Tungsten trioxide
(WO3) is a well-known electrochromic
material with a wide band gap, while rhenium trioxide (ReO3) is a “covalent metal” with an electrical conductivity
comparable to that of pure metals. Since both WO3 and ReO3 oxides have perovskite-type structures, the formation of
their solid solutions (ReO3–WO3 or RexW1–xO3) can be expected, which may be of significant academic and
industrial interest. In this study, layered WO3/ReO3, ReO3/WO3, and mixed ReO3–WO3 thin films were produced by reactive DC magnetron
sputtering and subsequent annealing in air at 450 °C. The structure
and properties of the films were characterized by X-ray diffraction,
optical spectroscopy, Hall conductivity measurements, conductive atomic
force microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, energy-dispersive
X-ray spectroscopy, and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy. First-principles
density functional theory calculations were performed for selected
compositions of RexW1–xO3 solid solutions to model their crystallographic
structure and electronic properties. The calculations predict metallic
conductivity and tetragonal distortion of solid solutions in agreement
with the experimental results. In contrast to previously reported
methods, our approach allows us to produce the WO3–ReO3 alloy with a high Re content (>50%) at moderate temperatures
and without the use of high pressures