The present invention relates generally to thin film fabrication, and more particularly to growing crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films on a substrate at a low temperature using microwave radiation.
Design and synthesis of new materials is the cornerstone of materials science. In particular, thin film fabrication is important in fields as diverse as semiconductor devices, optoelectronics, energy harnessing/storage, and medicine. Currently, high temperatures are required to synthesize thin films of semiconductor oxides, preventing the use of plastic-based, light-weight, and flexible substrates for solar cells, light emitting diodes, sensors, and photodetectors. As a result, low-temperature synthesis techniques to grow thin films of semiconductor oxides, which are also facile and energy efficient, are desired.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a method for growing crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films comprises coating a substrate with a conducting oxide. The method further comprises immersing the coated substrate in a growth solution. Furthermore, the method comprises heating the coated substrate and the growth solution in a microwave reactor via microwave radiation. In addition, the method comprises catalyzing film growth of crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films by microwave interaction with the conducting oxide on the substrate.
The foregoing has outlined rather generally the features and technical advantages of one or more embodiments of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the present invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the present invention will be described hereinafter which may form the subject of the claims of the present invention.
A better understanding of the present invention can be obtained when the following detailed description is considered in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
As stated in the Background section, design and synthesis of new materials is the cornerstone of materials science. In particular, thin film fabrication is important in fields as diverse as semiconductor devices, optoelectronics, energy harnessing/storage, and medicine. Currently, high temperatures are required to synthesize thin films of semiconductor oxides, preventing the use of plastic-based, light-weight, and flexible substrates for solar cells, light emitting diodes, sensors, and photodetectors. As a result, low-temperature synthesis techniques to grow thin films of semiconductor oxides, which are also facile and energy efficient, are desired.
The principles of the present invention provide such a low-temperature technique for growing crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films on a substrate at a low temperature using microwave radiation as discussed below in connection with
Prior to the discussion of the Figures, a discussion of microwave-assisted synthesis is deemed appropriate. Microwave-assisted synthesis is appealing because it can dramatically reduce reaction time, improve product yield, and enhance material properties when compared to conventional synthesis routes. While conventional heating is limited by thermal conduction from the vessel walls, microwave fields can quickly and uniformly heat a solution by directly coupling to molecules within the solution through polarization or conduction. Polarization is the process of dipoles formed from bound charges and polar molecules aligning with an oscillating electric field. Conduction is the process of free charge carriers and ions moving in response to an electric field. Collisions resulting from dipole rotation during polarization and charge motion during conduction impart energy to the atoms and molecules in the solution in the form of heat; these two types of heating are known as dielectric and ohmic heating, respectively. Thus, microwave heating can be described using a complex permittivity {tilde over (ε)} of the form
where ω is the angular frequency of the microwave field and ε′, ε″, and σ are the permittivity, dielectric loss, and electrical conductivity, respectively. While ohmic loss generally dominates when heating conducting solids, the relative contributions of dielectric loss (ε″) and ohmic loss (σ/ω) during solution heating depend on the solvent properties, ion concentration, and frequency.
Microwave-assisted heating phenomena are generally attributed to purely “thermal/kinetic” effects, resulting from uniform or rapid heating. However, “specific” and “non-thermal” microwave effects are debated when microwave reaction products differ from conventional synthesis products. Specific microwave effects are defined as interactions that are thermal in nature but lead to results that cannot be replicated by conventional heating. The specific microwave effect known as “selective heating” refers to preferential energy absorption by materials with high dielectric/ohmic loss. The principles of the present invention exploit a selective heating process to cultivate favorable sites for film nucleation; specifically, a highly microwave energy absorbing conducting layer is placed on an insulating substrate within a solution that absorbs weakly relative to the conducting layer, causing selective heating of the conducting layer and enabling thin film assembly.
Referring now to the Figures in detail,
Referring to
In step 102, a titanium-based sol-gel precursor is combined with tetraethylene glycol to form a growth solution 203 in a quartz vessel 204. In one embodiment, 5 ml of the titanium-based sol-gel precursor is combined with 20 ml of tetraethylene glycol in a 80 ml quartz vessel 204.
In step 103, coated substrate 201 is immersed in growth solution 203 by placing coated substrate 201 in a glass basket 205 suspended from the top of vessel 204. In one embodiment, vessel 204 is sealed to allow autogenous pressure to build under solvothermal reaction conditions.
In step 104, coated substrate 201 and solution 203 are heated in microwave reactor 200 via microwave radiation for a period of time. In one embodiment, the microwave radiation is at 2.45 GHz. In one embodiment, coated substrate 201 and solution 203 are heated at approximately 150° C. for approximately 60 minutes. The microwave heating process can be described as follows: the walls of the quartz vessel 204 do not absorb significant microwave energy, allowing solution 203 to be heated directly by dielectric and ohmic mechanisms. Conducting oxide layer 202 (e.g., ITO layer with a conductivity σ˜105 S/m) also absorbs microwave energy (predominantly by ohmic heating) and it does so more efficiently than solution 203, creating a site for crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films 206 (e.g., titanium dioxide (TiO2)) (discussed below) to nucleate and grow in a single step.
In step 105, film growth of crystalline semiconductor oxide thin films 206 (e.g., titanium dioxide (TiO2) thin films) is catalyzed by the microwave interaction with the conducting oxide 202 (e.g., ITO) on substrate 201. In the example using ITO as the conducting oxide 202, the ITO layer strongly absorbs microwave energy, causing localized heating that catalyzes growth of anatase TiO2 thin films while the solution temperature remains at 150° C. In contrast, classical synthesis routes for anatase films comprise of chemical deposition techniques (sol-gel) and vacuum deposition techniques (sputtering, atomic layer deposition), followed by a high-temperature sintering step at >450 ° C. to crystallize the films. Such high temperatures limit the choice of thin film growth substrates as flexible polymeric/plastic substrates typically decompose between 100 and 300° C.
In step 106, solution 203 is then cooled to room temperature after heating substrate 201 and solution 203 in step 104 for a period of time (e.g., 60 minutes).
In some implementations, method 100 may include other and/or additional steps that, for clarity, are not depicted. Further, in some implementations, method 100 may be executed in a different order presented and that the order presented in the discussion of
A more detailed description of the results of implementing method 100 using indium tin oxide (ITO) as the coating on various substrates is provided below in connection with
In one embodiment, the microwave-assisted film growth process of method 100 was run on ITO-coated glass (using ITO as the conducting oxide 202 and using glass as the substrate 201) under a wide range of conditions to optimize uniformity and crystallinity of the TiO2 films 206. A summary of the key results, shown in
The crystallinity of the microwave-grown films was studied with Glancing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GIXRD) and Raman spectroscopy. Microwave interaction yields crystalline films starting at temperatures as low as 140° C. Sharper anatase peaks appear at 150° C., as shown in
The morphology of the microwave-grown TiO2 films 206 was characterized by several techniques spanning a wide range of length scales. Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) image in
The thicknesses of optimized films 206 are approximately 2000 nm (thinnest in the middle and thicker at the edges). The samples heated at lower temperatures or shorter times are found to be thinner, and the samples heated at higher temperatures and longer times are thicker. Orientation of substrate 201 inside reaction vessel 204 also has a dramatic effect on film growth. GIXRD patterns show significantly stronger anatase peaks for films 206 grown in the vertical orientation. This observation agrees with visual inspection of films 206 and cross-sectional SEM images, indicating that thinner films 206 grow in the horizontal orientation (200 nm) than in the vertical orientation (2000 nm). This variation suggests stronger interaction between the microwave fields and ITO layer 202 when the latter is placed in a vertical orientation.
The results in
The descriptions of the various embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration, but are not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the embodiments disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the described embodiments. The terminology used herein was chosen to best explain the principles of the embodiments, the practical application or technical improvement over technologies found in the marketplace, or to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the embodiments disclosed herein.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/737,687, “Low Temperature Microwave-Assisted Thin Film Deposition,” filed on Dec. 14, 2012, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The U.S. Government has certain rights in this invention pursuant to the terms of the Department of Energy Grant Nos. DE-SC0005397 and DE-SC0001091.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US13/54888 | 8/14/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61737687 | Dec 2012 | US |