Faculty Publications

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    Room-temperature ultraviolet-ozone annealing of ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods to attain enhanced optical properties
    (Springer, 2020) Alam, M.J.; Murkute, P.; Sushama, S.; Ghadi, H.; Mondal, S.; Paul, S.; Das, D.; Pandey, S.K.; Chakrabarti, S.
    ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods have proven to be promising materials for sensing, UV and deep UV based optoelectronic applications. A major drawback of ZnO and ZnMgO based thin films and nanorods is the presence of native point defects which deteriorates their optical efficiency and becomes an impediment to their efficient device applications. The furnace and rapid thermal annealing processes have overcome this up to a great extent but being high temperature processes, they put many fabrication and technological limits in device fabrication. Especially keeping an eye on the future flexible devices, herein we report ultraviolet-ozone (UVO) annealing as a room-temperature, simple and cost-effective annealing method to improve the optical efficiency of ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods along with control of defect states. The ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods were grown by hydrothermal method and annealed in UVO irradiation. UVO annealing substantially improved near band emission and suppressed defect band emissions. It is found that zinc interstitial atoms migrate from the top portion of ZnO nanorods towards the bottom of nanorods after UVO annealing, resulting in reduced zinc interstitial defects in the top portion of nanorods. X-ray diffraction results showed improvement in structural properties. XPS results confirmed suppression of oxygen vacancies and zinc interstitials and improvement in lattice oxygen in the ZnO nanorods after UVO annealing. Optimum times of UVO annealing for ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods were 30 and 50 min respectively. These findings will be helpful for the further development of ZnO and ZnMgO nanorods based high performance optoelectronic devices and sensors. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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    Detection of acceptor-bound exciton peak at 300 K in boron–phosphorus co-doped ZnMgO thin films for room-temperature optoelectronics applications
    (Elsevier B.V., 2021) Sushama, S.; Murkute, P.; Ghadi, H.; Pandey, S.K.; Chakrabarti, S.
    It is well-known that the ZnMgO thin-film faces a roadblock in its potential applications for various optoelectronic devices due to the limitation imposed on achieving p-type conduction. The mono-acceptor doping of ZnMgO endures from the stern self-compensation by native donor defects and deep acceptor level formation advocating the need for alternate doping techniques like co-doping. In this paper, we report a detailed study on the improvement in structural, elemental, and optical properties of phosphorus-doped Zn0.85Mg0.15O thin films, with an aim to obtain enhancement in the signatures of acceptor-doped behavior, under the influence of boron implantation time. In addition, the paper also captures the behavior exhibited by the co-doped samples as a result of the variation in the annealing temperature. The solubility of the phosphorus atom (acceptor dopant) was observed to improve with boron (donor co-dopant) implantation as confirmed by the structural, elemental, and optical properties of co-doped ZnMgO thin films. It was also found that the acceptor level emissions got improved after boron implantation in phosphorus-doped ZnMgO thin films. Additionally, with co-doping, the sample showed the signature of acceptor-bound exciton peak till 300 K, evidencing the room-temperature operability of the films. Moreover, the fabricated film had a shallow acceptor energy level located at around 74 ± 0.45 meV above the valence band. Co-doped samples also showed stable acceptor based optical emission for more than a year. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.
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    Unfolding the conductivity reversal n- to p-type in phosphorus-doped ZnO thin films by spin-on dopant (SOD) process
    (Institute of Physics, 2022) Mishra, M.; Saha, R.; Bhowmick, S.; Pandey, S.K.; Chakrabarti, S.
    Phosphorus doping induced p-type doping in ZnO thin films based on spin-on dopant (SOD) process is reported in this article. Owing to the reduced dependence on the conventional amenities for diffusion/ion-implantation doping, the SOD process provides a simple and cheap doping method. The effect of SOD process temperature on conductivity ZnO thin films is investigated by altering the temperature from 700°C to 1000°C. Systematic field emission scanning electron microscopy analysis demonstrates the impact of doping temperature on the morphological properties of SOD. The x-ray diffraction measurements reveal that the p-type ZnO thin films had (002) preferred crystal orientation. At the same time, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy validated the formation of the PZn-2VZn complex, which was responsible for the acceptor behaviour of films. Moreover, the photoluminescence spectra tracked down that the origin of 3.35 and 3.31 eV emission peaks is due to the acceptor bound exciton and free-electron to acceptor level transitions, respectively. Finally, an elevated hole concentration of 2.09 × 1016 cm-3 is achieved with a resistivity of 1.14 ω-cm at 800°C doping temperature. However, the film doped at 900°C and 1000°C showed n-type behaviour due to the generation of high concentration donor defects. Here, we successfully demonstrate that the SOD process has great potential to produce high-quality p-type ZnO thin films suitable for optoelectronic devices applications. © 2022 IOP Publishing Ltd.
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    Investigation of phosphorus-doping of MgZnO thin films using efficient spin-on dopant process
    (Elsevier B.V., 2023) Mishra, M.; Saha, R.; Tyagi, L.; Sushama, S.; Pandey, S.K.; Chakrabarti, S.
    Phosphorus doped MgZnO thin films were prepared using the RF sputtering technique on a Si wafer, followed by spin-on doping (SOD) and annealing. The SOD is a cheap and non-destructive process in which the dopant film is spun on a Si wafer and placed in the vicinity of deposited undoped MgZnO thin film at a high temperature to perform doping. After doping, the MgZnO thin films were annealed at temperatures such as 700, 800, and 900°C, which significantly improved morphological, structural, and optical properties. The atomic force microscopy and scanning electron microscopy measurements revealed that phosphorus-doped MgZnO thin films annealed at 800–900°C have good morphology and large grains. X-ray diffraction spectra demonstrated the (002) orientation of MgZnO thin films. The photoluminescence spectra measured at 20 K demonstrated the acceptor bound exciton peak at 3.47 eV and acceptor binding energy of around 64.34 meV, indicating the formation of shallow acceptor levels by phosphorus doping of MgZnO thin films using the SOD process. In Raman spectroscopy measurement, the peak of E2high phonons mode of MgZnO wurtzite structure was observed around 436 cm−1. The FWHM value of this peak reduces with augmentation annealing temperature, demonstrating improvement in crystallinity. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurement demonstrated the presence of phosphorus atoms in the SOD processed MgZnO thin films, which is again verified by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy measurement showing vibration modes of P–O bonds. It was observed that the different properties of SOD-prepared phosphorus-doped MgZnO films were superior to the film prepared using the alternate costly and destructive ion-implantation technique. These findings have revealed that high-quality phosphorus-doped p-type MgZnO thin films by the SOD process are very suitable for UV optoelectronic device applications. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.