4.6 Article

In- and out-plane transport properties of chemical vapor deposited TiO2 anatase films

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 56, Issue 17, Pages 10458-10476

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10853-021-05955-6

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The study investigated the morphological characteristics and electrical properties of TiO2 films obtained by MOCVD and PECVD, with the latter including nitrogen doping. The increase in nitrogen amount in the PECVD films enhances disorder in their pillar-like columnar morphology. A transition from dense to tree-like columnar morphology is observed for the MOCVD films with increasing deposition temperature.
Due to their polymorphism, TiO2 films are quintessential components of state-of-the-art functional materials and devices for various applications from dynamic random access memory to solar water splitting. However, contrary to other semiconductors/dielectric materials, the relationship between structural/morphological and electrical properties at the nano and microscales remains unclear. In this context, the morphological characteristics of TiO2 films obtained by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) and plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), the latter including nitrogen doping, are investigated and they are linked to their in- and out-plane electrical properties. A transition from dense to tree-like columnar morphology is observed for the MOCVD films with increasing deposition temperature. It results in the decrease in grain size and the increase in porosity and disorder, and subsequently, it leads to the decrease in lateral carrier mobility. The increase in nitrogen amount in the PECVD films enhances the disorder in their pillar-like columnar morphology along with a slight increase in density. A similar behavior is observed for the out-plane current between the low temperature MOCVD films and the undoped PECVD ones. The pillar-like structure of the latter presents a lower in-plane resistivity than the low temperature MOCVD films, whereas the out-plane resistivity is lower. The tree-like columnar structure exhibits poor in- and out-plane conductivity properties, whereas pillar-like and dense TiO2 exhibits similar in- and out-plane conductivities even if their morphologies are noticeably different.

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