Single-Crystal Growth of Cl-Doped n-Type SnS Using SnCl2 Self-Flux.
Yuki IguchiKazutoshi InoueTaiki SugiyamaHiroshi YanagiPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
SnS is a promising photovoltaic semiconductor owing to its suitable band gap energy and high optical absorption coefficient for highly efficient thin film solar cells. The most significant carnage is demonstration of n-type SnS. In this study, Cl-doped n-type single crystals were grown using SnCl2 self-flux method. The obtained crystal was lamellar, with length and width of a few millimeters and thickness ranging between 28 and 39 μm. X-ray diffraction measurements revealed the single crystals had an orthorhombic unit cell. Since the ionic radii of S2- and Cl- are similar, Cl doping did not result in substantial change in lattice parameter. All the elements were homogeneously distributed on a cleaved surface; the Sn/(S + Cl) ratio was 1.00. The crystal was an n-type degenerate semiconductor with a carrier concentration of ∼3 × 1017 cm-3. Hall mobility at 300 K was 252 cm2 V-1 s-1 and reached 363 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 142 K.