Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films

abstract: Pyrite is a 0.95 eV bandgap semiconductor which is purported to have great potential in widespread, low–cost photovoltaic cells. A thorough material selection process was used in the design of a pyrite sequential vapor deposition chamber aimed at reducing and possibly eliminating contamina...

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Other Authors: Walimbe, Aditya Narendra (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38609
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-38609
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-386092018-06-22T03:07:19Z Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films abstract: Pyrite is a 0.95 eV bandgap semiconductor which is purported to have great potential in widespread, low–cost photovoltaic cells. A thorough material selection process was used in the design of a pyrite sequential vapor deposition chamber aimed at reducing and possibly eliminating contamination during thin film growth. The design process focused on identifying materials that do not produce volatile components when exposed to high temperatures and high sulfur pressures. Once the materials were identified and design was completed, the ultra–high vacuum growth system was constructed and tested. Pyrite thin films were deposited using the upgraded sequential vapor deposition chamber by varying the substrate temperature from 250°C to 420°C during deposition, keeping sulfur pressure constant at 1 Torr. Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) results showed that all contaminants in the films were reduced in concentration by orders of magnitude from those grown with the previous system. Characterization techniques of Rutherford Back–scattering Spectrometry (RBS), X–Ray Diffraction (XRD), Raman Spectroscopy, Optical Profilometry and UV/Vis/Near–IR Spectroscopy were performed on the deposited thin films. The results indicate that stoichiometric ratio of S:Fe, structural–quality (epitaxy), optical roughness and percentage of pyrite in the deposited thin films improve with increase in deposition temperature. A Tauc plot of the optical measurements indicates that the pyrite thin films have a bandgap of 0.94 eV. Dissertation/Thesis Walimbe, Aditya Narendra (Author) Newman, Nathan (Advisor) Alford, Terry (Committee member) Singh, Rakesh (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Materials Science Pyrite pyrite PVD Pyrite thin film sequential vapor deposition Thin film deposition eng 41 pages Masters Thesis Materials Science and Engineering 2016 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38609 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Materials Science
Pyrite
pyrite PVD
Pyrite thin film
sequential vapor deposition
Thin film deposition
spellingShingle Materials Science
Pyrite
pyrite PVD
Pyrite thin film
sequential vapor deposition
Thin film deposition
Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
description abstract: Pyrite is a 0.95 eV bandgap semiconductor which is purported to have great potential in widespread, low–cost photovoltaic cells. A thorough material selection process was used in the design of a pyrite sequential vapor deposition chamber aimed at reducing and possibly eliminating contamination during thin film growth. The design process focused on identifying materials that do not produce volatile components when exposed to high temperatures and high sulfur pressures. Once the materials were identified and design was completed, the ultra–high vacuum growth system was constructed and tested. Pyrite thin films were deposited using the upgraded sequential vapor deposition chamber by varying the substrate temperature from 250°C to 420°C during deposition, keeping sulfur pressure constant at 1 Torr. Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) results showed that all contaminants in the films were reduced in concentration by orders of magnitude from those grown with the previous system. Characterization techniques of Rutherford Back–scattering Spectrometry (RBS), X–Ray Diffraction (XRD), Raman Spectroscopy, Optical Profilometry and UV/Vis/Near–IR Spectroscopy were performed on the deposited thin films. The results indicate that stoichiometric ratio of S:Fe, structural–quality (epitaxy), optical roughness and percentage of pyrite in the deposited thin films improve with increase in deposition temperature. A Tauc plot of the optical measurements indicates that the pyrite thin films have a bandgap of 0.94 eV. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Materials Science and Engineering 2016
author2 Walimbe, Aditya Narendra (Author)
author_facet Walimbe, Aditya Narendra (Author)
title Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
title_short Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
title_full Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
title_fullStr Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Co–deposition method for Deposition of Low–Contamination Pyrite Thin Films
title_sort development of a co–deposition method for deposition of low–contamination pyrite thin films
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38609
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