Deposition and photoluminescence of zinc gallium oxide thin films with varied stoichiometry made by reactive magnetron co-sputtering

This paper reports on the deposition and photoluminescence of amorphous and crystalline thin films of zinc gallium oxide with Ga:Zn atomic ratio varied between 0.3 and 5.7. The films are prepared by reactive direct current magnetron co-sputtering from liquid/solid gallium/zinc targets onto fused qua...

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Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Martins Zubkins, Strods, Edvards, Vibornijs, Viktors, Sarakovskis, Anatolijs, Nedzinskas, Ramūnas, Reinis Ignatans, Butanovs, Edgars, Purans, Juris, Azens, Andris
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 05.02.2024
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Summary:This paper reports on the deposition and photoluminescence of amorphous and crystalline thin films of zinc gallium oxide with Ga:Zn atomic ratio varied between 0.3 and 5.7. The films are prepared by reactive direct current magnetron co-sputtering from liquid/solid gallium/zinc targets onto fused quartz substrates; the temperature of the substrate is varied from room temperature (RT) to 800{\deg}C. The sputtering process is effectively controlled by fixing the sputtering power of one of the targets and controlling the power of the other target by plasma optical emission spectroscopy. The method, in conjunction with oxygen flow adjustment, enables the production of near-stoichiometric films at any temperature used. The composition analysis suggests a few at.% oxygen deficiency in the films. The resulting deposition rate is at least an order of magnitude higher compared to the commonly used radio-frequency sputtering from a ceramic ZnO:Ga2O3 target. Deposited onto unheated substrates, the films with Ga:Zn {\approx} 2 are X-ray amorphous. Well-defined X-ray diffraction peaks of spinel ZnGa2O4 start to appear at a substrate temperature of 300{\deg}C. The surface of the as-deposited films is dense and exhibits a fine-featured structure observed in electron microscopy images. Increasing the deposition temperature from RT to 800{\deg}C eliminates defects and improves crystallinity, which for the films with Ga:Zn ratio close to 2 results in an increase in the optical band gap from 4.6 eV to 5.1 eV. Room temperature photoluminescence established the main peak at 3.1 eV (400 nm); a similar peak in Ga2O3 is ascribed to oxygen-vacancy related transitions. A prominent feature around 2.9 eV (428 nm) is attributed to self-activation center of the octahedral Ga-O groups in the spinel lattice of ZnGa2O4. It was found that photoluminescence from ZnGa2O4 depends significantly on the ratio Ga:Zn.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2402.03000