Study of Photo-Conductivity in MoS2 Thin Films Grown in Low-Temperature Aqueous Solution Bath
Authors
Abstract:
An experimental study over the optical response of thin MoS2 films grownby chemical bath deposition (CBD) method is presented. As two important factors, theeffect of bath temperature and growth time are considered on the photocurrentgeneration in the grown samples. The results show that increasing the growth time leadsto better optical response and higher difference between dark and photocurrent. Forhigher bath temperatures the layer loses its uniformity and the current reduces. Betterperformance of optical response is obtained for t=90min and T=70oC. We also studiedthe effect of post-annealing on the performance and quality of thin films. The I-Vmeasurements show no current flow for annealed films because of rupture of the filmstructure. Temporal response of the films to light source ON and OFF states is alsostudied and the results showed relaxation of photocurrent after about several seconds.The importance of the MoS2 thin films obtained by CBD method is low-temperatureprocess and large area of fabricated layers which can be used in many applications.
similar resources
Growth and Characterization of Thin MoS2 Films by Low- Temperature Chemical Bath Deposition Method
Transition metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) materials are very important inelectronic and optical integrated circuits and their growth is of great importance in thisfield. In this paper we present growth and fabrication of MoS2 (Molibdan DiSulfide)thin films by chemical bath method (CBD). The CBD method of growth makes itpossible to simply grow large area scale of the thin la...
full textMicrowave-assisted Low-temperature Growth of Thin Films in Solution
Thin films find a variety of technological applications. Assembling thin films from atoms in the liquid phase is intrinsically a non-equilibrium phenomenon, controlled by the competition between thermodynamics and kinetics. We demonstrate here that microwave energy can assist in assembling atoms into thin films directly on a substrate at significantly lower temperatures than conventional proces...
full textEffect of growth time on ZnO thin films prepared by low temperature chemical bath deposition on PS substrate
ZnO thin films were successfully synthesized on a porous silicon (PS) substrate by chemical bathdeposition method. X-ray diffraction (XRD), field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM),and photoluminescence (PL) analyses were carried out to investigate the effect of growth duration(3, 4, 5, and 6 h) on the optical and structural properties of the aligned ZnO nanorods. T...
full textLow Temperature Quantum Corrections to the Anomalous Hall Conductivity in Ultra-thin Fe Films
In situ transport measurements on disordered polycrystalline Fe films reveal a logarithmic temperature dependence of the longitudinal Rxx and anomalous Hall Rxx resistances at low temperatures and a heretoforeunobserved scaling behavior in which the relative changes in Rxx and Rxy are found to be equal. Accordingly, the anomalous Hall conductivity is non-zero with a logarithmic temperature depe...
full textAn Investigation of SILAR Grown CdO Thin Films
Cadmium oxide (CdO) thin films were deposited on the glass substrate by the modified SILAR method, using cadmium acetate dihydrate and ammonium hydroxide aqueous solution as precursors. The structural, surface morphological, elemental composition and optical properties of the deposited films were investigated via X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy, EDAX,...
full textMicrostructure of low temperature grown AlN thin films on Si„111..
AlN thin films were grown on HF-etched Si~111! substrates at 400– 600 °C by plasma source molecular beam epitaxy. Reflection high energy electron diffraction and transmission electron microscopy studies show that AlN films grown at 400 °C form an initial amorphous region at the interface, followed by c-axis oriented columnar grains with slightly different tilts and twists. AlN films grown at 60...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 4 issue 4
pages 53- 64
publication date 2019-12-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023