Abstract

The present work elaborates on the correlation between the amount and ordering of the free carbon phase in silicon oxycarbides and their charge carrier transport behavior. Thus, silicon oxycarbides possessing free carbon contents from 0 to ca. 58 vol.% (SiOC/C) were synthesized and exposed to temperatures from 1100 to 1800 °C. The prepared samples were extensively analyzed concerning the thermal evolution of the sp2 carbon phase by means of Raman spectroscopy. Additionally, electrical conductivity and Hall measurements were performed and correlated with the structural information obtained from the Raman spectroscopic investigation. It is shown that the percolation threshold in SiOC/C samples depends on the temperature of their thermal treatment, varying from ca. 20 vol.% in the samples prepared at 1100 °C to ca. 6 vol.% for the samples annealed at 1600 °C. Moreover, three different conduction regimes are identified in SiOC/C, depending on its sp2 carbon content: (i) at low carbon contents (i.e., <1 vol.%), the silicon oxycarbide glassy matrix dominates the charge carrier transport, which exhibits an activation energy of ca. 1 eV and occurs within localized states, presumably dangling bonds; (ii) near the percolation threshold, tunneling or hopping of charge carriers between spatially separated sp2 carbon precipitates appear to be responsible for the electrical conductivity; (iii) whereas above the percolation threshold, the charge carrier transport is only weakly activated (Ea = 0.03 eV) and is realized through the (continuous) carbon phase. Hall measurements on SiOC/C samples above the percolation threshold indicate p-type carriers mainly contributing to conduction. Their density is shown to vary with the sp2 carbon content in the range from 1014 to 1019 cm−3; whereas their mobility (ca. 3 cm2/V) seems to not depend on the sp2 carbon content.

Highlights

  • Silicon oxycarbides have been studied for several decades and attracted special attention due to the unique way in which they exhibit and combine structural features and properties of glasses with those of interface-dominated nano-heterogeneous materials [1]

  • The results obtained in the present work indicate that the charge carrier transport behavior of

  • SiOC/C materials correlated with the amount and the ordering of their sp2 -hybridized free carbon phase, which could be tuned upon adjusting the molecular structure of the precursor and the pyrolysis temperature, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Silicon oxycarbides have been studied for several decades and attracted special attention due to the unique way in which they exhibit and combine structural features and properties of glasses with those of interface-dominated nano-heterogeneous materials [1]. The incorporation of carbon in the silica glass network has been shown in various studies to improve its properties. It was shown for instance that silicon oxycarbide glasses have significantly increased Young’s moduli, hardness values, fracture toughness and devitrification resistance when compared to vitreous silica [1]. This effect has been attributed to an increased network connectivity of the silicon oxycarbides as compared to that of vitreous silica. The glassy network of silicon oxycarbides can be altered via incorporating additional network formers (i.e., boron) [8] or modifiers (e.g., Li, Ca, Mg, etc.) [3,5,6,9,10], structural properties such as network connectivity and polymerization can be finely tuned [6]

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