Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures

Tin oxide nanomaterial was synthesized using the horizontal vapor phase growth (HVPG) technique. The study investigated the optimum growth parameters by varying the growth temperature from 900 C to 1200 C and growth time of 1 hour to 5 hours. The SnO2 bulk powder with purity rate of 99.99% were plac...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Santos, Gil Nonato C., Salvador, Arnel A., Quiroga, Reuben V.
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12801
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: De La Salle University
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-14731
record_format eprints
spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-147312024-07-29T05:52:46Z Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures Santos, Gil Nonato C. Salvador, Arnel A. Quiroga, Reuben V. Tin oxide nanomaterial was synthesized using the horizontal vapor phase growth (HVPG) technique. The study investigated the optimum growth parameters by varying the growth temperature from 900 C to 1200 C and growth time of 1 hour to 5 hours. The SnO2 bulk powder with purity rate of 99.99% were placed in a sealed quartz tube with a vacuum pressure of≈ 10-5 Torr and baked with the desired growth parameters. The resulting nanocrystals displayed different structures ranging from nanobelts to nanorods as confirmed by the SEM. Results from EDX and DTA showed that indeed the grown samples were congruent based on the atomic composition and thermal property of the nanomaterials. The XRD also verified that the crystal structure was rutile but with low indexed peaks. Using the same growth technique, samples were grown on Silicon (100) substrate and exhibited nanorods and nanobelts. The SnO2 nanomaterial also displayed fluorescence and photoluminescence signals. The photoluminescence spectrum has a broad emission in the visible region with peaks at 558 nm and 666 nm. The visible light emission was known to be related to defect levels within the band gap of SnO2, associated with O vacancies or Sn interstitials that have formed during the synthesis process. 2011-10-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12801 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Nanostructured materials—Effect of temperature on Stannic oxide Vapor-plating Physics
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Nanostructured materials—Effect of temperature on
Stannic oxide
Vapor-plating
Physics
spellingShingle Nanostructured materials—Effect of temperature on
Stannic oxide
Vapor-plating
Physics
Santos, Gil Nonato C.
Salvador, Arnel A.
Quiroga, Reuben V.
Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
description Tin oxide nanomaterial was synthesized using the horizontal vapor phase growth (HVPG) technique. The study investigated the optimum growth parameters by varying the growth temperature from 900 C to 1200 C and growth time of 1 hour to 5 hours. The SnO2 bulk powder with purity rate of 99.99% were placed in a sealed quartz tube with a vacuum pressure of≈ 10-5 Torr and baked with the desired growth parameters. The resulting nanocrystals displayed different structures ranging from nanobelts to nanorods as confirmed by the SEM. Results from EDX and DTA showed that indeed the grown samples were congruent based on the atomic composition and thermal property of the nanomaterials. The XRD also verified that the crystal structure was rutile but with low indexed peaks. Using the same growth technique, samples were grown on Silicon (100) substrate and exhibited nanorods and nanobelts. The SnO2 nanomaterial also displayed fluorescence and photoluminescence signals. The photoluminescence spectrum has a broad emission in the visible region with peaks at 558 nm and 666 nm. The visible light emission was known to be related to defect levels within the band gap of SnO2, associated with O vacancies or Sn interstitials that have formed during the synthesis process.
format text
author Santos, Gil Nonato C.
Salvador, Arnel A.
Quiroga, Reuben V.
author_facet Santos, Gil Nonato C.
Salvador, Arnel A.
Quiroga, Reuben V.
author_sort Santos, Gil Nonato C.
title Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
title_short Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
title_full Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
title_fullStr Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
title_full_unstemmed Temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
title_sort temperature and deposition time dependence of the geometrical properties of tin oxide nanostructures
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2011
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12801
_version_ 1806511040139100160