Atomic layer deposition of crystalline Bi2O3 thin films and their conversion into Bi2S3 by thermal vapor sulfurization†
Abstract
Crystalline Bi2O3 thin films have been grown on Si and quartz substrates at 300 °C in an atomic layer deposition (ALD) chamber using Bi(thd)3 (thd: 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionato) and H2O as precursors. Post-growth thermal sulfurization of such Bi2O3 films results in orthorhombic Bi2S3 at elevated temperatures. Atomic-force microscopy reveals that the surface roughness of Bi2O3 increases with growth cycles, and the roughness of Bi2O3/Si is generally larger than those of Bi2O3/quartz grown under the same conditions. However, after sulfurization, the surface morphologies became nearly similar in spite of their different substrates and/or thicknesses. The evolution of X-ray diffraction patterns as a function of growth cycles provide evidence that the growth starts with nonstoichiometric β-phase Bi2O2.3, and then transfers to α-Bi2O3 with the increase in growth cycles; the β-to-α growth transition occurs earlier on Si than that on a quartz substrate. Optical absorption spectroscopy reveals a bandgap of 3.0–3.5 eV for the as-grown Bi2O3 thin films, which is narrowed to 1.5 eV for the resultant Bi2S3 after sulfurization. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy indicates that both the as-grown Bi2O3 and the sulfurized Bi2S3 thin films are n-type semiconductors with the valence band maxima located at about 2.1 and 1.0 eV below their Fermi levels, respectively. These observations, together with the large absorption coefficient of Bi2S3 in the wavelength range of visible light, suggest a significant potential for Bi2S3 thin films and/or Bi2S3/Bi2O3 heterojunctions in various optoelectronic devices, e.g., for solar energy conversions.