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Photosensitive nanocrystalline films based on semiconducting lead chalcogenides

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Photosensitive nanocrystalline films based on semiconducting lead chalcogenides. Z. Dashevsky ... Detectivity vs. Wavelength for Various Infrared Detectors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Photosensitive nanocrystalline films based on semiconducting lead chalcogenides


1
Photosensitive nanocrystalline films based on
semiconducting lead chalcogenides
  • Z. Dashevsky

Nanoscale Devices - Fundamentals and Applications
NDFA-2004
2
Detectivity vs. Wavelength for Various Infrared
Detectors
3
Lead chalcogenides
  • Narrow direct band gap
  • Eg(PbS) ? 0.4 eV at the room temperature. The
    temperature coefficient dEg/dT is positive.
  • High mobility of the charge carriers
  • PbS crystals have a carrier mobility m ? 600
    cm2/Vsec at the room temperature due to low
    effective mass and high permitivity. PbS has
    eo175 (at T ? 300 K). The elevated value of eo
    gives rise to the sharply decreased impurity
    scattering of charge carriers in the heavily
    doped state.

4
PbS Phase Diagram
5
Varying the Carrier Concentration
  • Carrier concentration can be varied by
  • introducing intrinsic defects during the thin
    film growth
  • intrinsic defects are those due to the presence
  • of excess Pb (cause S vacancies (VS ),
  • behaving like donors) or excess S (cause Pb
  • vacancies (VPb--), behaving like acceptors)
  • doping with impurities during or after the thin
    film growth
  • iodine and indium are donors, sodium are
    acceptors in PbS films

6
Thin Film Growth by Thermal Evaporation Technique
7
PbS Thin Film Deposition Parameters
8
PbS Thin Films Doping from Gaseous Phase
9
Structural Investigation of PbS Thin Film
10
AFM of PbS film on glass substrate
11
Topography of thin film surfacePbS film as
deposited
12
Topography of film surfacePbS film after
oxidation
13
Dark conductivity vs. temperature
14
Photosensitivity vs. temperature
15
Carrier life time measurements (PbS film after
oxidation)
16
Decay time as a function of temperature
17
Schematic view of thin film after oxidation
18
Schematic view of fragment of a film
1 quasineutral parts of n-type grains
2, and 3 p-type conducting inversion
channels on grain surfaces 4 region of
intersection of two conducting channels (node)
the arrow shows the current direction.
19
As grown p-type PbTe film with excess lead and
sulphur vacancies on grain boundaries
20
Absorption of oxygen on grain boundaries
21
Energy band diagram of a system consisting of
grains and boundaries
22
Influence of oxygen on energy band diagram
23
Separation of electron-hole pairs on grain
boundaries
24
Separation of electron-hole pairs on grain
boundaries
25
Generation of electron-hole pairs by
IR-irradiation
26
Diffusion of In along grain boundaries
27
Influence of indium on energy band diagram
28
Generation and recombination of electron-hole
pairs (P group samples)
29
Generation and recombination of electron-hole
pairs (G group samples)
30
Decay time for nanocrystalline PbS film at 300 K
31
Conclusions
  • High decay lifetime (50 msec at 300K) in
    nanocrystalline PbS film (nanocrystals 30 nm)
    has been observed, which is connected to
    persistent photoconductivity effect.
  • The effect is attributed to the separation of
    electron hole pairs by potential barriers at
    the grain boundaries, preventing their
    recombination.
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