Abstract

The temperature-dependent electrical properties of four suspended polycrystalline thin gold films with thicknesses of 20.0, 23.0, 36.0 and 54.0 nm have been measured in the temperature range 100–310 K. The measured results show that the electrical resistivity of the films significantly increases while the corresponding temperature dependence decreases compared with bulk gold. The significantly increased electrical resistivity indicates that grain boundary scattering dominates over surface scattering in the studied films. However, fixing the Debye temperature to the bulk value will lead to an erroneous temperature dependence of resistivity. Taking into account the reduced characteristic Debye temperature along with the surface and grain boundary scattering, the electrical properties of the films can be well described in the whole temperature range. The extracted grain boundary reflection coefficient is 0.3 ± 0.03, within the range of the previous reported values, 0.1–0.45. The films' characteristic Debye temperatures decrease from the bulk value of 165 K to between 83 and 121 K and tend to increase with increasing film thickness. This tendency coincides with the previous studies on thin gold, copper, platinum, silver films or wires, and cobalt/nickel superlattices. The possible mechanism responsible for the reduced Debye temperature is phonon softening at the surfaces, grain boundaries, disorder, defects and impurities, part of which has been demonstrated in other studies.

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