METHOD FOR PRODUCING A UV PHOTODETECTOR
20170170345 ยท 2017-06-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Rebekah Hooker (Belmont, MA, US)
- Deepak Ranjan Deshmukh (Watertown, MA, US)
- Pawel Miskiewicz (Southampton, GB)
- Andreas Klyszcz (Darmstadt, DE)
- Klaus Bonrad (Alsbach-Haehnlein, DE)
- Thomas Albrecht (Frankfurt am Main, DE)
Cpc classification
H01L21/02565
ELECTRICITY
C23C18/1279
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H10F30/10
ELECTRICITY
Y02P70/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H10K71/13
ELECTRICITY
Y02E10/549
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H10F71/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L31/032
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/18
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/09
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
This invention relates to a method for producing a photodetector based on the deposition of precursor system having a liquid phase. The photodetectors are characterized by a certain group of semiconductor materials which can be used as the absorber in solar-blind UV detectors. A facile route for the formation of thin layers of such absorber materials is disclosed.
Claims
1. Method for producing a UV photodetector comprising the steps deposition of a liquid composition comprising a liquid carrier, metal ions, where one or more of the metal ions is bound to a ligand selected from oximate and hydroxamate, processing the deposited composition resulting in a UV photodetector material, and providing electrodes to the photodetector material.
2. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that processing the deposited composition comprises evaporating the liquid carrier and optionally heating the residual material.
3. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that processing the deposited composition comprises heating in the presence of oxygen.
4. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that processing the deposited composition comprises heating to a temperature between 150 and 600 C.
5. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that the metal ion bound to the ligand selected from oximate and hydroxamate is selected from the elements Ga, In, Zn, Al, Be, Mg, Sn, Cu, Ni, Ti, or Mn.
6. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that the liquid composition comprises an oximate ligand.
7. Method for producing a UV photodetector according to claim 1, characterized in that the liquid composition comprises a hydroxamate ligand.
8. Printed UV photodetector comprising a substrate, a printed layer of metal oxide, and a pair of electrodes connected to the layer of oxide, wherein the electrodes are configured in a manner that incident UV light can be absorbed by the layer of metal oxide between the electrodes.
9. Printed UV detector according to claim 8, characterized in that the layer of oxide is gallium oxide or indium zinc oxide.
10. A composition comprising a liquid carrier and a metal precursor having one or more ligands, where the ligands comprise an oximate or a hydroxamate ligand, characterized in that the metal precursor is a mixture of the metals indium and tin.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
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[0047]
[0048] The examples below shall illustrate the invention without limiting it. The skilled person will be able to recognize practical details of the invention not explicitly mentioned in the description, to generalize those details by general knowledge of the art and to apply them as solution to any special problem or task in connection with the technical matter of this invention.
EXAMPLES
Example 1. Formation of a UV Photodetector with Indium Zinc Oxide (IZO) Active Layer Formed by Spin-Coating an Ink Containing Indium and Zinc Oximates
[0049] In a glass vial, 48.0 mg of zinc bis(2-methoxyiminopropanoate) was dissolved in 3 ml of methoxypropanol. In a separate vial, 125.5 mg of indium tris(2-methoxyiminopropanoate) was dissolved in 3 ml of methoxypropanol. The solutions were sonicated briefly until clear. 0.5 ml of each solution was combined in a new glass vial to achieve a 3 wt % solution of oximates with In:Zn in a 5:2 ratio.
[0050] The ink was spin coated onto clean quartz slides (25 mm25 mm) using 50 L of ink per layer and a rotational speed of 2000 rpm. After each layer, the film was annealed at 250 C. for 4 minutes to yield the semiconductor material containing indium zinc oxide (IZO). The coating procedure is repeated until seven layers are formed. The UV absorbance was seen to increase with film thickness.
[0051] To test the photoresponse of the material, two gold pads were sputtered on the substrate to a final thickness of approximately 20 nm. A 3.3 mm linear mask was used to form the active area. Accordingly, the active area between the electrodes was 3.3 mm broad and 25 mm in length. Following deposition, the device was tested for an IV response using four different light conditions: dark, a 6 W 365 nm light source, a 6 W 302 nm light source, and a 6 W 254 nm light source (hand-held fluorescent tube, VWR). The distance to the lamp was about 13 cm.
[0052]
Example 2. Formation of a UV Photodetector with Gallium Oxide (Ga.SUB.2.O.SUB.3.) Active Layer Formed by Spin-Coating a Ga-Oximate Ink
[0053] In a glass vial, 282 mg of gallium tris(2-methoxyiminopropanoate) was dissolved in 3.6 ml of methoxyethanol to achieve a 4 wt % solution of the oximate. The mixture was sonicated briefly until clear.
[0054] The ink was spin coated onto clean quartz slides using 50 l of ink per layer and a speed of 2000 rpm. After each layer, the film was annealed at 250 C. for 4 minutes to yield the semiconductor material containing gallium(III) oxide. The UV absorbance was observed to increase with film thickness, i.e. the number of coating steps.
[0055]
[0056] To test the photoresponse of the material, two gold pads were sputtered on the substrate to a final thickness of approximately 20 nm. A 3.3 mm linear mask was used to form the active area (3.3 mm25 mm). Following deposition, the devices were tested for an IV response in the dark and under the illumination of a 6 W 254 nm light source.
[0057] In
Example 3. Formation of a UV Photodetector with Gallium Oxide (Ga.SUB.2.O.SUB.3.) Active Layer Formed by Spin-Coating a Ga-Hydroxamate Ink
[0058] In a glass vial, 144 mg of gallium tris(N-methyl-acetohydroxamate) was dissolved in 3.6 ml of methoxyethanol to achieve a 4 wt % solution of the hydroxamate. The solutions was sonicated briefly until clear. The ink was spin coated onto clean quartz slides using 50 l of ink per layer and a speed of 2000 rpm. After each layer, the film was annealed at 350 C. for 4 minutes to yield the semiconductor material containing gallium(III) oxide.
[0059] To test the photoresponse of the material, two gold pads were sputtered on the substrate to a final thickness of approximately 20 nm. A 3.3 mm linear mask was used to form the active area (3.3 mm25 mm). Following deposition, the devices were tested for an IV response in the dark and under the illumination of a 6 W 254 nm light source.
[0060] Further combinations of the embodiments of the invention and variants of the invention are disclosed by the following claims.