HfS2 thin films deposited at room temperature by an emerging technique, solution atomic layer deposition

Cao Y, Zhu S, Bachmann J (2021)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2021

Journal

DOI: 10.1039/d1dt01232k

Abstract

As a member of the two-dimensional metal dichalcogenide family, HfS2 has emerged as a promising material for various optoelectronic applications. Atomic layer deposition is widely used in microelectronics manufacturing with unique properties in terms of accurate thickness control and high conformality. In this work, a simple and versatile method based on the atomic layer deposition principles is presented to generate hafnium disulfide from the solution phase ('solution ALD' or sALD). For ease of comparison with the traditional gaseous atomic layer deposition (gALD) method, the same precursors are used, namely tetrakis-(dimethylamido) hafnium(iv) and H2S. The deposit is characterized on several different oxide substrates by spectroscopic ellipsometry, scanning electron microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. In the saturated regime, the growth rate depends on the substrate nature and is between 0.4 and 0.6 angstrom per sALD cycle. This growth rate determined at room temperature is lower than with the gALD process reported at 100 degrees C recently. At those low deposition temperatures, the films remain in an amorphous state. This success in sALD expands the range of material classes available by the new method, adding transition metal dichalcogenides to the list containing oxides, cubic sulfides, hydrides, and organics so far. It promises to overcome the precursor constraints associated with the traditional gALD method, in particular the volatility requirement.

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How to cite

APA:

Cao, Y., Zhu, S., & Bachmann, J. (2021). HfS2 thin films deposited at room temperature by an emerging technique, solution atomic layer deposition. Dalton Transactions. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1dt01232k

MLA:

Cao, Yuanyuan, Sha Zhu, and Julien Bachmann. "HfS2 thin films deposited at room temperature by an emerging technique, solution atomic layer deposition." Dalton Transactions (2021).

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