Publication | Open Access
Electrical Transport and Grain Growth in Solution-Cast, Chloride-Terminated Cadmium Selenide Nanocrystal Thin Films
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Citations
49
References
2014
Year
Materials ScienceSemiconductorsElectrical EngineeringNanocrystalline MaterialEngineeringElectronic MaterialsNanomaterialsNanotechnologyGrain GrowthApplied PhysicsSemiconductor MaterialThin Film Process TechnologyThin FilmsGrain SizeElectrical TransportElectrical PropertyThin Film ProcessingSemiconductor Nanostructures
We report the evolution of electrical transport and grain size during the sintering of thin films spin-cast from soluble phosphine and amine-bound, chloride-terminated cadmium selenide nanocrystals. Sintering of the nanocrystals occurs in three distinct stages as the annealing temperature is increased: (1) reversible desorption of the organic ligands (≤150 °C), (2) irreversible particle fusion (200-300 °C), and (3) ripening of the grains to >5 nm domains (>200 °C). Grain growth occurs at 200 °C in films with 8 atom % Cl(-), while films with 3 atom % Cl(-) resist growth until 300 °C. Fused nanocrystalline thin films (grain size = 4.5-5.5 nm) on thermally grown silicon dioxide gate dielectrics produce field-effect transistors with electron mobilities as high as 25 cm(2)/(Vs) and on/off ratios of 10(5) with less than 0.5 V hysteresis in threshold voltage without the addition of indium.
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