Charge Transfer in c-Si(n++)/TiO2(ALD) at the Amorphous/Anatase Transition: A Transient Surface Photovoltage Spectroscopy Study

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Jan 15;12(2):3140-3149. doi: 10.1021/acsami.9b17592. Epub 2020 Jan 6.

Abstract

Electronic properties and charge transfer processes were studied in an n-Si(n++)/TiO2(ALD) system at an amorphous TiO2/anatase transition by transient surface photovoltage spectroscopy at constant photon flux. The TiO2 layers were deposited by atomic layer deposition (ALD) onto highly doped silicon (c-Si(n++)), and the phase composition of the TiO2 layers changed with increasing thickness from amorphous to the anatase polymorph as anatase crystallites started to grow at the surface. Depending on phase composition, the band gap of TiO2 correlated with the characteristic energy of exponential tails. In most cases, photogenerated electrons were separated toward the back contact. For photogeneration in c-Si(n++), electron back transfer was limited by Auger recombination with holes in the surface space charge region of c-Si(n++), and by electron transfer across the interface, either via exponentially distributed states near the conduction band edge of amorphous TiO2 or via distance-dependent recombination with holes trapped in anatase. For photogeneration in TiO2, electron back transfer was limited by trapping in TiO2. Under strong light absorption in amorphous TiO2 with anatase crystallites on top, electrons were preferentially separated toward the TiO2 surface.

Keywords: TiO2; charge transfer; interface; surface photovoltage; transient spectroscopy.