Applied Surface Science, Vol.254, No.13, 3949-3954, 2008
Effect of post-annealing on the properties of copper oxide thin films obtained from the oxidation of evaporated metallic copper
Thin films of copper oxide were obtained through thermal oxidation (100-450 degrees C) of evaporated metallic copper (Cu) films on glass substrates. The X-ray diffraction (XRD) studies confirmed the cubic Cu phase of the as-deposited films. The films annealed at 100 degrees C showed mixed Cu-Cu2O phase, whereas those annealed between 200 and 300 degrees C showed a single cubic Cu2O phase. A single monoclinic CuO phase was obtained from the films annealed between 350 and 450 degrees C. The positive sign of the Hall coefficient confirmed the p-type conductivity in the films with Cu2O phase. However, a relatively poor crystallinity of these films limited the p-type characteristics. The films with Cu and CuO phases show n-type conductivity. The surface of the as-deposited is smooth (RMS roughness of 1.47 nm) and comprised of uniformly distributed grains (AFM and SEM analysis). The post-annealing is found to be effective on the distribution of grains and their sizes. The poor transmittance of the as-deposited films (<1%) is increased to a maximum of similar to 80% (800 nm) on annealing at 200 degrees C. The direct allowed band gap is varied between 2.03 and 3.02 eV. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:x-ray diffraction;physical vapor deposition processes;copper oxide thin films;oxides;semiconducting materials