Optical and photoconductivity properties of ZnO thin films grown by pulsed filtered cathodic vacuum arc deposition

2008 
Abstract High quality transparent conductive ZnO thin films with various thicknesses were prepared by pulsed filtered cathodic vacuum arc deposition (PFCVAD) system on glass substrates at room temperature. The high quality of the ZnO thin films was verified by X-ray diffraction and optical measurements. XRD analysis revealed that all films had a strong ZnO (200) peak, indicating c -axis orientation. The ZnO thin films are very transparent (92%) in the near vis regions. For the ZnO thin films deposited at a pressure of 0.086 Pa (6.5 × 10 −4  Torr) optical energy band gap decreased from 3.21 eV to 3.19 eV with increasing the thickness. Urbach tail energy also decreased as the film thickness increased. Spectral dependence of the photoconductivity was obtained from measurements of the samples deposited at various thicknesses. Photoconductivities were observed at energies lower than energy gap which indicates the existence of energy states in the forbidden gap. Photoconductivities of ZnO thin films increase with energy of the light and reach its maximum value at around 2.32 eV. Above this value surface recombination becomes dominant process and reduces the photocurrent. The photoconductivity increases with decreasing the film thickness.
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