Healing Ion-Implanted Semiconductors by Hybrid Microwave Annealing: Activation of Nitrogen-Implanted TiO 2 .
Hemin ZhangChang Won AhnJin Yong ParkJung-Woo OkJi Yeong SungJong Sung JinHyun Gyu KimJae Sung LeePublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
In order to recover the damaged structure of a nitrogen-implanted TiO 2 (N-I-TiO 2 ) photoanode, hybrid microwave annealing (HMA) is proposed as an alternative postannealing process instead of conventional thermal annealing (CTA). Compared to CTA, HMA provides distinctive advantages: (i) facile transformation of the interstitial N-N states into substitutional N-Ti states, (ii) better preservation of the ion-implanted nitrogen in TiO 2 , and (iii) effective alleviation of lattice strain and reconstruction of the broken bonds. As a result, the HMA-activated photoanode improves the photocurrent density by a factor of ∼3.2 from 0.29 to 0.93 mA cm -2 at 1.23 V RHE and the incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) from ∼2.9% to ∼10.5% at 430 nm relative to those of the as-prepared N-I-TiO 2 photoanode in photoelectrochemical water oxidation, which are much better than those of the CTA-activated photoanode (0.58 mA cm -2 at 1.23 V RHE and IPCE of 5.7% at 430 nm), especially in the visible light region (≥420 nm).