Volume 45, Issue 4 pp. 5922-5938
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Band gap engineering of ZnO by amino acid capping for optoelectronic and energy applications

Jositta Sherine

Jositta Sherine

Department of Physics and Nanotechnology, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Search for more papers by this author
Emayavaramban Indubala

Emayavaramban Indubala

Electrochemical Systems Lab, SRM Research Institute, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Search for more papers by this author
Harsh Anish

Harsh Anish

Department of Physics and Nanotechnology, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Search for more papers by this author
Harinipriya Seshadri

Corresponding Author

Harinipriya Seshadri

CTO-Head of Operations, Department of Energy and Environment, InventusBioEnergy Private Limited, Chengalpattu, Tamil Nadu, India

Correspondence

Harinipriya Seshadri, CTO-Head of Operations, Department of Energy and Environment, InventusBioEnergy Private Limited, Venbakkam, Chengalpattu, Tamil Nadu 603111, India.

Email: [email protected], [email protected]

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 30 November 2020
Citations: 1

Summary

ZnO nanorods were capped with aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic amino acids and the effect of capping on morphology, structural, optical, electrochemical, and electrical properties were studied in detail. The formation of coordination complexes between amino acids and ZnO were confirmed by XRD, XPS, and FTIR. The binding energy difference; ∆E = 23 eV explicitly indicates the nanometer range of the complexes formed. The high Iuv/Ivis seen in PL, for all ZnO-AA complexes except ZnO-L-Phe and ZnO-D-Phe indicate the crystallinity and minimal defect in the complexes. The band gap of ZnO-D-Ala and ZnO-DL-Ala reduced by 0.15 eV compared to ZnO NRs (3.0 eV). This reduction in band gap is attributed to the (a) electronic percolation between C=O group of amino acid and Zn in ZnO and (b) increase in crystallite size due to amino acid capping. The free energy of activation for electronic conductivity, in case of ZnO-D-Ala and ZnO-DL-Ala remained identical to ZnO NRs (127 kJ) as supported by EIS analysis and Arrhenius kinetics. Out of all the aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic amino acids capping on ZnO NRs, the results indicate that ZnO-D-Ala and ZnO-DL-Ala complexes possess lower band gap and can be used as a viable n-type semiconductor material in optoelectronic applications such as energy harvesting devices like solar cells.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

The authors declare that no data had been used in the present work.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.