4.6 Article

The optical and electrical properties of copper indium di-selenide thin films

Journal

OPTICAL MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 329-336

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0925-3467(00)00006-9

Keywords

CIS thin film; SEL method; stoichiometry; optical and electrical property

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Thin films of copper indium di-selenide (CIS) with a wide range of compositions near stoichiometry have been formed on glass substrates in vacuum by the stacked elemental layer (SEL) deposition technique. The compositional and optical properties of the films have been measured by proton-induced X-ray emission (PIXE) and spectrophotometry (photon wavelength range of 300-2500 nm), respectively. Electrical conductivity (sigma), charge-carrier concentration (n), and Hall mobility (mu(H)) were measured at temperatures ranging from 143 to 400 K. It was found that more indium-rich films have higher energy gaps than less indium-rich ones while more Cu-rich films have lower energy gaps than less Cu-rich films. The sub-bandgap absorption of photons is minimum in the samples having Cu/In approximate to 1 and it again decreases, as Cu/In ratio becomes less than 0.60. Indium-rich films show n-type conductivities while near-stoichiometric and copper-rich films have p-type conductivities. At 300 K sigma, n and mu(H) of the films vary from 2.15 x 10(-3) to 1.60 x 10(-1) (Omega cm)(-1), 2.28 x 10(15) to 5.74 x 10(17) cm(-3) and 1.74 to 5.88 cm(2) (V s)(-1), respectively, and are dependent on the composition of the films. All the films were found to be non-degenerate. The ionization energies for accepters and donors vary between 12 and 24, and 3 and 8 meV, respectively, and they are correlated well with the Cu/In ratios. The crystallites of the films were found to be partially depleted in charge carriers. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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