2008 Annual Meeting
(428g) Surface Effects on Oxygen Defects In TiO2 for Nanoelectronic Materials
Authors
We have employed measurements of isotopic self-diffusion to indirectly monitor the concentrations and behavior of native point defects in metal oxides such as titania that find use as nano-electronic materials. In particular, experiments employing secondary ion mass spectroscopy have yielded concentration profiles of the defect-mediated self-diffusion of isotopic oxygen into titania. Surface chemical bonding state greatly influences the observed diffusion rates, which increase when the surface is held essentially atomically clean in high vacuum. Such surfaces appear to promote the formation of a highly mobile defect within titania, although several distinct mechanisms are possible. We have developed three potential models for the mechanism. Simulations based on continuum equations for each of the three defect mechanisms have permitted the application of formal model discrimination methods to identify the most likely mechanism.