T. Drusedau et al., THE INFLUENCE OF HYDROGEN AND ARGON PRESSURE ON COMPOSITION AND OPTOELECTRONIC PROPERTIES OF SPUTTERED A-SI1-XGEXH(X-APPROXIMATE-TO-0.4), Journal of non-crystalline solids, 155(3), 1993, pp. 195-208
The composition and the defect density of a-Si1-xGex:H films (x almost
-equal-to 0.4) prepared by magnetron sputtering of a composite target
under varying hydrogen and argon partial pressure were investigated by
Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS), elastic recoil detectio
n (ERD), infrared spectroscopy, electron spin resonance (ESR) and phot
othermal deflection spectroscopy (PDS). The incorporation of hydrogen
is well described by Moustakas' empirical relation and results in pref
erential Si-H bonding and preferential plasma etching of Si during the
film growth. By contrast with sputtered a-Si: H and a-Ge:H where good
agreement of the data is observed, the hydrogen concentration of the
alloy determined by ERD and IR spectroscopy differs by a factor of two
. Hydrogenation lowers the film's spin density to typically 3 x 10(18)
cm-3 which is about a factor of ten above the value obtained from PDS
measurements. The optical properties static refractive index and Tauc
gap vary linearly with the films hydrogen content in the range of 3.8
-3.4 and 1.2 eV-1.55 eV, respectively. Hydrogenation causes a decrease
s of the dark conductivity from 10(-6) (OMEGA cm)-1 to a minimum of 10
(-10) (OMEGA cm)-1 and an increase of the normalized photoconductivity
to a maximum of etamutau = 5 X 10(-8) cm2/V.