Publication | Closed Access
Extremely low temperature growth of ZnO by atomic layer deposition
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Citations
27
References
2008
Year
EngineeringCrystal Growth TechnologyZinc OxideOptoelectronic DevicesThin Film Process TechnologyChemical DepositionSemiconductorsLow Temperature GrowthPulsed Laser DepositionAtomic Layer DepositionThin Film ProcessingMaterials ScienceExcitonic PhotoluminescenceOxide ElectronicsSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsThin FilmsChemical Vapor DepositionSolar Cell Materials
We report on the zinc oxide (ZnO) thin films obtained by the atomic layer deposition (ALD) method using diethyl zinc and water precursors, which allowed us to lower deposition temperature to below 200 °C. The so-obtained “as grown” ZnO layers are polycrystalline and show excitonic photoluminescence (PL) at room temperature, even if the deposition temperature was lowered down to 100 °C. Defect-related PL bands are of low intensity and are absent for layers grown at 140−200 °C. This is evidence that extremely low temperature growth by ALD can result in high quality ZnO thin films with inefficient nonradiative decay channels and with thermodynamically blocked self-compensation processes.
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