Publication | Open Access
The effect of annealing on structural, optical and photosensitive properties of electrodeposited cadmium selenide thin films
51
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringSimple Electrodeposition MethodOptoelectronic DevicesThin Film Process TechnologySemiconductorsIi-vi SemiconductorPhotosensitive PropertiesThin Film ProcessingMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringNanotechnologyOptoelectronic MaterialsSemiconductor MaterialNanocrystalline MaterialSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsX-ray DiffractionThin FilmsCadmium SelenideSolar Cell Materials
Cadmium selenide (CdSe) thin films have been deposited on indium tin oxide coated glass substrate by simple electrodeposition method. X-ray Diffraction (XRD) studies identify that the as-deposited CdSe films are highly oriented to [002] direction and they belong to nanocrystalline hexagonal phase. The films are changed to polycrystalline structure after annealing in air for temperatures up to 450 °C and begin to degrade afterwards with the occurrence of oxidation and porosity. CdSe completely ceases to exist at higher annealing temperatures. CdSe films exhibit a maximum absorbance in the violet to blue-green region of an optical spectrum. The absorbance increases while the band gap decreases with increasing annealing temperature. Surface morphology also shows that the increase of the annealing temperature caused the grain growth. In addition, a number of distinct crystals is formed on top of the film surface. Electrical characteristics show that the films are photosensitive with a maximum sensitivity at 350 °C.
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