Abstract

Amorphous hydrogenated silicon films were deposited on glass substrates at room temperature. This cold deposition process was operated in a dielectric barrier discharge CVD reactor with a fixed strip-shaped plasma matched with a moving substrate holder. The maximum film area was 300 × 600 mm 2. The film deposition rate as a function of applied peak voltage of DBD power was investigated under different hydrogen-diluted silane concentrations, and the film surface smoothness, continuity, and film/glass adherence were also studied. The maximum deposition rate was 12.2 Å/s, which was performed under the applied peak voltage of 16 kV and a hydrogen-diluted silane concentration of 50%. IR measurements reveal that the silane concentration plays a key role in determining the hydrogen-silicon bonding configurations. With increasing hydrogen-diluted silane concentration, the H–Si bonding configurations shift gradually from Si–H 3 to Si–H. The variation of photo/dark conductivity ratio and optical bandgap versus hydrogen-diluted silane concentration were investigated. The use of DBD-CVD for deposition of a-Si:H films offers certain advantages, such as colder substrate, faster film growth rate, and larger deposition area. However, the consumption of silane for the DBD-PECVD procedure is much greater than for the RF-PECVD process.

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