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Defect Equilibration in Amorphous Silicon Films Submitted to High Intensity Illumination
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2011
Abstract
In plasma-deposited a-Si:H films, the increase of the metastable defect density produced by high-intensity illumination usually follows a stretched-exponential time-dependence, with a characteristic time τSE and a steady-state value Nss. For a wide range of deposition conditions, we have observed that both parameters depend on the material properties. The strong correlation between Nss and the monohydride [SiH]2000 density, reported previously, has been interpreted as due to the trapping of metastable H atoms at specific sites.
In this study of the kinetics of defect equilibration under high-intensity illumination, we find two groups of a-Si:H films with fast and slow kinetics, respectively. These two groups display a very different dependence of the defect creation rate as a function of the optical gap. For the fast kinetics films, we emphasize the critical influence of the Urbach energy Eu deduced from the exponential optical absorption edge (1/τSE increases as a function of Eu). The slow kinetics films are characterized by a high nanovoid density evidenced by their SiHx infrared signature at 2090 cm-1. The results are discussed in relation to the medium-range H motion.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1996
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