Low temperature synthesis of photoconductive BaSi2 films via mechanochemically assisted close-spaced evaporation†
Abstract
BaSi2 is an emerging photovoltaic material with optimum optoelectronic properties and can be deposited by close-spaced evaporation, which has the advantages of epitaxial growth, high productivity, and scalability to large area deposition. This process is enabled by two reactions: (1) Ba gas generation from a milled BaAl4–Ni source and (2) BaSi2 formation from the Ba gas and a Si substrate, and is limited by the temperature of the former reaction. We show that mechanical activation of the BaAl4–Ni source by ball milling within 60 s lowers the BaSi2 film synthesis temperature down to 700 °C from 1000 °C required for the source ground using a pestle and mortar. Interestingly, additional milling beyond 60 s reduces the Ba gas generation rate, presumably because Ni is mechanochemically dissolved into BaAl4. The BaSi2 films synthesized at 700 °C are free from cracks and are epitaxially grown with (100) orientation on Si(100) substrates. Hall effect measurements reveal low electron concentration below 1.1 × 1017 cm−3. Photoconductance of the BaSi2 films correlates with film thickness, clearly indicating photocarrier generation in BaSi2. Thus, the mechanochemically assisted synthesis opens the way for solar cell applications of BaSi2 films synthesized via close-spaced evaporation.