZnO array (sample Z-nR) at (a) low magnification and (b) high magnification.
Figure 2X-ray diffraction pattern of the as-made ZnO nanorods sample (Z-nR).
Figure 3Photoluminescence spectra of the different Z-nR samples before and after SF6 plasma treatment in the (a) ultraviolet (UV) spectral regime and (b) visible spectrum.
Figure 4Deconvoluted PL spectra of the ZnO nanorods: (a) As-deposited nanorods (Z-nR), and after Ar/SF6 plasma treatment for (b) 5 min (Z-nR5), (c) 10 min (Z-nR10), and (d) 20 min (Z-nR20).
Figure 5Change in orange (I) and red (I) emission intensities with respect to the green (I) or total intensity (I) from the PL spectra of the as-deposited and Ar/SF6 plasma-treated ZnO nanorods.
Figure 6Bar chart showing atomic percentage of different elements as determined from the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) data.
Figure 7XPS Zn 2p core level spectra for the ZnO nanorods before and after Ar/SF6 plasma treatment.
Figure 8XPS F 1s core level spectra for the ZnO nanorods surface after Ar/SF6 plasma treatment.
Figure 9XPS O 1s deconvoluted core level spectra of (a) as-prepared ZnO NRs and ZnO NRs treated in Ar/SF6 plasma: (b) Z-nR5, (c) Z-nR10, and (d) Z-nR20.
Deconvolution of the O 1s XPS peak in the different ZnO nanorods in terms of binding energy values and atomic percentages for the three O 1s component peaks.
| Sample | O 1s Binding Energy (eV) | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Z-nR | 23.8 | |
| 55.1 | ||
| 21.1 | ||
| Z-nR5 | 35.1 | |
| 54.2 | ||
| 10.7 | ||
| Z-nR10 | 22.6 | |
| 69.3 | ||
| 8.1 | ||
| Z-nR20 | 21.7 | |
| 76.2 | ||
| 2.1 |