1 / 25

Dehydration of tin hydroxide and low-temperature, solution-processed zinc tin oxide TFT

Dehydration of tin hydroxide and low-temperature, solution-processed zinc tin oxide TFT. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide. Strategy to low-temperature sol-gel oxide semiconductor. 2008 DA Keszler , JACS. 2010 H . Sirringhaus , Nat. Mat. 2009 M Halik , Adv. Mat. Alkoxides. 1. Deposition.

allan
Télécharger la présentation

Dehydration of tin hydroxide and low-temperature, solution-processed zinc tin oxide TFT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dehydration of tin hydroxide and low-temperature, solution-processed zinc tin oxide TFT

  2. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Strategy to low-temperature sol-gel oxide semiconductor 2008 DA Keszler, JACS 2010 H. Sirringhaus, Nat. Mat. 2009 M Halik, Adv. Mat. Alkoxides 1. Deposition Hydroxides 2. Steam annealing 1. Deposition Oxides 3. Anealing 2. Anealing 1. Deposition (Nanoparticle)

  3. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Ethoxide Water vapor hydrolysis rate vs. functional group SrBi2Ta2O9 (SBT) sol-gel coating (Ferroelectric material) Water vapor-oxygen flow annealing – less hydrogen, carbon (compared to air annealing) Ethoxide precursor is hydrolized (more H, less C) More than methoxyethoxide precursor Methoxyethoxide

  4. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Water vapor hydrolysis rate vs. functional group Ethoxide precursor – high hydrolysis rate (less steric effect) Larger grain size after 650ºC annealing Ethoxide Methoxyethoxide

  5. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Dehydration of metal hydroxides Zinc hydroxide Weight loss from 190ºC from DTA analysis (Generally known to decompose at 125ºC) Indium hydroxide 250 ~ 300ºC : 2In(OH)3 → 2InOOH + 2H2O 305ºC : 2InOOH → In2O3+ H2O

  6. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Dehydration of metal hydroxides Tin hydroxide Complete dehydration requires very high temperature (600ºC) Hydrogen impurities remain as stannic acid form

  7. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide IZO TFT FE mobility 0.54cm2/Vsat 300ºC

  8. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide IZO TFT FE mobility 0.86cm2/Vsat 300ºC FE mobility 2.12cm2/Vsat 300ºC microwave

  9. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide ZTO TFT Lower mobility at 500ºC (1.1cm2/Vs) TFT characteristic is undetectable at 300ºC

  10. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide ZTO TG-DTA analysis Decomposition was completed at around 500ºC

  11. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Zr-ZTO TFT Improved mobility at 500ºC (4.02cm2/Vs) and at lower temperature FE mobility 0.028cm2/Vs at 300ºC

  12. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Zr-ZTO TG-DTA analysis 190-320ºC : Dehydration process Decomposition temperature is reduced by alloying

  13. Zr-ZTO XPS measurement The O 1s peaks 530.1 eV(Oox) - oxygen atoms in the fully oxidized surroundings. 531.2 eV(Ov) - oxygen ions in oxygen deficient regions 532.4 eV(Os) - loosely bound oxygen (H2O and OH groups) Increasing Zr – less hydroxyl

  14. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide ZTO TFT with vacuum annealing Vacuum annealing enabled low-temperature ZTO TFT As-deposition : 5.5 x 10−3cm2/Vs (300ºC 3h : no improvement) 300ºC Vacuum : 3.17 cm2/Vs 300ºC Vacuum-wet : 5.5 cm2/Vs

  15. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide XPS measurement Zn:Sn ratio – maintained 1:1 after the postannealing Cl concentration - significantly reduced after vacuum annealing (0.4 - 2 atom%)

  16. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide XPS measurement The O 1s peaks 530.1 eV(Oox) - oxygen atoms in the fully oxidized surroundings. 531.2 eV(Ov) - oxygen ions in oxygen deficient regions Increased after vacuum annealing 532.4 eV(Os) - loosely bound oxygen (H2O and OH groups) Decreased after vacuum annealing

  17. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide Low-temperature SiO2 Low temperature (<400ºC) grown SiO2 (CVD,PECVD,sol-gel) Poor properties by remaining H2O and OH groups Dehydration of SiO2 requires high temperature over 600ºC FTIR spectra Reduction of H2O and Si-OH signal XeF2 annealing 350ºC annealing with sublimated XeF2

  18. Low-temperature sol-gel oxide TPD spectra H2O desorption is undetectable from XeF2-annealed sample (almost like thermal oxide) Leakage characteristic Dielectric constant: 3.8 Breakdown field strength : 4MV/cm High Si-F bonds Low Si-F bonds

  19. Conclusion • Sol-gel processed ZTO : higher dehydration temperature than IZO • High dehydration temperature is related to tin hydroxide dehydration products • Vacuum annealing effectively improve ZTO TFT’s low temperature characteristics • XeF2 Catalytic dehydration can decrease process temperature

  20. Experiment ZrO2 surface sol-gel dielectric Large leakage current Vg can applied to 1.5V maximum

  21. Experiment ZrO2 surface sol-gel dielectric ~16nm thickness Capacitance ~650 nF/cm2

  22. Experiment Thermal SiO2 ZrO2 surface sol-gel dielectric – leakage current reduced

  23. Experiment Thermal SiO2 ZrO2 surface sol-gel dielectric

  24. Experiment Surface sol-gel SnO2 active layer – 10 cycles thickness

  25. Experiment Surface sol-gel SnO2 active layer – 20 cycles thickness

More Related