| Literature DB >> 35335712 |
Xiaoyan Wu1, Wei Li1, Qingrong Chen2, Caixia Xu3, Jiamian Wang2, Lingyuan Wu1, Guodong Liu1, Weiping Wang1, Ting Li2, Ping Chen2, Long Xu2.
Abstract
Light-induced degradation (LID) phenomenon is commonly found in optoelectronics devices. Self-healing effect in halide lead perovskite solar cells was investigated since the electrons and holes in the shallow traps could escape easily at room temperature. However, the degradation in the semiconductors could not easily recover at room temperature, and many of them needed annealing at temperatures in the several hundreds, which was not friendly to the integrated optoelectronic semiconductor devices. To solve this problem, in this work, LID effect of photocurrent in p-type Mg-doped gallium nitride thin films was investigated, and deep defect and vacancy traps played a vital role in the LID and healing process. This work provides a contactless way to heal the photocurrent behavior to its initial level, which is desirable in integrated devices.Entities:
Keywords: Mg-doped gallium nitride; contactless healing; light-induced degradation; photocurrent device
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335712 PMCID: PMC8950378 DOI: 10.3390/nano12060899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Schematic illustration of the MOCVD system; (b) X-ray diffraction spectrum of the Mg-doped and undoped GaN thin film; (c) Scanning electron microscopy of the Mg-doped GaN thin film.
The growth parameters of the Mg doped GaN thin films.
| Growth | Flow Rate | Vacuum | Growth | Annealing Temperature | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Step | 520 °C | TMG: 8.3 µmol/min | 80 Torr | 15 min | - |
| Second Step | 850 °C | Cp2Mg: 0.4 µmol/min | 80 Torr | 120 min | - |
| Third Step | - | N2: 60 sccm | - | - | 750 °C |
Figure 2(a) Absorption spectrum of the Mg-doped GaN thin film; (b) Photoluminescence spectra of the Mg-doped GaN thin film excited by the 355 nm nanosecond laser; (c) Defect luminescence of the Mg-doped GaN thin film; (d) Temperature-dependent photoluminescence of the Mg-doped GaN thin film.
Figure 3(a) Typical Schottky type I–V characteristic curve with and without UV light illumination of Mg–doped GaN thin film with Au interdigital contact on the top (the inset is the schematic diagram of the interdigital metal contact structure); (b) Responsivity and photocurrent intensity of the Mg–doped GaN device versus UV light power; (c) External quantum efficiency of the Mg–doped GaN device versus UV light power; (d) External quantum efficiency of the Mg–doped GaN device versus applied bias voltage.
Figure 4(a) Light-induced photocurrent degradation of the I–V response under different UV light exposure time (the inset is the enlarged photocurrent data in 4–5 V); (b) Light-induced photocurrent degradation rate versus applied bias voltage after 5- and 15-min irradiation; (c) Dynamics of the photocurrent intensity along with UV light exposure; (d) Dynamics of the self-recovered photocurrent intensity after UV light was turned off; (e) Dynamics of the recovered photocurrent intensity along with IR light exposure.
Figure 5(a) Schematic illustration of the physical picture of deep electron traps and deep hole traps assisted light-induced degradation after UV light exposure; (b) Schematic illustration of the physical picture of the healing of light-induced degradation after infrared light exposure.
Hall coefficient and carrier concentration of the Mg-doped GaN thin film before and after UV or infrared light exposure.
| Light Illumination | Magnetic | Hall | Carrier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before UV Illumination | 600 mT | 9.33 cm³/C | 6.69 × 1017 cm−3 |
| After UV Illumination for 5 min | 600 mT | 14.17 cm³/C | 4.40 × 1017 cm−3 |
| After Infrared light Illumination for 5 min | 600 mT | 9.74 cm³/C | 6.38 × 1017 cm−3 |