Abstract

Aqueous solution deposition has emerged as a potentially scalable, high-throughput route to functional metal oxide thin films. Aqueous routes, however, generally require elevated processing temperatures to produce fully condensed films that are resistant to water absorption. Herein, we report a low-processing-temperature method for preparing more fully condensed, stable metal oxide films from aqueous precursors. We show that a steam anneal at ≤200 °C reduces residual nitrates in zinc oxide, yttrium aluminum oxide, and lanthanum zirconium oxide (LZO) films. An in-depth study on LZO dielectric films reveals steam annealing also reduces residual chloride content, increases resistance to post-anneal water absorption, eliminates void formation, and enhances the dielectric constant. This investigation demonstrates that steam annealing directly affects the decomposition temperatures and chemical evolution of aqueous precursors, suggesting a general means for producing high-quality films at low processing tempera...

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