Abstract

This article presents the investigation on the large-scale synthesis of ZnO microrods with a simple low temperature hydrothermal method without using surfactants, organic solvents, or catalytic reagents. The synthesized ZnO powder is characterized with different techniques. The X-ray diffraction study reveals the excellent crystal quality of the ZnO product possessing the hexagonal (wurtzite-type) crystal structure. The scanning electron microscope observation confirms the formation of six faceted prismatic hexagonal ZnO microrods with the aspect ratio of 10. It also reveals that the ZnO microrods grow along the (0001) direction and finally emerge with a sharp tip because of the existence of polar faces. The UV–vis spectrum shows a sharp absorption peak centered at 370nm, which is in a good agreement with the equivalent bulk band gap value. The strong UV absorption peak implies the excellent crystal quality of the synthesized ZnO microrods. Room temperature photoluminescence spectroscopic study of the ZnO microrods with different excitation wavelengths reveals a strong band edge emission peak centered at 398nm and a defect related visible blue emission peak at 460nm. The decrease in photoluminescence intensity with negligible red shift in peak position is observed with increasing excitation wavelength.

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