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P‐Type Transparent Cu‐Alloyed ZnS Deposited at Room Temperature
Author(s) -
WoodsRobinson Rachel,
Cooper Jason K.,
Xu Xiaojie,
Schelhas Laura T.,
Pool Vanessa L.,
Faghaninia Alireza,
Lo Cynthia S.,
Toney Michael F.,
Sharp Ian D.,
Ager Joel W.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
advanced electronic materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.25
H-Index - 56
ISSN - 2199-160X
DOI - 10.1002/aelm.201500396
Subject(s) - materials science , amorphous solid , nanocrystalline material , conductivity , analytical chemistry (journal) , band gap , copper , pulsed laser deposition , electrical resistivity and conductivity , thin film , nanotechnology , crystallography , metallurgy , optoelectronics , chemistry , engineering , chromatography , electrical engineering
All transparent conducting materials (TCMs) of technological practicality are n‐type; the inferior conductivity of p‐type TCMs has limited their adoption. In addition, many relatively high‐performing p‐type TCMs require synthesis temperatures >400 °C. Here, room‐temperature pulsed laser deposition of copper‐alloyed zinc sulfide (Cu x Zn 1‐ x S) thin films (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.75) is reported. For 0.09 ≤ x ≤ 0.35, Cu x Zn 1‐ x S has high p‐type conductivity, up to 42 S cm −1 at x = 0.30, with an optical band gap tunable from ≈3.0–3.3 eV and transparency, averaged over the visible, of 50%–71% for 200–250 nm thick films. In this range, synchrotron X‐ray and electron diffraction reveal a nanocrystalline ZnS structure. Secondary crystalline Cu y S phases are not observed, and at higher Cu concentrations, x > 0.45, films are amorphous and poorly conducting. Within the TCM regime, the conductivity is temperature independent, indicating degenerate hole conduction. A decrease in lattice parameter with Cu content suggests that the hole conduction is due to substitutional incorporation of Cu onto Zn sites. This hole‐conducting phase is embedded in a less conducting amorphous Cu y S, which dominates at higher Cu concentrations. The combination of high hole conductivity and optical transparency for the peak conductivity Cu x Zn 1‐ x S films is among the best reported to date for a room temperature deposited p‐type TCM.

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