Abstract

As a wide energy band gap semiconductor, a Ga2O3 thin film was prepared by the sol–gel process with different annealing processes. Since Ga2O3 is a type of metal oxide structure, an oxygen annealing process can be considered to remove oxygen defects. An effective oxygen annealing process can help form a β-Ga2O3 structure with reduced defects. In this study, different types of annealing effects for β-Ga2O3 were investigated and compared. An electric furnace process using thermal effect characteristics of and an Rapid Thermal Annealing (RTA) process applied with an infrared radiation light source were compared. Two and 4 h thermal annealing processes were conducted at 900 °C in the furnace. Meanwhile, to study the optical annealing effects, 2 h furnace at 900 °C + 15 min in rapid thermal annealing and only 15 min in rapid thermal annealing effects were compared, respectively. Through increasing the thermal annealing temperature and time, β-Ga2O3 can be formed even though a sol–gel process was employed in this experiment. An annealing temperature of at least 900 °C was required to form β-Ga2O3 thin film. Moreover, by introducing an RTA process just after the spinning process of thin film, a β-Ga2O3 thin film was formed on the sapphire substrates. Compared with the electric furnace process applied for 2 h, the RTA process performed in 15 min has a relatively short process time and results in similar structural and optical characteristics of a thin film. From the X-ray diffraction patterns and UV spectrometer analysis, optically annealed β-Ga2O3 thin films on the sapphire substrate showed a highly crystalized structure with a wide energy band gap of 4.8 eV.

Highlights

  • The energy industry is changing to renewable energy and focusing on carbon-free and power saving

  • We confirmed that these changing of colors are related with generation of β-Ga2O3 phase, and we could expect that β-Ga2O3 was formed by obtaining the same results even after the Rapid Thermal Annealing (RTA) process

  • The β-Ga2O3 thin film quality and rocking curve was determined by high-resolution X-ray diffraction (HRXRD, D8-Discover/Bruker-AXS, Karlsruhe, Germany)

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Summary

Introduction

The energy industry is changing to renewable energy and focusing on carbon-free and power saving. In future industries, ultra-wide bandgap materials are preferred to control high-power systems [5] such as industrial assembly robots, electric vehicles and energy storage systems These materials contain diamond, boron nitride, Al-AlGaN, and β-Ga2O3. There has been a growing body of investigations that obtain β-Ga2O3 thin film by various methods, including chemical vapor deposition (CVD), plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition (PEALD), radio frequency sputtering (RF sputtering), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), hydride vapor phase epitaxy, and pulsed laser deposition (PLD) [10,11,12,13,14] These processes are not suitable for large-area production, because they are vacuum-based complex methods. It is especially notable that RTA is suitable for the fast production of β-Ga2O3 thin film

Cleaning and Production of Solution Using Starting Material
Spin-Coating and Hot Plate Process
Thin Film Characterization
Results and Discussion
Full Text
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