Literature DB >> 32610559

Optical-Based Thickness Measurement of MoO3 Nanosheets.

Sergio Puebla1, Antonio Mariscal-Jiménez2, Rosalía Serna Galán2, Carmen Munuera1, Andres Castellanos-Gomez1.   

Abstract

Considering that two-dimensional (2D) molybdenum trioxide has acquired more attention in the last few years, it is relevant to speed up thickness identification of this material. We provide two fast and non-destructive methods to evaluate the thickness of MoO3 flakes on SiO2/Si substrates. First, by means of quantitative analysis of the apparent color of the flakes in optical microscopy images, one can make a first approximation of the thickness with an uncertainty of ±3 nm. The second method is based on the fit of optical contrast spectra, acquired with micro-reflectance measurements, to a Fresnel law-based model that provides an accurate measurement of the flake thickness with ±2 nm of uncertainty.

Entities:  

Keywords:  2D materials; MoO3; complex oxides; optical microscopy; thickness determination

Year:  2020        PMID: 32610559      PMCID: PMC7407517          DOI: 10.3390/nano10071272

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)        ISSN: 2079-4991            Impact factor:   5.076


1. Introduction

Since the isolation of graphene by mechanical exfoliation in 2004 [1], the catalog of different 2D materials with complementary properties keeps growing [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Among them, wide bandgap semiconductor materials have attracted a great deal of attention due to their potential in optoelectronic applications [10] requiring electrically conductive materials that are transparent to visible light. Molybdenum trioxide (MoO3) in its α-phase is a van der Waals material with a monolayer thickness of ~0.7 nm [11,12] and a direct bandgap of approximately 3 eV [13,14,15], suitable for such applications [16]. It has been used in thin films to enhance the injection of holes in organic light-emitting diodes as a buffer layer [17,18], in organic photovoltaics [19], perovskite solar cells [20] and silicon solar cells [21], furthermore it can be used in gas sensors [15,22,23]. Moreover, MoO3 is interesting because of its photochromic, thermochromic, electrochromic effects [24,25,26,27,28] and catalytic properties in the partial oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde [29,30,31,32,33]. Sub-stoichiometric MoO3 quantum dots have been synthesized as surface-enhanced Raman scattering substrates [34]. Furthermore, this material displays an in-plane anisotropy of the crystal structure in its layered phase (α-MoO3) [16,35,36,37,38], which can be exploited to fabricate novel optical and optoelectronic devices [39,40,41], and anisotropic phonon polariton propagation along the MoO3 surface has been observed [42]. A rapid and non-destructive method to measure the thickness of MoO3 would be highly desirable for the further development of this line of research. This is precisely the goal of this manuscript: to provide a guide to evaluate the thickness of MoO3 nanosheets (in the 0–100 nm range) by optical microscopy-based methods. We propose two complementary approaches: first, a coarse thickness estimation based on the apparent interference color of the flakes and, second, a quantitative analysis of the reflection spectra using a Fresnel law-based model.

2. Materials and Methods

MoO3 flakes were grown by a simple physical vapor transport method carried out at atmospheric conditions, developed in Reference [35]. A molybdenum foil was oxidized by heating it up on a hotplate at 540 °C, then a silicon wafer was placed on top. The molybdenum oxide sublimed and crystallized on the surface of the Si wafer, at a slightly lower temperature, forming MoO3 flakes. The MoO3 grown by this method was characterized by X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) finding that it was composed of a single-phase fully oxidized MoO3 [35]. These MoO3 flakes can be easily lifted from the Si wafer surface with a Gel-Film (WF x4 6.0 mil, from Gel-Pak) viscoelastic substrate and subsequently transferred to an arbitrary target substrate. We transferred the flakes onto silicon chips with a 297 nm SiO2 capping layer (see the Supporting Information for the quantitative determination of the SiO2 thickness) as it is one of the standard substrates for work with 2D materials.

2.1. Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM)

AFM characterization was performed at ambient conditions using two commercial AFM systems: (1) a Nanotec AFM system has been used [43] in dynamic mode with a NextTip (NT-SS-II) cantilever (resonance frequency of 75 kHz), (2) an ezAFM (by Nanomagnetics) AFM operated in dynamic mode with Tap190Al-G by Budget Sensors AFM cantilevers (force constant 48 Nm−1 and resonance frequency 190 kHz).

2.2. Optical Microscopy and Spectroscopy

Optical microscopy images were acquired using a Motic BA310 Me-T microscope (Motic, Barcelona, Spain) (equipped with a 50× 0.55 NA objective and an AMScope MU1803 CMOS Camera) and reflection spectra were collected from a spot of ~1.5–2 µm diameter with a Thorlabs CCS200/M fiber-coupled spectrometer (Thorlabs Inc., Newton, New Jersey, United States). More details about the micro-reflectance setup can be found in Reference [44].

3. Results and Discussion

Figure 1a shows the atomic force microscopy (AFM) topography of eight MoO3 flakes with different thicknesses, and Figure 1b shows their corresponding optical microscopy images. The direct comparison between the AFM and the optical images allows us to build up a color-chart correlating the apparent color of the MoO3 flakes deposited on top of the 297 nm SiO2/Si substrate (the SiO2 thickness is experimentally measured by reflectometry with ±0.5 nm uncertainty) with their corresponding thickness with an uncertainty of ±3 nm. Similar approaches have been reported for graphene [45], transition metal dichalcogenides [46], TiS3 [47] and franckeite [48]. This method has the main limitation that it requires the use of a specific SiO2 thickness as the interference colors of the MoO3 flakes strongly depend on the underlying substrate. In this work, we provide color-charts for four different nominal SiO2 capping layer thicknesses: 297 nm, 271 nm, 148 nm and 88 nm. Figure 2 shows the correlation of optical images and AFM images for MoO3 flakes transferred onto an 88 nm SiO2/Si substrate. We address the reader to the Supporting Information for the data corresponding to the 148 nm and 271 nm thick SiO2 substrates, named as Figures S1 and S2, respectively. Figure 3 shows a comparison between the apparent color vs. the thickness color-charts obtained for the four different SiO2 thicknesses studied here. If a different SiO2 thickness is used, a new calibration measurement, like that shown in Figure 1, has to be carried out again for the desired SiO2 thickness.
Figure 1

Thickness dependent apparent color of MoO3 flakes. (a) AFM measurements of the exfoliated flakes with different thickness placed on a 297 nm SiO2/Si substrate. (b) Optical images of the flakes and a colorbar with the apparent color of flakes with thickness from 5 nm up to 93 nm (from 7 to ~130 layers). Scale bars: 10 µm.

Figure 2

Thickness dependent apparent color of MoO3 flakes. (a) AFM measurements of the exfoliated flakes with different thickness placed on an 88 nm SiO2/Si substrate. (b) Optical images of the flakes and a colorbar with the apparent color of flakes with thickness up to 88 nm. Scale bars: 10 µm.

Figure 3

Thickness dependent apparent color of MoO3 flakes on SiO2/Si substrates with different oxide capping layer thickness.

Further, we quantitatively analyze the reflection spectra of MoO3 flakes to measure their thickness more accurately, similarly to previous works in transition metal dichalcogenides, muscovite mica and black phosphorus [44,49,50,51]. Differential reflectance spectra are acquired in normal incidence with a modified metallurgical microscope (BA 310 MET-T, Motic), details in Reference [44]. A spectrum is first acquired onto the bare substrate (Is) and then onto the flake (If) and the optical contrast (C) can be calculated as: In Figure 4a, we sketch the optical system, indicating the different optical media, used to model the optical contrast spectra. The refractive index values of the different media used for the model are shown in Figure S3a. Figure 4b shows the experimental optical contrast obtained for different values of thickness of MoO3.
Figure 4

(a) Optical model used to calculate the MoO3 optical contrast. (b) Optical contrast spectra measured on MoO3 flakes, on a 297 nm SiO2/Si substrate, of different thickness. (c) Calculated optical contrast (solid lines) using the Fresnel law-based model [52]. The shaded area accounts for an uncertainty of ±1 nm in the thickness of the flake [53].

The optical contrast of this kind of multilayer optical system can be calculated with high accuracy using a Fresnel law-based model [54]. The reflection coefficient in a four media Fresnel model is expressed as [55]: where sub index 0 refers to air, 1 to MoO3, 2 to SiO2 and 3 to Si. Assuming normal incidence, Φi = 2πñidi/λ is the phase shift induced by the propagation of the light beam in the media i, being and the complex refractive index, thickness of the media and wavelength, respectively; rij = (ñi − ñj)/(ñi + ñj) is the Fresnel coefficient at the interface between the media i and j. The reflection coefficient in a three media Fresnel model (i.e., the case of the bare substrate without the MoO3 flake) is expressed as: where sub index 0 is air, 1 is SiO2 and 2 is Si. With these equations, one can calculate the optical contrast by firstly calculating the reflected intensity: Then the optical contrast can be defined through the following operation that correlates the reflected intensity by the bare substrate (R3) with the reflected intensity by the MoO3 flake (R4) as: Interestingly, we found that one can accurately reproduce the experimental optical contrast spectra by simply assuming a refractive index of MoO3 of ñ1 = 2.2 − i0. Note that, according to Reference [35], the band structure of MoO3 has a negligible thickness dependence and thus we do not expect the refractive index to depend on the flake thickness. The results of the calculated spectra with this model are depicted in Figure 4c. The real part of the refractive index of bulk MoO3 nMoO3 spans in the literature from 1.8 to 2.3 [14,56,57]. Since the literature values of the extinction coefficient in the visible range are very low, we neglect that term in our calculations, still providing a good fit to the experimental data. As verification, Figure S3b shows the complex refractive index as a function of wavelength, ñ = n + iκ, measured with ellipsometry of polycrystalline MoO3 films showing values of n = 2–2.3 in the visible part of the spectrum (from 1.5 to 3 eV) and a negligible value of κ in the same region (from 0.02 to 0.1). This ellipsometry measurement on polycrystalline MoO3 verifies that the assumed refractive index for single crystalline MoO3 flakes (ñ1 = 2.2 − i0) is reasonable. Some of the features present in the optical contrast spectra, like the local maxima and minima, strongly depend on the thickness of the MoO3 medium. In fact, the shape of the optical contrast spectra, including the maxima and minima features, arises from the interference colors effect. It is therefore clear that these features will depend on the thickness of the MoO3 flake as the optical paths of the light beams passing through flakes with different thicknesses will be different. Therefore, one can evaluate the thickness of a MoO3 flake by calculating the optical contrast according to Equations (2)–(5) for different thicknesses of MoO3 and determining the best fit by minimum squares. Figure 5a compares the optical contrast measured for a MoO3 flake (16.5 nm thick according to the AFM) with the optical contrast calculated assuming a thickness in the range of 0–100 nm. The best match is obtained for a thickness of 13.5 nm. The inset in Figure 5a shows the square of the difference between the measured contrast and the calculated one as a function of the thickness assumed for the calculation. The plot shows a well-defined minimum at a thickness of 13.5 nm.
Figure 5

(a) Experimental optical contrast (black) and comparison with the calculated ones (color lines) of MoO3 flakes, with thicknesses from 10 to 18 nm, placed onto a substrate of 297 nm of SiO2. Inset of figure: minimum square value for different values of thickness of the flakes. (b) Comparison of thickness measured with AFM and the Fresnel model. Experimental data represented as red dots and line in black has a slope of 1.

In order to benchmark this thickness determination method, Figure 5b compares the thickness values measured with AFM for 23 flakes from 5 nm to 100 nm thick with the values obtained following the optical contrast fit method discussed above. In the plot, we include a straight line with a slope of 1 that indicates the perfect agreement between the thickness of MoO3 nanosheets measured by AFM and the fit to the Fresnel law-based model. The low dispersion along the slope = 1 line indicates the good agreement between the thickness evaluated by both methods. In effect, the calculated linear regression of the data points in Figure 5b has a slope of 1.02.

4. Conclusions

In summary, we provided two fast and non-destructive complementary methods to evaluate the number of layers of MoO3 nanosheets using optical microscopy. First, one can get a coarse estimation of the thickness (with ±3 nm of uncertainty) by comparing the apparent color of the flakes with a pre-calibrated color-chart. This method is very fast, but it requires the previous calibration of a color-chart that depends on the SiO2 capping layer thickness (nonetheless, we provide pre-calibrated color-charts for four commonly used SiO2 capping layer thicknesses). The second method is based on the measurement of the optical contrast spectrum of the MoO3 flake under study and the subsequent fit to a Fresnel law-based model that includes the optical constants of each medium. This method requires a modification of the optical microscope to allow for differential reflectance measurements, but it can provide lower uncertainty (±2 nm of median standard deviation for the samples on 297 nm of SiO2), and it can be easily employed for flakes transferred on SiO2/Si substrates with different SiO2 thicknesses. We believe that the development of these thickness determination methods can be very helpful for the community working on MoO3 as it can effectively speed up the research on this 2D material.
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