Abstract

p-Type SnO thin films were deposited on a Si substrate by a cosputtering process using ceramic SnO and metal Sn targets at room temperature without adding oxygen. By varying the dc sputtering power applied to the Sn target while maintaining a constant radio frequency power to the SnO target, the Sn/O ratio varied from 56:44 to 74:26 at the as-deposited state. After thermal annealing at 180 °C for 25 min under air atmosphere using a microwave annealing system, the films were crystallized into tetragonal SnO when the Sn/O ratio increased from 44:56 to 57:43. Notably, the metallic Sn remained when the Sn/O ratio was higher than 55:45 at an annealed state. When the ratio was lower than 55:45 at the annealed state, the incorporated Sn fully oxidized to SnO, making the films useful p-type semiconductors, whereas the films became metallic conductors at higher Sn/O ratios. At the Sn/O ratio of 55:45 at the annealed state, the film showed the highest Hall mobility of 8.8 cm2 V-1 s-1 and a hole concentration of 5.4 × 1018 cm-3. Interestingly, the electrical conduction behavior showed trap-mediated hopping when the Sn metal was cosputtered, whereas the single SnO film showed regular band conduction behavior. The residual stress effect could interpret such property variation originated from the sputtering power and postoxidation-induced volumetric effects. This report makes a critical contribution to the in-depth understanding of the composition-structure-property relationship of this technically important thin film material.

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