Evidences of the passivation effect are given when thin films of CdS are deposited on GaSb crystalline substrates, using a bath chemical deposition method. The passivation process is studied through photoacoustic and photoluminescence experiments. The surface recombination velocity calculated from photoacoustic measurements decreases and the radiative recombination rate as measured from photoluminescence spectra increases when the nominal S/Cd ratio in the layer deposition solution increases. The influence of the CdS layer thickness on the surface passivation of GaSb is also studied.
CdTe:Cu films were grown by pulsed laser deposition on Corning glass slides at a substrate temperature of 300 °C. The thin films were grown using CdTe and Cu2Te powders, varying the Cu2Te concentration from 3 to 10 wt. %. The structural, compositional, optical, and electrical properties were analyzed as a function of the nominal copper concentration. X-ray diffraction shows that films have CdTe cubic phase. The compositional analysis indicates that CdTe:Cu films grown with lower Cu content have Te excess, on the other hand, films with higher Cu content have Te deficiencies. The electrical measurements showed that CdTe:Cu films grown with low Cu content present lowest resistivity.
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