Nanomaterials (Oct 2022)

High-Resolution Photoemission Study of Neutron-Induced Defects in Amorphous Hydrogenated Silicon Devices

  • Francesca Peverini,
  • Marco Bizzarri,
  • Maurizio Boscardin,
  • Lucio Calcagnile,
  • Mirco Caprai,
  • Anna Paola Caricato,
  • Giuseppe Antonio Pablo Cirrone,
  • Michele Crivellari,
  • Giacomo Cuttone,
  • Sylvain Dunand,
  • Livio Fanò,
  • Benedetta Gianfelici,
  • Omar Hammad,
  • Maria Ionica,
  • Keida Kanxheri,
  • Matthew Large,
  • Giuseppe Maruccio,
  • Mauro Menichelli,
  • Anna Grazia Monteduro,
  • Francesco Moscatelli,
  • Arianna Morozzi,
  • Stefania Pallotta,
  • Andrea Papi,
  • Daniele Passeri,
  • Marco Petasecca,
  • Giada Petringa,
  • Igor Pis,
  • Gianluca Quarta,
  • Silvia Rizzato,
  • Alessandro Rossi,
  • Giulia Rossi,
  • Andrea Scorzoni,
  • Cristian Soncini,
  • Leonello Servoli,
  • Silvia Tacchi,
  • Cinzia Talamonti,
  • Giovanni Verzellesi,
  • Nicolas Wyrsch,
  • Nicola Zema,
  • Maddalena Pedio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12193466
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 19
p. 3466

Abstract

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In this paper, by means of high-resolution photoemission, soft X-ray absorption and atomic force microscopy, we investigate, for the first time, the mechanisms of damaging, induced by neutron source, and recovering (after annealing) of p-i-n detector devices based on hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H). This investigation will be performed by mean of high-resolution photoemission, soft X-Ray absorption and atomic force microscopy. Due to dangling bonds, the amorphous silicon is a highly defective material. However, by hydrogenation it is possible to reduce the density of the defect by several orders of magnitude, using hydrogenation and this will allow its usage in radiation detector devices. The investigation of the damage induced by exposure to high energy irradiation and its microscopic origin is fundamental since the amount of defects determine the electronic properties of the a-Si:H. The comparison of the spectroscopic results on bare and irradiated samples shows an increased degree of disorder and a strong reduction of the Si-H bonds after irradiation. After annealing we observe a partial recovering of the Si-H bonds, reducing the disorder in the Si (possibly due to the lowering of the radiation-induced dangling bonds). Moreover, effects in the uppermost coating are also observed by spectroscopies.

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