The development of new-generation photovoltaic devices through more sustainable production techniques and materials is driven by the need of containing the threats to the biosphere while guaranteeing the safety of the supply, accounting for the limited availability of fossil fuels. This study investigates the crystal structure of thin films of chalcogenides, in particular a junction with a p-type (Cu2S) and a n-type (CdS) layer deposited one on top of the other on a Ag(111) substrate, starting from aqueous solution and by means of Electrochemical Atomic Layer Deposition (E-ALD) (the system is denoted by (Cu2S)60/(CdS)60/Ag(111)). The experiment highlights the profound epitaxial relationship existing between the films and the bulk, consequent to the homogenisation of the metrics of the CdS and the Cu2S structures to values commensurate to the surface periodicity of the substrate. Cadmium sulphide develops an elementary cell with crystallographic axes parallel to those of the Ag(111) and parameters |a|, |b| and |c| never found in any of the known mineral phases. The comparison with the wurtzite-type structure of greenockite shows a compensation mechanism related to the strain imposed by the film growth on the crystallographic Ag(111) surface.
The positions in the reciprocal space of the Cu2S reflections is compatible with a pseudo-hexagonal pattern rotated by 30 ° with respect to the Ag, as already noticed in relation to a Cu2S/Ag(111) E-ALD deposit (1). The Cu2S c axis results parallel to the direction [111] of the Ag substrate and its structure is characterized by the strong occurrence of the 3.963 Å periodicity, which corresponds to the interatomic distance S-S in the triangular CuS3 groups, basis of all the mineral Cu2-xS group structures. These data suggest a pseudo-hexagonal chalcocite-like structure with a planarization of S layers (1), as a result of the strong epitaxial relationship existing with the CdS below. This study confirms E-ALD as an energy efficient method for the growth of semiconducting heterostructures with tailored properties.
- Giaccherini et al. (2017), Scientific Reports | 7: 1615 | DOI:10.1038/s41598-017-01717-0