4.8 Article

Schottky Contacts on Polarity-Controlled Vertical ZnO Nanorods

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages 13217-13228

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b23260

Keywords

ZnO; nanorods; polarity; Schottky contacts; electrical transport; cathodoluminescence; defects

Funding

  1. Ser Cymru II fellowship scheme - European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government
  2. Centre for Nanohealth, Swansea University, U.K.
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/R511614/1]
  4. French Research National Agency [ANR-17-CE09-0033, ANR-17-CE24-0003]
  5. French RENATECH network through the CIMENanotech platform in a clean room environment
  6. French RENATECH network through the PTA technological platform in a clean room environment

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Polarity-controlled growth of ZnO by chemical bath deposition provides a method for controlling the crystal orientation of vertical nanorod arrays. The ability to define the morphology and structure of the nanorods is essential to maximizing the performance of optical and electrical devices such as piezoelectric nanogenerators; however, well-defined Schottky contacts to the polar facets of the structures have yet to be explored. In this work, we demonstrate a process to fabricate metal-semiconductor-metal device structures from vertical arrays with Au contacts on the uppermost polar facets of the nanorods and show that the O-polar nanorods (similar to 0.44 eV) have a greater effective barrier height than the Zn-polar nanorods (similar to 0.37 eV). Oxygen plasma treatment is shown by cathodoluminescence spectroscopy to affect midgap defects associated with radiative emissions, which improves the Schottky contacts from weakly rectifying to strongly rectifying. Interestingly, the plasma treatment is shown to have a much greater effect in reducing the number of carriers in O-polar nanorods through quenching of the donor-type substitutional hydrogen on oxygen sites (H-O) when compared to the zinc-vacancy-related hydrogen defect complexes (V-Zn-nH) in Zn-polar nanorods that evolve to lower-coordinated complexes. The effect on H-O in the O-polar nanorods coincides with a large reduction in the visible-range defects, producing a lower conductivity and creating the larger effective barrier heights. This combination can allow radiative losses and charge leakage to be controlled, enhancing devices such as dynamic photodetectors, strain sensors, and light-emitting diodes while showing that the O-polar nanorods can outperform Zn-polar nanorods in such applications.

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