Time-resolved microwave photoconductivity (TRMC) using planar microwave resonators: Application to the study of long-lived charge pairs in photoexcited titania nanotube arrays

  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
  • Steady-state (SRMC) and time-resolved microwave photoconductivity (TRMC) are key techniques used to perform the contact-less determination of carrier density, transport, trapping, and recombination parameters in charge transport materials such as organic semiconductors and dyes, inorganic semiconductors, and metal–insulator composites, which find use in conductive inks, thin film transistors, light-emitting diodes, photocatalysts, and photovoltaics. We present the theory, design, simulation, and fabrication of a planar microwave ring resonator operating at 5.25 GHz with a quality factor of 224, to perform SRMC and TRMC measurements. Our method consists of measuring the resonance frequency (f0) and Q-factor of the microwave resonator with the sample to be probed placed in a defined sensitive region of the resonator where the microwave field is highly concentrated. We also provide proof of concept measurements of the time-resolved microwave photoresponse of anatase-phase TiO2 nanotube array membranes (TNTAMs) using the planar microstrip resonator. An unusual observation was the persistence of charged pair states in TNTAMs for several hours at room temperature under ambient conditions. Fast (120–220 s), slow (1300–2850 s), and very slow (6–26 h) components were extracted from the long-lived photoconductive decays of TNTAMs in response to 365, 250, and 405 nm illumination and assigned to various trap-mediated processes in TiO2 nanotubes.

  • Date created
    2015-05-31
  • Subjects / Keywords
  • Type of Item
    Article (Published)
  • DOI
    https://doi.org/10.7939/r3-jntw-6f52
  • License
    Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International