Studies of NiO/Ag/NiO transparent conducting electrodes on NiO and ZnO Schottky diodes
Abstract
A nickel oxide (NiO)/silver (Ag)/NiO (NAN) transparent conducting electrode (TCE) was deposited on NiO and zinc oxide (ZnO) to fabricate Schottky diodes (SDs). The physical and electrical properties of NAN/NiO and NAN/ZnO SDs were studied. In addition, conventional Au/ZnO SDs were fabricated for comparison. The prepared NAN TCE was of n-type, with more than 40% transmittance and a low sheet resistance of 6.5 Ω sq.−1, indicating that NAN is an exceptional TCE. Secondary ion mass spectrometry revealed that Ag atoms diffused into NiO and ZnO in the NAN/NiO and NAN/ZnO SDs, respectively. Owing to the large number of defects on the ZnO surface, the current–voltage (I–V) characteristics of the Au/ZnO SDs followed a linear curve. However, the reduced number of defects and a large barrier height at the NAN/ZnO interface led to a rectifying I–V curve in NAN/ZnO SDs. In contrast, a near homojunction at the NAN/NiO interface caused a linear I–V curve and a large leakage current in NAN/NiO SDs. These issues resulted in a lower ideality factor (5.32) in NAN/ZnO SDs than that in NAN/NiO SDs (15.14). The NAN/ZnO SDs exhibited a higher barrier height (0.91 eV) than the NAN/NiO SDs (0.55 eV). The mechanism of carrier transport was investigated using a ln(I) versus ln(V) plot. The NAN/NiO SDs only exhibited one region of ohmic conduction. However, two distinct regions were observed in the NAN/ZnO SDs. For V ≤ 0.7 V, the space-charge-limited current dominated; however, the diffusion–recombination model controlled carrier transport at V ≥ 0.7 V. Band diagrams were proposed to elucidate the carrier transport mechanism in NAN/NiO and NAN/ZnO SDs.