Electrical properties of vacuum-annealed titanium-doped indium oxide films
Publication date
2011-09-01
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Titanium-doped indium oxide (ITiO) films were deposited on Corning glass 2000 substrates at room temperature by radio frequency magnetron sputtering followed by vacuum post-annealing. With increasing deposition power, the as-deposited films showed an increasingly crystalline nature. As-deposited amorphous ITiO films obtained at 20 W began to crystallize at the annealing temperature of 155 °C. Although there was no significant change in the crystalline structure of the films, electron mobility improved gradually with further increase in the annealing temperature. After post-annealing at 580 °C, the highest electron mobility of 50 cm2 V−1 s−1 was obtained. Compared with the amorphous ITiO films, the ITiO films with a certain degree of crystallinity obtained at high deposition power were less affected by the vacuum annealing. Their electron mobility also improved due to post-annealing, but the increase was insignificant. After post-annealing, the optical transmission of the 325 nm-thick ITiO films showed approximately 80% at wavelengths ranging from 530 to 1100 nm, while the sheet resistance decreased to 10 Ω/sq. This makes them suitable for use as transparent conductive oxide layers of low bandgap solar cells.
Keywords
Sputtering deposition, Amorphous, Annealing, Electrical properties, Optical transmission
Citation
Yan, L T, Rath, J K & Schropp, R E I 2011, 'Electrical properties of vacuum-annealed titanium-doped indium oxide films', Applied Surface Science, vol. 257, no. 22, pp. 9461-9465. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2011.06.035