Citation:Madusanka, H.D.P., Kalubowila, K.D.R.N., Jayathilaka, K.M.D.C. and Jayanetti, J.K.D.S. 2016. Effect of temperature on photosensitivity of electrodeposited n-Cu2O/p-CuxS thin film junctions. In Proceedings of the International Research Symposium on Pure and Applied Sciences (IRSPAS 2016), Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. p 52.
Date:2016
Abstract:
The purpose of this study was the construction of a standalone microcontroller based
ambient light sensing device to interface an ambient light sensor with a temperature
correction and to study the effects of temperature on photosensitivity of
electrodeposited Cu2O based thin film p-n junction diodes. Environmentally friendly,
low cost, nontoxic cuprous oxides have highly acceptable electrical and optical
properties. It has a direct energy gap of about 2 eV at room temperature and has a
good absorption coefficient. Cuprous oxide has a good mobility for the majority
carriers and a diffusion length of the minority carriers is several micrometers. In this
study, an electrolytic solution of 0.1M sodium acetate and 0.01M cupric acetate was
used to fabricate Cu2O thin films on top of Ti substrates using electrodeposition.
Electrodeposition was carried out potentiostatically at a potential of -200 mV with
respect to the saturated calomel electrode. A Na2S solution was used to make the n-
Cu2O/p-CuxS junction. In order to increase the photocurrent from the fabricated n-
Cu2O/p-CuxS junction, the sulphided Cu2O sample was exposed to ammonium
sulphide gas. Then the photocurrent of the n-Cu2O/p-CuxS thin film junction was
measured by a constructed microcontroller based light sensing device simultaneously
monitoring the intensity of light with a luminance meter HS1010. An important
observation made in this study was that the photocurrent of the electrodeposited
Cu2O/CuxS thin film junctions depended greatly on the variation of temperature
during exposure to light. Thus the junction photocurrent was studied by exposing the
junctions to light while monitoring the variation in the photocurrent with the
temperature using a DS18B20 temperature sensor. The resulting data were plotted
using MATLAB software and it was found that the photocurrent of the thin film p-n
junction displayed a variation that was very much linear at low intensities of light.
The measured output currents obtained from the p-n junctions and the output values
obtained from the temperature sensor were used to display the intensity of light with
the temperature correction using an electronic circuit.