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2015
Fortunato, E., Martins R. "How materials innovations will lead to device revolution?" 2015 Transducers - 2015 18th International Conference on Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems, TRANSDUCERS 2015. 2015. 884-887. Abstract

Transparent electronics has gained special attention during the last few years and is today established as one of the most promising technologies for leading the next generation of flat panel display due to its excellent electronic performance. The key components are wide band gap semiconductors, where oxides of different origin play an important role, not only as passive component but also as active component, similar to what we observe in conventional semiconductors like silicon. In this paper we present the recent progress in n- and p-type oxide based thin film transistors (TFT) produced by rf magnetron sputtering and we will summarize the major milestones already achieved with this emerging and very promising technology. © 2015 IEEE.

Liu, G.a, Liu Zhu Shin Fortunato Martins Wang Shan A. a H. a. "Low-Temperature, Nontoxic Water-Induced Metal-Oxide Thin Films and Their Application in Thin-Film Transistors." Advanced Functional Materials (2015). AbstractWebsite

Here, a simple, nontoxic, and inexpensive "water-inducement" technique for the fabrication of oxide thin films at low annealing temperatures is reported. For water-induced (WI) precursor solution, the solvent is composed of water without additional organic additives and catalysts. The thermogravimetric analysis indicates that the annealing temperature can be lowered by prolonging the annealing time. A systematic study is carried out to reveal the annealing condition dependence on the performance of the thin-film transistors (TFTs). The WI indium-zinc oxide (IZO) TFT integrated on SiO2 dielectric, annealed at 300 °C for 2 h, exhibits a saturation mobility of 3.35 cm2 V-1 s-1 and an on-to-off current ratio of ≈108. Interestingly, through prolonging the annealing time to 4 h, the electrical parameters of IZO TFTs annealed at 230 °C are comparable with the TFTs annealed at 300 °C. Finally, fully WI IZO TFT based on YOx dielectric is integrated and investigated. This TFT device can be regarded as "green electronics" in a true sense, because no organic-related additives are used during the whole device fabrication process. The as-fabricated IZO/YOx TFT exhibits excellent electron transport characteristics with low operating voltage (≈1.5 V), small subthreshold swing voltage of 65 mV dec-1 and the mobility in excess of 25 cm2 V-1 s-1. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

c c Shan, F.a, Liu Liu Meng Fortunato Martins A. a G. a. "Low-voltage high-stability InZnO thin-film transistor using ultra-thin solution-processed ZrOx dielectric." IEEE/OSA Journal of Display Technology. 11 (2015): 541-546. AbstractWebsite

This paper deals with the evaluation of the performances of InZnO thin-film transistor (TFT) using as dielectric an ultra-thin solution-processed ZrOx layer. The ZrOx thin film was formed using ultraviolet (UV) photo-annealing method and shows a low leakage-current density of 4 nA/cm2 at 3.8 MV/cm and a large areal-capacitance of 775 nF/cm2 at 50 Hz. The InZnO TFT incorporating the UV-treated ZrOx dielectric exhibits high stable and enhanced characteristics, an on/off current ratio of 10

Alexa, A.a, Tigau Alexandru Pimentel Branquinho Salgueiro Calmeiro Martins Fortunato Musat N. b P. a. "Morphological and optical characterization of transparent thin films obtained at low temperature using ZnO nanoparticles." Journal of Optoelectronics and Advanced Materials. 17 (2015): 1288-1295. AbstractWebsite

Transparent metal oxides thin films are a class of inorganic conductors and semiconductors with significant importance for use in portable electronics, displays, flexible electronics, multi-functional windows and solar cells. Due to the recent development of transparent and flexible electronics, there is a growing interest in depositing metal-oxide thin-film on plastic substrates that can offer flexibility, lighter weight, and potentially lead to cheaper manufacturing by allowing printing and rollto- roll processing. The plastic substrates, however, limit device processing to below 200oC. In this context, the deposition of high-performance semiconductor thin films from dispersions of pre-prepared oxide nanoparticles at temperatures below 200oC represents a potential key route. This paper reports on the preparation of ZnO transparent thin films using solutionprocessed nanoparticles (NPs) precipitated from zinc acetate alcoholic solution with potassium hydroxide. The nanoparticles size distribution, microstructure and crystallinity were measured by dynamic light scattering (DLS), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The thin films were deposited by spin-coating onto soda lima glass substrate, using a dispersion of 1wt% ZnO NPs. The morphology of the films annealed at 120 and 180oC, observed by atomic force microscopy and cross-section scanning electron microscopy, shows columnar grains with diameter ranging between 20 and 70 nm, depending on the conditions of depositions. Optical measurements indicated high transparency, between 85 and 94 %, in the visible range, a direct nature of band-to-band transitions and band gap values between 3,22 and 3,32 eV. The refractive index and extinction coefficient have been calculated from optical transmittance and reflectance spectra.

Lyubchyk, A.a, Filonovich Mateus Mendes Vicente Leitão Falcão Fortunato Águas Martins S. A. a T. "Nanocrystalline thin film silicon solar cells: A deeper look into p/i interface formation." Thin Solid Films. 591 (2015): 25-31. AbstractWebsite

The p/i interface plays a major role in the conversion efficiency of nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) solar cells. Under plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) of the intrinsic (i) nc-Si:H layer, ion bombardment can severely affect the underlying p-doped layer and degrade the solar cell performance. The core of the present work is to investigate the effect of light and heavy ion bombardment on the structural modifications of the p-layer during the p/i interface formation. The properties of the nc-Si:H materials deposited under distinct conditions are analyzed and correlated to the deposition rate and the resulting cell efficiency. To recreate the ion bombardment during the initial stages of the i-layer deposition on the p-layer, hydrogen plasma treatment was performed for 30 s (light ion bombardment), after which a flux of silane was introduced into the deposition chamber in order to initiate the heavy ion bombardment and growth of an ultra-thin (5 nm) i-layer. The structural changes of the p-type nc-Si:H layers were observed by spectroscopic ellipsometry. The obtained results confirm that detrimental structural modifications (e.g. partial amorphization of the sub-surface region and bulk) occur in the p-layer, caused by the ion bombardment. To minimize this effect, a protective buffer layer is investigated able to improve the performance of the solar cells fabricated under increased growth rate conditions. © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

b Marques, A.C.a c, Santos Costa Dantas Duarte Gonçalves Martins Salgueiro Fortunato L. a M. N. "Office paper platform for bioelectrochromic detection of electrochemically active bacteria using tungsten trioxide nanoprobes." Scientific Reports. 5 (2015). AbstractWebsite

Electrochemically active bacteria (EAB) have the capability to transfer electrons to cell exterior, a feature that is currently explored for important applications in bioremediation and biotechnology fields. However, the number of isolated and characterized EAB species is still very limited regarding their abundance in nature. Colorimetric detection has emerged recently as an attractive mean for fast identification and characterization of analytes based on the use of electrochromic materials. In this work, WO 3 nanoparticles were synthesized by microwave assisted hydrothermal synthesis and used to impregnate non-treated regular office paper substrates. This allowed the production of a paper-based colorimetric sensor able to detect EAB in a simple, rapid, reliable, inexpensive and eco-friendly method. The developed platform was then tested with Geobacter sulfurreducens, as a proof of concept. G. sulfurreducens cells were detected at latent phase with an RGB ratio of 1.10 ± 0.04, and a response time of two hours.

Rodrigues, J.a, Mata Pimentel Nunes Martins Fortunato Neves Monteiro Costa D. a A. b. "One-step synthesis of ZnO decorated CNT buckypaper composites and their optical and electrical properties." Materials Science and Engineering B: Solid-State Materials for Advanced Technology. 195 (2015): 38-44. AbstractWebsite

ZnO/CNT composites were prepared using ZnO nanoparticles and tetrapods synthesized by the Laser Assisted Flow Deposition method. The co-operative behaviour between these two materials may give rise to the production of advanced functional materials with a wide range of applications in electronics and optoelectronics. Despite some degree of aggregation in the case of the nanoparticles, scanning electron microscopy images evidence that the produced ZnO structures are well dispersed in the CNT buckypapers. Independent of the ZnO morphology the samples resistivity was shown to be of the order of ∼10-1 Ω cm while in the case of the electron mobility, the composite with tetrapods reveals a lower value than the ones obtained for the remaining samples. Well-structured ZnO luminescence was observed mainly in ultraviolet highlighting the high optical quality of the produced structures. The temperature dependence of the luminescence reveals a distinct trend for the composites with ZnO tetrapods and ZnO nanoparticles. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.

c Kiazadeh, A.a b, Salgueiro Branquinho Pinto Gomes Barquinha Martins Fortunato D. a R. a. "Operational stability of solution based zinc tin oxide/SiO2 thin film transistors under gate bias stress." APL Materials. 3 (2015). AbstractWebsite

In this study, we report solution-processed amorphous zinc tin oxide transistors exhibiting high operational stability under positive gate bias stress, translated by a recoverable threshold voltage shift of about 20% of total applied stress voltage. Under vacuum condition, the threshold voltage shift saturates showing that the gate-bias stress is limited by trap exhaustion or balance between trap filling and emptying mechanism. In ambient atmosphere, the threshold voltage shift no longer saturates, stability is degraded and the recovering process is impeded. We suggest that the trapping time during the stress and detrapping time in recovering are affected by oxygen adsorption/desorption processes. The time constants extracted from stretched exponential fitting curves are ∼106 s and 105 s in vacuum and air, respectively. © 2015 Author(s).

Contreras, J.a, Tornero Ferreira Martins Gomes Fortunato J. a I. b. "Simulated and real sheet-of-light 3D object scanning using a-Si: H thin film PSD arrays." Sensors (Switzerland). 15 (2015): 29938-29949. AbstractWebsite

AMATLAB/SIMULINK software simulation model (structure and component blocks) has been constructed in order to view and analyze the potential of the PSD (Position Sensitive Detector) array concept technology before it is further expanded or developed. This simulation allows changing most of its parameters, such as the number of elements in the PSD array, the direction of vision, the viewing/scanning angle, the object rotation, translation, sample/scan/simulation time, etc. In addition, results show for the first time the possibility of scanning an object in 3D when using an a-Si:H thin film 128 PSD array sensor and hardware/software system. Moreover, this sensor technology is able to perform these scans and render 3D objects at high speeds and high resolutions when using a sheet-of-light laser within a triangulation platform. As shown by the simulation, a substantial enhancement in 3D object profile image quality and realism can be achieved by increasing the number of elements of the PSD array sensor as well as by achieving an optimal position response from the sensor since clearly the definition of the 3D object profile depends on the correct and accurate position response of each detector as well as on the size of the PSD array. © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Ferreira, M., Loureiro Nogueira Rodrigues Martins Ferreira J. A. A. "SnO2 thin Film Oxides Produced by rf Sputtering for Transparent Thermoelectric Devices." Materials Today: Proceedings. Vol. 2. 2015. 647-653. Abstract

The combination of high transparency and good thermoelectric properties of SnO2 can open new field of applications for the thin film thermoelectric materials. Here we report on SnO2 thin films with transmittance above 90%, resistivity bellow 10-3Ωm and a Power Factor around 10-4 W/m.K2, for a Seebeck of -255μV/K, at room temperature. The effect of film thickness and post-deposition annealing on the thermoelectric properties were analysed. The performances of a single layer thermoelectric device are also presented. © 2015 .

Vicente, A.a, Águas Mateus Araújo Lyubchyk Siitonen Fortunato Martins H. a T. a. "Solar cells for self-sustainable intelligent packaging." Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 3 (2015): 13226-13236. AbstractWebsite

Nowadays there is a strong demand for intelligent packaging to provide comfort, welfare and security to owners, vendors and consumers by allowing them to know the contents and interact with the goods. This is of particular relevance for low cost, fully disposable and recyclable products, such as identification tags and medical diagnostic tests, and devices for analysis and/or quality control in food and pharmaceutical industries. However, the increase of complexity and processing capacity requires continuous power and can be addressed by the combined use of a small disposable battery, charged by a disposable solar cell, which is able to work under indoor lighting. Herein, we show a proof-of-concept of the pioneering production of thin-film amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) solar cells with an efficiency of 4% by plasma enhanced chemical vapour deposition (PECVD) on liquid packaging cardboard (LPC), which is commonly used in the food and beverage industries. Such accomplishment put us one step closer to this revolution by providing a flexible, renewable and extremely cheap autonomous energy packaging system. Moreover, such Si thin films take advantage of their good performance at low-light levels, which also makes them highly desirable for cheap mobile indoor applications. © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Santos, L., Nunes Calmeiro Branquinho Salgueiro Barquinha Pereira Martins Fortunato D. T. R. "Solvothermal synthesis of gallium-indium-zinc-oxide nanoparticles for electrolyte-gated transistors." ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces. 7 (2015): 638-646. AbstractWebsite

Solution-processed field-effect transistors are strategic building blocks when considering low-cost sustainable flexible electronics. Nevertheless, some challenges (e.g., processing temperature, reliability, reproducibility in large areas, and cost effectiveness) are requirements that must be surpassed in order to achieve high-performance transistors. The present work reports electrolyte-gated transistors using as channel layer gallium-indium-zinc-oxide nanoparticles produced by solvothermal synthesis combined with a solid-state electrolyte based on aqueous dispersions of vinyl acetate stabilized with cellulose derivatives, acrylic acid ester in styrene and lithium perchlorate. The devices fabricated using this approach display a ION/IOFF up to 1 × 106, threshold voltage (VTh) of 0.3-1.9 V, and mobility up to 1 cm2/(V s), as a function of gallium-indium-zinc-oxide ink formulation and two different annealing temperatures. These results validates the usage of electrolyte-gated transistors as a viable and promising alternative for nanoparticle based semiconductor devices as the electrolyte improves the interface and promotes a more efficient step coverage of the channel layer, reducing the operating voltage when compared with conventional dielectrics gating. Moreover, it is shown that by controlling the applied gate potential, the operation mechanism of the electrolyte-gated transistors can be modified from electric double layer to electrochemical doping. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

Santos, L.a, Wojcik Pinto Elangovan Viegas Pereira Martins Fortunato P. a J. V. "Structure and morphologic influence of WO3 nanoparticles on the electrochromic performance of dual-phase a -WO3/WO3 inkjet printed films." Advanced Electronic Materials. 1 (2015). AbstractWebsite

The optimization of tungsten trioxide (WO3) nanoparticles produced via hydrothermal synthesis for application in electrochromic (EC) devices is reported. The structure and morphology of the nanoparticles are controlled by changing the acidity of the aqueous solvent added to the sol-gel precursor (peroxopolytungstic acid) during synthesis. Orthorhombic hydrated WO3 nanorods or monoclinic WO3 nanoslabs are obtained when HCl is added, while synthesis only in aqueous medium results in a mixture of both types of polymorphs. Dual-phase thin films are processed by inkjet printing deposition of the nanoparticles in flexible polyethylene terephthalate substrate with indium tin oxide coating (ITO PET) followed by the deposition of the precursor solution. When compared with purely amorphous tungsten oxide films, the dual phase ones present higher optical densities and improved capacity, and cyclability stability. The best results, obtained for orthorhombic hydrated nanoparticles (ortho -WO3 ·0.33H2 O), are due to its high surface area and improved conductivity. Additionally, the ex situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) lithiation studies show evidence of a higher distortion of the monoclinic when compared with the orthorhombic crystallographic structure, which contribute to the inferior EC performance. These results validate the use of inkjet printing deposition with low processing temperatures for EC dual-phase thin films containing optimized nanoparticles which are compatible with low-cost substrates. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Wojcik, P.J., Santos Pereira Martins Fortunato L. L. R. "Tailoring nanoscale properties of tungsten oxide for inkjet printed electrochromic devices." Nanoscale. 7 (2015): 1696-1708. AbstractWebsite

This paper focuses on the engineering procedures governing the synthesis of tungsten oxide nanocrystals and the formulation of printable dispersions for electrochromic applications. By that means, we aim to stress the relevancy of a proper design strategy that results in improved physicochemical properties of nanoparticle loaded inks. In the present study inkjet printable nanostructured tungsten oxide particles were successfully synthesized via hydrothermal processes using pure or acidified aqueous sol-gel precursors. Based on the proposed scheme, the structure and morphology of the nanoparticles were tailored to ensure the desired printability and electrochromic performance. The developed nanomaterials with specified structures effectively improved the electrochemical response of printed films, resulting in 2.5 times higher optical modulation and 2 times faster coloration time when compared with pure amorphous films. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015.

Águas, H.a, Mateus Vicente Gaspar Mendes Schmidt Pereira Fortunato Martins T. a A. a. "Thin Film Silicon Photovoltaic Cells on Paper for Flexible Indoor Applications." Advanced Functional Materials. 25 (2015): 3592-3598. AbstractWebsite

The present development of non-wafer-based photovoltaics (PV) allows supporting thin film solar cells on a wide variety of low-cost recyclable and flexible substrates such as paper, thereby extending PV to a broad range of consumer-oriented disposable applications where autonomous energy harvesting is a bottleneck issue. However, their fibrous structure makes it challenging to fabricate good-performing inorganic PV devices on such substrates. The advances presented here demonstrate the viability of fabricating thin film silicon PV cells on paper coated with a hydrophilic mesoporous layer. Such layer can not only withstand the cells production temperature (150 C), but also provide adequate paper sealing and surface finishing for the cell's layers deposition. The substances released from the paper substrate are continuously monitored during the cell deposition by mass spectrometry, which allows adapting the procedures to mitigate any contamination from the substrate. In this way, a proof-of-concept solar cell with 3.4% cell efficiency (41% fill factor, 0.82 V open-circuit voltage and 10.2 mA cm-2 short-circuit current density) is attained, opening the door to the use of paper as a reliable substrate to fabricate inorganic PV cells for a plethora of indoor applications with tremendous impact in multi-sectorial fields such as food, pharmacy and security. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Águas, H.a, Mateus Vicente Gaspar Mendes Schmidt Pereira Fortunato Martins T. a A. a. "Thin Film Silicon Photovoltaic Cells on Paper for Flexible Indoor Applications." Advanced Functional Materials (2015). AbstractWebsite

The present development of non-wafer-based photovoltaics (PV) allows supporting thin film solar cells on a wide variety of low-cost recyclable and flexible substrates such as paper, thereby extending PV to a broad range of consumer-oriented disposable applications where autonomous energy harvesting is a bottleneck issue. However, their fibrous structure makes it challenging to fabricate good-performing inorganic PV devices on such substrates. The advances presented here demonstrate the viability of fabricating thin film silicon PV cells on paper coated with a hydrophilic mesoporous layer. Such layer can not only withstand the cells production temperature (150 °C), but also provide adequate paper sealing and surface finishing for the cell's layers deposition. The substances released from the paper substrate are continuously monitored during the cell deposition by mass spectrometry, which allows adapting the procedures to mitigate any contamination from the substrate. In this way, a proof-of-concept solar cell with 3.4% cell efficiency (41% fill factor, 0.82 V open-circuit voltage and 10.2 mA cm-2 short-circuit current density) is attained, opening the door to the use of paper as a reliable substrate to fabricate inorganic PV cells for a plethora of indoor applications with tremendous impact in multi-sectorial fields such as food, pharmacy and security. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Pavan, M.a, Rühle Ginsburg Keller Barad Sberna Nunes Martins Anderson Zaban Fortunato S. b A. b. "TiO2/Cu2O all-oxide heterojunction solar cells produced by spray pyrolysis." Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells. 132 (2015): 549-556. AbstractWebsite

Here we present for the first time a TiO2/Cu2O all-oxide heterojunction solar cell entirely produced by spray pyrolysis onto fluorine doped tin oxide (FTO) covered glass substrates, using silver as a back contact. A combinatorial approach was chosen to investigate the impact of the TiO2 window layer and the Cu2O light absorber thicknesses. We observe an open circuit voltage up to 350 mV and a short circuit current density which is strongly dependent of the Cu2O thickness, reaching a maximum of  0.4 mA/cm2. Optical investigation reveals that a thickness of 300 nm spray pyrolysis deposited Cu2O is sufficient to absorb most photons with an energy above the symmetry allowed optical transition of 2.5 eV, indicating that the low current densities are caused by strong recombination in the absorber that consists of small Cu2O grains. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Branquinho, R., Salgueiro Santa Kiazadeh Barquinha Pereira Martins Fortunato D. A. A. "Towards environmental friendly solution-based ZTO/AlOx TFTs." Semiconductor Science and Technology. 30 (2015). AbstractWebsite

Solution based deposition has been recently considered as a viable option for low-cost flexible electronics. In this context research efforts have been increasingly centred on the development of suitable solution-processed materials for oxide based transistors. Nevertheless, the majority of synthetic routes reported require the use of toxic organic solvents. In this work we report on a new environmental friendly solution combustion synthesis route, using ethanol as solvent, for the preparation of indium/gallium free amorphous zinc-tin oxide (ZTO) thin film transistors (TFTs) including AlOx gate dielectric. The decomposition of ZTO and AlOx precursor solutions, electrical characterization and stability of solution processed ZTO/AlOx TFTs under gate-bias stress, in both air and vacuum atmosphere, were investigated. The devices demonstrated low hysteresis (ΔV=0.23 V), close to zero turn on voltage, low threshold voltage (VT=0.36 V) and a saturation mobility of 0.8 cm2 V-1 s-1 at low operation voltages. Ethanol based ZTO/AlOx TFTs are a promising alternative for applications in disposable, low cost and environmental friendly electronics. © 2015 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Liu, A.a, Liu Zhu Meng Song Shin Fortunato Martins Shan G. a H. a. "A water-induced high-k yttrium oxide dielectric for fully-solution-processed oxide thin-film transistors." Current Applied Physics. 15 (2015): S75-S81. AbstractWebsite

In this work, we develop a simple and eco-friendly water-inducement method for high-k yttrium oxide (YOx) dielectric. To prepare YOx thin films at low temperature, yttrium nitrate and deionized water were used as the source materials. No toxic organic materials were required in the YOx coating process. The YOx thin film annealed at 350 °C showed a low leakage current density of 2 × 10-9 A/cm2 at 5 MV/cm and a large areal-capacitance of 448 nF/cm2 at 1 kHz. On the basis of its implementation as the gate dielectric, the fully-water-induced In2O3 TFT based on YOx exhibited a high field-effect mobility of 15.98 cm2/Vs, excellent subthreshold swing of 75 mV/dec, an on/off current ratio of 6 × 106, and a negligible hysteresis of 50 mV. The as-fabricated TFT operated at a low voltage (∼1.5 V) and showed high drain current drive capability, enabling oxide TFT with a water-induced high-k dielectric for use in backplane electronics for low-power mobile display applications. © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

2016
g Lorenz, M.a, Ramachandra Rao Venkatesan Fortunato Barquinha Branquinho Salgueiro Martins Carlos Liu Shan Grundmann Boschker Mukherjee Priyada M. S. b T. "The 2016 oxide electronic materials and oxide interfaces roadmap." Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. 49 (2016). AbstractWebsite

Oxide electronic materials provide a plethora of possible applications and offer ample opportunity for scientists to probe into some of the exciting and intriguing phenomena exhibited by oxide systems and oxide interfaces. In addition to the already diverse spectrum of properties, the nanoscale form of oxides provides a new dimension of hitherto unknown phenomena due to the increased surface-to-volume ratio. Oxide electronic materials are becoming increasingly important in a wide range of applications including transparent electronics, optoelectronics, magnetoelectronics, photonics, spintronics, thermoelectrics, piezoelectrics, power harvesting, hydrogen storage and environmental waste management. Synthesis and fabrication of these materials, as well as processing into particular device structures to suit a specific application is still a challenge. Further, characterization of these materials to understand the tunability of their properties and the novel properties that evolve due to their nanostructured nature is another facet of the challenge. The research related to the oxide electronic field is at an impressionable stage, and this has motivated us to contribute with a roadmap on 'oxide electronic materials and oxide interfaces'. This roadmap envisages the potential applications of oxide materials in cutting edge technologies and focuses on the necessary advances required to implement these materials, including both conventional and novel techniques for the synthesis, characterization, processing and fabrication of nanostructured oxides and oxide-based devices. The contents of this roadmap will highlight the functional and correlated properties of oxides in bulk, nano, thin film, multilayer and heterostructure forms, as well as the theoretical considerations behind both present and future applications in many technologically important areas as pointed out by Venkatesan. The contributions in this roadmap span several thematic groups which are represented by the following authors: novel field effect transistors and bipolar devices by Fortunato, Grundmann, Boschker, Rao, and Rogers; energy conversion and saving by Zaban, Weidenkaff, and Murakami; new opportunities of photonics by Fompeyrine, and Zuniga-Perez; multiferroic materials including novel phenomena by Ramesh, Spaldin, Mertig, Lorenz, Srinivasan, and Prellier; and concepts for topological oxide electronics by Kawasaki, Pentcheva, and Gegenwart. Finally, Miletto Granozio presents the European action 'towards oxide-based electronics' which develops an oxide electronics roadmap with emphasis on future nonvolatile memories and the required technologies. In summary, we do hope that this oxide roadmap appears as an interesting up-to-date snapshot on one of the most exciting and active areas of solid state physics, materials science, and chemistry, which even after many years of very successful development shows in short intervals novel insights and achievements. Guest editors: M S Ramachandra Rao and Michael Lorenz. © 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Bahubalindruni, P.G.a, Tavares Barquinha Martins Fortunato V. c P. b. "Basic analog and digital circuits with a-IGZO TFTs." 2016 13th International Conference on Synthesis, Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Methods and Applications to Circuit Design, SMACD 2016. 2016. Abstract

This paper presents the characterization of fundamental analog and digital circuits with a-IGZO TFTs from measurements performed at normal ambient. The fundamental blocks considered in this work include digital logic gates, a low-power single stage high-gain amplifier with capcacitive bootstrapping and a level shifter/buffer. These circuits are important functional blocks in analog/Mixed signal IC design with oxide TFTs. Being fabricated at low temperature (< 200 °C), they can find potential applications in low-cost large-area flexible systems. © 2016 IEEE.

c Nunes, D.a, Calmeiro Nandy Pinto Pimentel Barquinha Carvalho Walmsley Fortunato Martins T. R. a S. "Charging effects and surface potential variations of Cu-based nanowires." Thin Solid Films. 601 (2016): 45-53. AbstractWebsite

The present work reports charging effects and surface potential variations in pure copper, cuprous oxide and cupric oxide nanowires observed by electrostatic force microscopy (EFM) and Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM). The copper nanowires were produced by wet synthesis, oxidation into cuprous oxide nanowires was achieved through microwave irradiation and cupric oxide nanowires were obtained via furnace annealing in atmospheric conditions. Structural characterization of the nanowires was carried out by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. During the EFM experiments the electrostatic field of the positive probe charged negatively the Cu-based nanowires, which in turn polarized the SiO2 dielectric substrate. Both the probe/nanowire capacitance as well as the substrate polarization increased with the applied bias. Cu2O and CuO nanowires behaved distinctively during the EFM measurements in accordance with their band gap energies. The work functions (WF) of the Cu-based nanowires, obtained by KPFM measurements, yielded WFCuO > WFCu > WFCu2O. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.

Moldovan, O.a, Castro-Carranza Cerdeira Estrada Barquinha Martins Fortunato Miljakovic Iñiguez A. b A. c. "A compact model and direct parameters extraction techniques For amorphous gallium-indium-zinc-oxide thin film transistors." Solid-State Electronics. 126 (2016): 81-86. AbstractWebsite

An advanced compact and analytical drain current model for the amorphous gallium indium zinc oxide (GIZO) thin film transistors (TFTs) is proposed. Its output saturation behavior is improved by introducing a new asymptotic function. All model parameters were extracted using an adapted version of the Universal Method and Extraction Procedure (UMEM) applied for the first time for GIZO devices in a simple and direct form. We demonstrate the correct behavior of the model for negative VDS, a necessity for a complete compact model. In this way we prove the symmetry of source and drain electrodes and extend the range of applications to both signs of VDS. The model, in Verilog-A code, is implemented in Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools, such as Smart Spice, and compared with measurements of TFTs. It describes accurately the experimental characteristics in the whole range of GIZO TFTs operation, making the model suitable for the design of circuits using these types of devices. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd

Mendes, M.J., Araújo Vicente Águas Ferreira Fortunato Martins A. A. H. "Design of optimized wave-optical spheroidal nanostructures for photonic-enhanced solar cells." Nano Energy. 26 (2016): 286-296. AbstractWebsite

The interaction of light with wavelength-sized photonic nanostructures is highly promising for light management applied to thin-film photovoltaics. Several light trapping effects come into play in the wave optics regime of such structures that crucially depend on the parameters of the photonic and absorbing elements. Thus, multi-parameter optimizations employing exact numerical models, as performed in this work, are essential to determine the maximum photocurrent enhancement that can be produced in solar cells.Generalized spheroidal geometries and high-index dielectric materials are considered here to model the design of the optical elements providing broadband absorption enhancement in planar silicon solar cells. The physical mechanisms responsible for such enhancement are schematized in a spectral diagram, providing a deeper understanding of the advantageous characteristics of the optimized geometries. The best structures, composed of TiO2 half-spheroids patterned on the cells' top surface, yield two times higher photocurrent (up to 32.5 mA/cm2 in 1.5 μm thick silicon layer) than the same devices without photonic schemes.These results set the state-of-the-art closer to the theoretical Lambertian limit. In addition, the considered light trapping designs are not affected by the traditional compromise between absorption enhancement versus current degradation by recombination, which is a key technological advantage. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd.

c Deuermeier, J.a b, Wardenga Morasch Siol Nandy Calmeiro Martins Klein Fortunato H. F. b J. "Highly conductive grain boundaries in copper oxide thin films." Journal of Applied Physics. 119 (2016). AbstractWebsite

High conductivity in the off-state and low field-effect mobility compared to bulk properties is widely observed in the p-type thin-film transistors of Cu2O, especially when processed at moderate temperature. This work presents results from in situ conductance measurements at thicknesses from sub-nm to around 250 nm with parallel X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. An enhanced conductivity at low thickness is explained by the occurrence of Cu(II), which is segregated in the grain boundary and locally causes a conductivity similar to CuO, although the surface of the thick film has Cu2O stoichiometry. Since grains grow with an increasing film thickness, the effect of an apparent oxygen excess is most pronounced in vicinity to the substrate interface. Electrical properties of Cu2O grains are at least partially short-circuited by this effect. The study focuses on properties inherent to copper oxide, although interface effects cannot be ruled out. This non-destructive, bottom-up analysis reveals phenomena which are commonly not observable after device fabrication, but clearly dominate electrical properties of polycrystalline thin films. © 2016 Author(s).