Facile in situ formation of high conductive Ag and Cu x O y composite films: a role of aqueous spray combustion

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2019

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer New York LLC barbara.b.bertram@gsk.com

Abstract

In the present contribution, in situ formation of low-temperature high conductive composite films composed of pure silver and oxides of copper (Cu <inf>x</inf> O <inf>y</inf> where, x = y = 1 for CuO and x = 2, y = 1 for Cu <inf>2</inf> O), are presented through spray combustion with a balanced stoichiometric redox reaction. High electrical conductivity (~ 7.8 × 10 5  S/cm) was retained in the composite film at an annealing temperature of 170 °C with matrix silver phase being 50% by volume. Whereas electrical conductivity of spray combustion processed pure silver is found to be ~ 2 × 10 6  S/cm. In situ formation of the composite film directly from the silver and cupric nitrate aqueous precursor solution through spray combustion proves it to be compositionally tunable with minimal usage of noble metal. Presence of Ag and Cu <inf>x</inf> O <inf>y</inf> is confirmed by X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The ratio of Cu 1+ /Cu 2+ in the composite is found to be 0.54 and 0.43 at an annealing temperature of 170 °C and 400 °C respectively. The transformation of Cu <inf>2</inf> O to CuO is highly a thermally activated phenomenon; as the vacancy driven electrical conductivity is more in Cu <inf>2</inf> O than CuO, stabilization of Cu <inf>2</inf> O at a lower temperature is desired. The composite electrode can have potential applications in optoelectronics, printed electronics and catalysis. © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Description

Keywords

Conductive films, Copper oxides, Electric conductivity, In situ combustion, Precious metals, Redox reactions, Temperature, X ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Annealing temperatures, Composite electrode, Conductive composites, Electrical conductivity, High electrical conductivity, Lower temperatures, Printed electronics, Thermally activated, Composite films

Citation

Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics, 2019, 30, 3, pp. 2888-2897

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By