Temperature Dependence of the Piezotronic Effect in
ZnO Nanowires
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Abstract
A comprehensive
investigation was carried out on n-type ZnO nanowires
for studying the temperature dependence of the piezotronic effect
from 77 to 300 K. In general, lowering the temperature results in
a largely enhanced piezotronic effect. The experimental results show
that the behaviors can be divided into three groups depending on the
carrier doping level or conductivity of the ZnO nanowires. For nanowires
with a low carrier density (<10<sup>17</sup>/cm<sup>3</sup> at
77 K), the pieozotronic effect is dominant at low temperature for
dictating the transport properties of the nanowires; an opposite change
of Schottky barrier heights at the two contacts as a function of temperature
at a fixed strain was observed for the first time. At a moderate doping
(between 10<sup>17</sup>/cm<sup>3</sup> and 10<sup>18</sup>/cm<sup>3</sup> at 77 K), the piezotronic effect is only dominant at one
contact, because the screening effect of the carriers to the positive
piezoelectric polarization charges at the other end (for n-type semiconductors).
For nanowires with a high density of carriers (>10<sup>18</sup>/cm<sup>3</sup> at 77 K), the piezotronic effect almost vanishes.
This study
not only proves the proposed fundamental mechanism of piezotronic
effect, but also provides guidance for fabricating piezotronic devices