Hydrogen passivation effect in nitrogen-doped ZnO thin films

Xiaonan Li(National Laboratory of the Rockies), B. M. Keyes(National Laboratory of the Rockies), S. E. Asher(National Laboratory of the Rockies), Shengbai Zhang(National Laboratory of the Rockies), Su‐Huai Wei(National Laboratory of the Rockies), Timothy J. Coutts(National Laboratory of the Rockies), Sukit Limpijumnong(Suranaree University of Technology), Chris G. Van de Walle(University of California, Santa Barbara)
Applied Physics Letters
March 16, 2005
Cited by 157

Abstract

The role of hydrogen in nitrogen-doped ZnO thin films was studied by Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) absorption and modeled by first-principles calculations to understand the difficulty of doping ZnO p-type with nitrogen. Nitrogen-doped ZnO films were fabricated by low-pressure metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). High levels of nitrogen incorporation were observed, but the acceptor concentrations remained low. Theoretical analysis suggests there is a high probability that NO− and H+ charged defects combine to form the neutral defect complexes, thereby compensating the nitrogen-related acceptors. Calculated values of the vibrational frequencies of the related infrared modes agree well with the measured spectra. Thus, we believe the difficulty of achieving p-type doping in MOCVD-grown ZnO films is due, at least partially, to inadvertent passivation by hydrogen.


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