This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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Description
I studied the properties of novel Co2FeAl0.5Si0.5 (CFAS), ZnGeAs2, and FeS2 (pyrite) thin films for microelectronic applications ranging from spintronic to photovoltaic. CFAS is a half metal with theoretical spin polarization of 100%. I investigated its potential as a spin injector, for spintronic applications, by studying the critical steps involved

I studied the properties of novel Co2FeAl0.5Si0.5 (CFAS), ZnGeAs2, and FeS2 (pyrite) thin films for microelectronic applications ranging from spintronic to photovoltaic. CFAS is a half metal with theoretical spin polarization of 100%. I investigated its potential as a spin injector, for spintronic applications, by studying the critical steps involved in the injection of spin polarized electron populations from tunnel junctions containing CFAS electrodes. Epitaxial CFAS thin films with L21 structure and saturation magnetizations of over 1200 emu/cm3 were produced by optimization of the sputtering growth conditions. Point contact Andreev reflection measurements show that the spin polarization at the CFAS electrode surface exceeds 70%. Analyses of the electrical properties of tunnel junctions with a superconducting Pb counter-electrode indicate that transport through native Al oxide barriers is mostly from direct tunneling, while that through the native CFAS oxide barriers is not. ZnGeAs2 is a semiconductor comprised of only inexpensive and earth-abundant elements. The electronic structure and defect properties are similar in many ways to GaAs. Thus, in theory, efficient solar cells could be made with ZnGeAs2 if similar quality material to that of GaAs could be produced. To understand the thermochemistry and determine the rate limiting steps of ZnGeAs2 thin-film synthesis, the (a) thermal decomposition rate and (b) elemental composition and deposition rate of films were measured. It is concluded that the ZnGeAs2 thin film synthesis is a metastable process with an activation energy of 1.08±0.05 eV for the kinetically-limited decomposition rate and an evaporation coefficient of ~10-3. The thermochemical analysis presented here can be used to predict optimal conditions of ZnGeAs2 physical vapor deposition and thermal processing. Pyrite (FeS2) is another semiconductor that has tremendous potential for use in photovoltaic applications if high quality materials could be made. Here, I present the layer-by-layer growth of single-phase pyrite thin-films on heated substrates using sequential evaporation of Fe under high-vacuum followed by sulfidation at S pressures between 1 mTorr and 1 Torr. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy reveals high-quality, defect-free pyrite grains were produces by this method. It is demonstrated that epitaxial pyrite layer was produced on natural pyrite substrates with this method.
ContributorsVahidi, Mahmoud (Author) / Newman, Nathan (Thesis advisor) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Singh, Rakesh (Committee member) / Chen, Tingyong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
Microwave dielectrics are widely used to make resonators and filters in telecommunication systems. The production of thin films with high dielectric constant and low loss could potentially enable a marked reduction in the size of devices and systems. However, studies of these materials in thin film form are very sparse.

Microwave dielectrics are widely used to make resonators and filters in telecommunication systems. The production of thin films with high dielectric constant and low loss could potentially enable a marked reduction in the size of devices and systems. However, studies of these materials in thin film form are very sparse. In this research, experiments were carried out on practical high-performance dielectrics including ZrTiO4-ZnNb2O6 (ZTZN) and Ba(Co,Zn)1/3Nb2/3O3 (BCZN) with high dielectric constant and low loss tangent. Thin films were deposited by laser ablation on various substrates, with a systematical study of growth conditions like substrate temperature, oxygen pressure and annealing to optimize the film quality, and the compositional, microstructural, optical and electric properties were characterized. The deposited ZTZN films were randomly oriented polycrystalline on Si substrate and textured on MgO substrate with a tetragonal lattice change at elevated temperature. The BCZN films deposited on MgO substrate showed superior film quality relative to that on other substrates, which grow epitaxially with an orientation of (001) // MgO (001) and (100) // MgO (100) when substrate temperature was above 500 oC. In-situ annealing at growth temperature in 200 mTorr oxygen pressure was found to enhance the quality of the films, reducing the peak width of the X-ray Diffraction (XRD) rocking curve to 0.53o and the χmin of channeling Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS) to 8.8% when grown at 800oC. Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) was used to study the topography and found a monotonic decrease in the surface roughness when the growth temperature increased. Optical absorption and transmission measurements were used to determine the energy bandgap and the refractive index respectively. A low-frequency dielectric constant of 34 was measured using a planar interdigital measurement structure. The resistivity of the film is ~3×1010 ohm·cm at room temperature and has an activation energy of thermal activated current of 0.66 eV.
ContributorsLi, You (Author) / Newman, Nathan (Thesis advisor) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Singh, Rakesh (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
Diamond transistors are promising as high-power and high-frequency devices having higher efficiencies than conventional transistors. Diamond possesses superior electronic properties, such as a high bandgap (5.47 eV), high breakdown voltage (>10 MV cm−1 ), high electron and hole mobilities [4500 and 3800 cm2 V−1 · s−1, respectively], high electron

Diamond transistors are promising as high-power and high-frequency devices having higher efficiencies than conventional transistors. Diamond possesses superior electronic properties, such as a high bandgap (5.47 eV), high breakdown voltage (>10 MV cm−1 ), high electron and hole mobilities [4500 and 3800 cm2 V−1 · s−1, respectively], high electron and hole saturation velocities (1.5 × 107 and 1.05 × 107 cm s−1, respectively), and high thermal conductivity [22 W cm−1 · K−1], compared to conventional semiconductors. Reportedly, the diamond field-effect transistors (FETs) have shown transition frequencies (fT) of 45 and 70 GHz, maximum oscillation frequency (fmax) of 120 GHz, and radiofrequency (RF) power densities of 2.1 and 3.8 W mm−1 at 1 GHz. A two-dimensional-hole-gas (2DHG) surface channel forms on H-diamond by transfer doping from adsorbates/dielectrics in contact with H-diamond surface. However, prior studies indicate that charge transfer at the dielectric/ H-diamond interface could result in relatively low mobility attributed to interface scattering from the transferred negative charge to acceptor region. H-terminated diamond exhibits a negative electron affinity (NEA) of -1.1 to -1.3 eV, which is crucial to enable charge transfer doping. To overcome these limitations modulation doping, that is, selective doping, that leads to spatial separation of the MoO3 acceptor layer from the hole channel on H-diamond has been proposed. Molybdenum oxide (MoO3) was used as dielectric as it has electron affinity of 5.9eV and could align its conduction band minimum (CBM) below the valence band maximum (VBM) of H-terminated diamond. The band alignment provides the driving potential for charge transfer. Hafnium oxide (HfO2) was used as interfacial layer since it is a high-k oxide insulator (∼25), having large Eg (5.6 eV), high critical breakdown field, and high thermal stability. This study presents photoemission measurements of the electronic band alignments of the MoO3/HfO2/H-diamond layer structure to gain insight into the driving potential for the negative charge transfer and the location of the negative charges near the interface, in the HfO2 layer or in the MoO3 layer. The diamond hole concentration, mobility, and sheet resistance were characterized for MoO3/HfO2/H-Diamond with HfO2 layers of 0, 2 and 4 nm thickness.
ContributorsDeshmukh, Aditya Vilasrao (Author) / Nemanich, Robert J. (Thesis advisor) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Yang, Sui (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
Pyrite is a 0.95 eV bandgap semiconductor which is purported to have great potential in widespread, low–cost photovoltaic cells. A thorough material selection process was used in the design of a pyrite sequential vapor deposition chamber aimed at reducing and possibly eliminating contamination during thin film growth. The design process

Pyrite is a 0.95 eV bandgap semiconductor which is purported to have great potential in widespread, low–cost photovoltaic cells. A thorough material selection process was used in the design of a pyrite sequential vapor deposition chamber aimed at reducing and possibly eliminating contamination during thin film growth. The design process focused on identifying materials that do not produce volatile components when exposed to high temperatures and high sulfur pressures. Once the materials were identified and design was completed, the ultra–high vacuum growth system was constructed and tested.

Pyrite thin films were deposited using the upgraded sequential vapor deposition chamber by varying the substrate temperature from 250°C to 420°C during deposition, keeping sulfur pressure constant at 1 Torr. Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) results showed that all contaminants in the films were reduced in concentration by orders of magnitude from those grown with the previous system. Characterization techniques of Rutherford Back–scattering Spectrometry (RBS), X–Ray Diffraction (XRD), Raman Spectroscopy, Optical Profilometry and UV/Vis/Near–IR Spectroscopy were performed on the deposited thin films. The results indicate that stoichiometric ratio of S:Fe, structural–quality (epitaxy), optical roughness and percentage of pyrite in the deposited thin films improve with increase in deposition temperature. A Tauc plot of the optical measurements indicates that the pyrite thin films have a bandgap of 0.94 eV.
ContributorsWalimbe, Aditya (Author) / Newman, Nathan (Thesis advisor) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Singh, Rakesh (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Wide bandgap semiconductors are of much current interest due to their superior electrical properties. This dissertation describes electron microscopy characterization of GaN-on-GaN structures for high-power vertical device applications. Unintentionally-doped (UID) GaN layers grown homoepitaxially via metal-organic chemical vapor deposition on freestanding GaN substrates, were subjected to dry etching, and layers

Wide bandgap semiconductors are of much current interest due to their superior electrical properties. This dissertation describes electron microscopy characterization of GaN-on-GaN structures for high-power vertical device applications. Unintentionally-doped (UID) GaN layers grown homoepitaxially via metal-organic chemical vapor deposition on freestanding GaN substrates, were subjected to dry etching, and layers of UID-GaN/p-GaN were over-grown. The as-grown and regrown heterostructures were examined in cross-section using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Two different etching treatments, fast-etch-only and multiple etches with decreasing power, were employed. The fast-etch-only devices showed GaN-on-GaN interface at etched location, and low device breakdown voltages were measured (~ 45-95V). In comparison, no interfaces were visible after multiple etching steps, and the corresponding breakdown voltages were much higher (~1200-1270V). These results emphasized importance of optimizing surface etching techniques for avoiding degraded device performance. The morphology of GaN-on-GaN devices after reverse-bias electrical stressing to breakdown was investigated. All failed devices had irreversible structural damage, showing large surface craters (~15-35 microns deep) with lengthy surface cracks. Cross-sectional TEM of failed devices showed high densities of threading dislocations (TDs) around the cracks and near crater surfaces. Progressive ion-milling across damaged devices revealed high densities of TDs and the presence of voids beneath cracks: these features were not observed in unstressed devices. The morphology of GaN substrates grown by hydride vapor-phase epitaxy (HVPE) and by ammonothermal methods were correlated with reverse-bias results. HVPE substrates showed arrays of surface features when observed by X-ray topography (XRT). All fabricated devices that overlapped with these features had typical reverse-bias voltages less than 100V at a leakage current limit of 10-6 A. In contrast, devices not overlapping with such features reached voltages greater than 300V. After etching, HVPE substrate surfaces showed defect clusters and macro-pits, whereas XRT images of ammonothermal substrate revealed no visible features. However, some devices fabricated on ammonothermal substrate failed at low voltages. Devices on HVPE and ammonothermal substrates with low breakdown voltages showed crater-like surface damage and revealed TDs (~25µm deep) and voids; such features were not observed in devices reaching higher voltages. These results should assist in developing protocols to fabricate reliable high-voltage devices.
ContributorsPeri, Prudhvi Ram (Author) / Smith, David J. (Thesis advisor) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Mccartney, Martha R (Committee member) / Nemanich, Robert (Committee member) / Zhao, Yuji (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021