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Marked Cofuel Tuning of Combustion Synthesis Pathways for Metal Oxide Semiconductor Films
Author(s) -
Wang Binghao,
Leonardi Matthew J.,
Huang Wei,
Chen Yao,
Zeng Li,
Eckstein Brian J.,
Marks Tobin J.,
Facchetti Antonio
Publication year - 2019
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.201900540
Subject(s) - materials science , oxide , chemical engineering , thin film , amorphous solid , microstructure , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , metallurgy , chemistry , engineering
Thin‐film combustion synthesis (CS), driven by the exothermic reaction of liquid fuel+oxidizer+metal precursors is an important methodology for growing smooth, transparent, amorphous, and polycrystalline metal oxide (MO) films at low temperatures. In optimized MO CS precursors, the fuel combines a primary coordinating ligand [e.g., acetylacetone (AcAcH)] with an additional cofuel. Several studies suggest a structure–property relationship between the resulting MO film composition/microstructure and macroscopic charge transport characteristics. However, the structural and compositional details of solution‐phase precursors remain poorly defined. Here a diverse series of cofuels (urea, glycine, sorbitol, L ‐ascorbic acid) are selected and mechanistic details of the fuel‐assisted CS process are provided, focusing on technologically relevant indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO). Thermal analysis, proton nuclear magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry, and X‐ray diffraction are used to probe how the cofuel affects AcAcH‐metal ion binding and how it influences the MO precursor response. The charge transport characteristics of cofuel‐derived IGZO films stimulate additional cofuel studies and the results support the primary cofuel role of enhancing CS heat generation, hence IGZO film microstructure densification and carrier mobility. These results provide new insight into precursor design and its relationship to thin‐film CS processes, yielding guidance for more efficient, environmentally benign (co)fuels for high‐performance solution‐processed MO electronics.