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Growth Condition-Oriented Defect Engineering for Changes in Au⁻ZnO Contact Behavior from Schottky to Ohmic and Vice Versa.

Abu Ul Hassan Sarwar RanaHyun-Seok Kim
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2018)
ZnO has the built-in characteristics of both ionic and covalent compound semiconductors, which makes the metal⁻ZnO carrier transport mechanism quite intricate. The growth mechanism-centric change in ZnO defect density and carrier concentration also makes the contact formation and behavior unpredictable. This study investigates the uncertainty in Au⁻ZnO contact behavior for application-oriented research and the development on ZnO nanostructures. Herein, we explain the phenomenon for how Au⁻ZnO contact could be rectifying or non-rectifying. Growth method-dependent defect engineering was exploited to explain the change in Schottky barrier heights at the Au⁻ZnO interface, and the change in device characteristics from Schottky to Ohmic and vice versa. The ZnO nanorods were fabricated via aqueous chemical growth (ACG) and microwave-assisted growth (MAG) methods. For further investigations, one ACG sample was doped with Ga, and another was subjected to oxygen plasma treatment (OPT). The ACG and Ga-doped ACG samples showed a quasi-Ohmic and Ohmic behavior, respectively, because of a high surface and subsurface level donor defect-centric Schottky barrier pinning at the Au⁻ZnO interface. However, the ACG-OPT and MAG samples showed a more pronounced Schottky contact because of the presence of low defect-centric carrier concentration via MAG, and the removal of the surface accumulation layer via the OPT process.
Keyphrases
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  • room temperature
  • sensitive detection
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  • solid state