High-Performance Zinc Tin Oxide Semiconductor Grown by Atmospheric-Pressure Mist-CVD and the Associated Thin-Film Transistor Properties

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2017 Jun 21;9(24):20656-20663. doi: 10.1021/acsami.7b04235. Epub 2017 Jun 8.

Abstract

Zinc tin oxide (Zn-Sn-O, or ZTO) semiconductor layers were synthesized based on solution processes, of which one type involves the conventional spin coating method and the other is grown by mist chemical vapor deposition (mist-CVD). Liquid precursor solutions are used in each case, with tin chloride and zinc chloride (1:1) as solutes in solvent mixtures of acetone and deionized water. Mist-CVD ZTO films are mostly polycrystalline, while those synthesized by spin-coating are amorphous. Thin-film transistors based on mist-CVD ZTO active layers exhibit excellent electron transport properties with a saturation mobility of 14.6 cm2/(V s), which is superior to that of their spin-coated counterparts (6.88 cm2/(V s)). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analyses suggest that the mist-CVD ZTO films contain relatively small amounts of oxygen vacancies and, hence, lower free-carrier concentrations. The enhanced electron mobility of mist-CVD ZTO is therefore anticipated to be associated with the electronic band structure, which is examined by X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) analyses, rather than the density of electron carriers.

Keywords: Mist − CVD; atmospheric pressure; solution process; sol−gel process; tin films transistors(tfts); zinc tin oxide.