4.6 Article

Influence of Crystal Structure, Encapsulation, and Annealing on Photochromism in Nd Oxyhydride Thin Films

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 126, Issue 4, Pages 2276-2284

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c10521

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Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [680.M4SF.034]

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Thin films of rare earth metal oxyhydrides exhibit a photochromic effect, and the composition and encapsulation of the films can modify their band gap, crystal structure, photochromic contrast, and lifetime. The annealing process and defects are found to be crucial for the reversibility of the bleaching speed.
Thin films of rare earth metal oxyhydrides show a photochromic effect, the precise mechanism of which is yet unknown. Here, we made thin films of NdH3-2xOx and show that we can change the band gap, crystal structure, and photochromic contrast by tuning the composition (O2-:H-) via the sputtering deposition pressure. To protect these films from rapid oxidation, we add a thin ALD coating of Al2O3, which increases the lifetime of the films from 1 day to several months. Encapsulation of the films also influences photochromic bleaching, changing the time dependency from first-order kinetics. As well, the partial annealing which occurs during the ALD process results in a dramatically slower bleaching speed, revealing the importance of defects for the reversibility (bleaching speed) of photochromism.

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