Abstract

Zinc Oxide (ZnO) nanostructures such as nanorods (NRs), nanowalls (NWs) and nanoflakes (NFs) were successfully grown on a glass substrate via chemical bath deposition (CBD) method by varying solutions concentration (0.01 M, 0.05 M, 0.10 M, 0.15 M, 0.20 M and 0.25 M). Effect of CBD concentration on the growth and morphology of ZnO nanostructures are dignified. The structural and optical properties of ZnO NRs, NWs, and NFs were investigated by Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (FESEM), energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX), X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), and UV-Visible (UV-Vis) analyses. Results reveal that as the CBD concentration increases, FESEM images showed differ top-down morphology of ZnO nanostructures from NRs, NWs to NFs. Likewise, the alignment of ZnO cross-section evolved from randomly oriented to vertically oriented. As revealed by EDX, the stoichiometric ratio of Zn:O were mostly towards 1:1. From XRD analyses, the preferred structure was wurtzite hexagonal with c-axis orientation along (002) plane. The UV-Vis analysis exposed the optical band gap energy closes to the standard energy gap value of ZnO at 3.37 eV. Thus, this work introduces a variable geometry of ZnO nanostructures (NRs, NWs, and NFs) grown on glass with high structural and optical quality as standard ZnO. The fabricated materials are potential candidates for investigating random lasing in ZnO from different structural geometry.

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