3.1. Structural Analysis
The long-range crystalline structure of the studied films was characterized by X-ray diffraction, and Raman microscopy complements the short-range order structural analysis.
Figure 2(a) shows the observed and calculated XRD patterns of the studied BiFeO
3 thin films at room temperature, and
Figure 2(b) shows Raman spectra recorded from the same samples. In
Figure 2(a), no preferred orientations were observed for all XRD patterns, and the indexed (
hkl) peaks refer to the rhombohedral structure of the BiFeO
3 with an
space group. The peaks Pt(111) and Pt(200) refer to the cubic phase (
a = 3.892 Å) of the platinum substrate with an
space group. A single-phase BiFeO
3 is observed in
Figure 2(a) for the BFO1 film, pyrolyzed at 300 °C and crystallized in air at 600 °C without post-annealing. On the other hand, traces of the secondary Bi
25FeO
39 and Bi
2Fe
4O
9 phases were observed in coexistence with the BiFeO
3 phase for the BFO2 and BFO3 films, pyrolyzed at 300 °C and crystallized in air at 600 °C with an additional post annealing in oxygen atmosphere, and pyrolyzed at 360 °C and crystallized in oxygen atmosphere at 640 °C without post annealing, respectively. The calculated profiles were obtained by Rietveld refinements of the XRD patterns using the rhombohedral phase with space group
of the BiFeO
3. The parameters obtained from refinements are summarized in
Table 3. The obtained lattice parameters and the volume cell are very similar for all samples and are in good agreement with those reported for BiFeO
3 single crystals [
26]. From a structural perspective, no differences were observed in the studied films due to variations in processing under different annealing atmospheres. On the other hand, the different crystallization temperatures strongly influence the intensity of the XRD peaks. The intensity of the XRD peaks is associated with the number of atoms in the crystal contributing to the diffraction, such that higher peak intensities indicate a higher degree of crystallinity. The more intense X-ray diffraction peaks indicate higher crystallinity for the BFO3 film, while the lower peak intensities indicate moderate crystallinity for BFO2 and lower crystallinity for the BFO1 sample. As BFO2 and BFO1 films were prepared at the same crystallization temperature (600 °C) under different atmospheres, the very similar XRD peak intensities indicate that the annealing atmosphere has no pronounced effects on the crystallinity. In contrast, the increase in crystallization temperature (640 °C) of the BFO3 film leads to higher crystallinity, indicating that temperature is more effective in improving the film crystallinity. In addition, the slope of the plot drawn between
versus
from the Williamson-Hall approach in
Figure 2(c) gives the values of microstrain, while the y-intercept gives the values of crystallite size. For the studied BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films, the obtained crystallite sizes were 43, 48, and 45 nm, while the microstrains were 1.2 x 10
-3, 1.3 x 10
-3 and 1.1 x 10
-3, respectively. Despite the expected link between synthesis and processing conditions, the crystallite sizes and microstrains present essentially the same values for the different films.
Figure 2(b) shows the Raman spectra of the three studied BiFeO3 films, recorded at room temperature in the range of 100-600 cm
-1. According to the group theory, BiFeO3 with rhombohedral
structure exhibits 13 (4A1 + 9E) Raman-active modes, which were fitted in
Figure 2(b) using Lorentzian curves for each mode. The assignment for the Raman modes of the studied BiFeO
3 films is summarized in
Table 4 and compared with results from the literature for single crystals [
27] and epitaxial BiFeO
3 thin films [
28]. The peaks at 141, 174, 220, and 430 cm
-1 are A1-symmetry longitudinal-optical A1(LO) phonons, while the peaks at 260, 281, 349, 371, 469, 480, and 527 cm
-1 are all related to the transverse-optical E(TO) modes, considering as a reference the Raman spectrum of the BFO3 film. Similarly to the observed in the XRD patterns in
Figure 2(a), the higher Raman intensity peaks in
Figure 2(b) of the BFO3 film, which was crystallized at a higher temperature (640 °C), compared to the BFO1 and BFO2 films, confirm its higher crystallinity. On the other hand, the increase or decrease in Raman shift provides a powerful tool for probing property changes directly affected by the synthesis conditions, since Raman frequency shift is susceptible to internal and external factors associated with structural and physical properties, such as crystallite size, crystallinity, phase composition, oxygen vacancies, defects, strain, and compressive/tensile stresses. The Raman shift of the A1(LO) modes in the BFO2 film shifts to lower frequencies or longer wavelengths (red shift), in comparison to the BFO1 film modes around 144 cm
-1 and 177 cm
-1, as shown in
Figure 2(d). Despite the red shift often being attributed to improved crystallinity in the literature, this does not appear to be the case, as BFO1 and BFO2 exhibit similar crystallinity, whereas BFO3 shows higher crystallinity. The redshift in the BFO2 film indicates a direct effect of the synthesis conditions, possibly associated not only with oxygen vacancies, as will be discussed below, but also with other defects that could not be explicitly identified.
3.2. X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Analysis
XPS measurements were conducted to determine the oxidation states, chemical shifts, and oxygen vacancies in the studied BiFeO3 films.
Figure 3 shows the XPS spectra of the (a) Bi 4f, (b) Fe 2p, and (c) O 1s core levels for the studied BiFeO
3 thin films.
Figure 3(a) shows that the Bi 4f core levels of all samples are also similar, such that Bi 4f
7/2 and Bi 4f
5/2 were centered at BEs of 158.9 eV and 164.2 eV, with a spin-orbit splitting of 5.3 eV. These results were ascribed to Bi
3+ and agreed with reports in the literature for BiFeO
3 thin films [
29]. In
Figure 3(b), the Fe 2p regions were fitted by using a Shirley background and Lorentzian functions. For all samples, the Fe 2p core levels were quite similar. They presented two main peaks ascribed to Fe 2p
3/2 and Fe 2p
1/2 with a spin-orbit splitting of 13.6 eV. Furthermore, the results in the present work reveal the coexistence of Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ ions in the studied BiFeO
3 films. Moreover, a satellite peak related to Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ ions clearly appeared in the spectra at a binding energy (BE) of about 718.6 eV [
30], as indicated in
Figure 3(b). This satellite peak is characteristic of oxidized Fe atoms. On the other hand, the main peaks could be fitted by two components that correspond to Fe
3+ and Fe
2+ [
31,
32] centered at BEs of about 711.5 eV and 709.9 eV, respectively. While Fe
3+ was ascribed to the Fe atoms in the pristine BiFeO
3 samples, Fe
2+ derives from the surface defects, i.e., oxygen vacancies [
29].
Despite reports in the literature stating that the satellite peak for Fe 2p
3/2 at a difference of 8 eV indicates only the Fe
3+ presence, the asymmetries observed in
Figure 3(b) for both Fe 2p
3/2 and 2p
1/2 peaks clearly suggest a coexistence of Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ in the present case. In this case, the satellite peak will also be a combination of Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ effects. The obtained Fe
3+/Fe
2+ = 2.1 ratios between the oxidation states of Fe were essentially the same for all films. Therefore, Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ ions coexist in the studied BiFeO
3 thin films, but Fe
3+ ions are predominant compared to Fe
2+ ions. The presence of Fe
2+ ions is indicative of the existence of oxygen vacancies, since
leads to
[
29].
The O 1s core levels exhibit three peaks labelled O
I, O
II, and O
III in
Figure 3(c), which are attributed to the oxygen-metal bond, the dangling bond, and surface-adsorbed oxygen, respectively, as previously reported for BiFeO
3 thin films [
29]. The O
I peak at ~ 529.6 eV remains constant across all studied BiFeO
3 films. The O
II peak appeared at binding energies ~ 532.3 eV in BFO1 and BFO2 films, and ~ 531.7 eV in BFO3 film, while the O
III peak appeared at ~ 534.0 eV in BFO1 and BFO2 films and is not present in BFO3 film, pyrolyzed at 360 °C and crystallized in O
2 atmosphere at 640 °C. The O
II peaks are higher than O
I peaks for both BFO1 and BFO2 films, while the O
I peak is higher than O
II peak in the BFO3 film, indicating a strong influence of the processing on the oxygen vacancies and adsorbed oxygen in the final films. In addition, the asymmetry observed in
Figure 3(c) at OII peak in XPS spectra of BFO1 film, pyrolyzed at 300 °C and crystallized in open atmosphere (in air) at 600 °C, suggests the coexistence of oxygen vacancies with different oxidation states (
,
). The O
III is ascribed to oxygen vacancies with higher oxidation states (
) as plausible defects in the BiFeO
3 system [
11]. So, the XPS spectra of BFO films were fitted using three Lorentzian functions to simulate the presence of
and
oxygen vacancies, in addition to the lattice oxygen. Previous works indicated that O
II is related mainly with hydroxyl groups occupying the oxygen defects in BiFeO
3 films [
29,
31], but also with oxygen contamination, including oxidized organic groups and adsorbed H
2O [
33]. In our case, although post-annealing in an O
2 atmosphere potentially reduces the oxygen vacancies compared to the film crystallized at the same temperature (600 °C) in an open atmosphere, the pyrolysis at low temperature (300 °C) probably plays a more prominent role in introducing defects associated with incomplete organic removal during the layer-by-layer film deposition.
The oxygen vacancy content can be estimated from the relative peak’s intensity ratio (
) relation
, such that
,
and
are the relative peak intensities of the oxygen-metal bond, dangling bond, and adsorbed oxygen, respectively [
34]. Thus, a lower
value indicates a higher concentration of oxygen vacancies. The calculated
values of the BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films, from fits in
Figure 3(c), were 0.30, 0.55, and 2.26, respectively, indicating that the concentration of oxygen vacancies is higher in the BFO1 film and lower in the BFO3 film, while the BFO2 film shows an intermediate concentration of oxygen vacancies. The
values indicate that the total oxygen vacancy (
) is smaller in the film post-annealed in an O
2 atmosphere (BFO2) than in the film crystallized in an open atmosphere (BFO1), both of which were crystallized at the same temperature (600 °C). These results indicate that the decrease in oxygen vacancies in BFO2, compared to the BFO1 film, lowers the O
III oxygen density, suggesting that post-annealing in an oxygen atmosphere reduces surface-adsorbed oxygen. Also, the oxygen vacancies are not neutral in these films but fully ionized (
) or partially ionized (
). Furthermore, increasing the pyrolysis temperature to 360 °C for 10 min and crystallizing at 640 °C for 40 min under an O
2 atmosphere significantly reduces oxygen vacancies in the BFO3 film, indicating the importance of establishing ideal conditions for defect control during synthesis.
3.3. Dielectric Properties and Conductivity
Defects such as oxygen vacancies, valence changes of Fe
3+ to Fe
2+ ions, and other point defects significantly modify the dielectric and electrical properties of BiFeO3 thin films. The frequency dependence of the real (
) and imaginary (
) parts of the dielectric permittivity at room temperature of the studied BiFeO
3 thin films (BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3) is shown in
Figure 4(a) and 3(b). All films show normal dielectric dispersion in both figures, i.e.,
and
decreases with increasing frequency and gradually stabilize above ~ 10⁴ Hz. In
Figure 4(a), a lower permittivity (
= 37 at 100 kHz) almost frequency independent was observed for the BFO3 film, pyrolyzed at 360 °C and crystallized at 640 °C in an O2 atmosphere, while higher permittivities (
= 153 and 165 at 100 kHz) increasing at low frequencies (~ 100 Hz) are observed for the BFO1 and BFO2 films, both pyrolyzed at 300 °C and crystallized at 600 °C, in an open atmosphere (in air) and post-annealed in an O
2 atmosphere, respectively. Although the obtained permittivity values agree with different reports in the literature for BiFeO
3 thin films prepared from chemical or physical routes, it is important to note that the lower permittivity of the BFO3 film indicates that pyrolysis and crystallization at higher temperature and in an O
2 atmosphere were effective in minimizing point defects, compared to BFO1 and BFO2 films with higher defects. In addition, post-annealing in an O
2 atmosphere for the BFO2 film was favorable for the formation of secondary phases and introduced additional defects, allowing mobile charge carriers to accumulate at interfaces or grain boundaries, resulting in significant space charge polarization known as the Maxwell-Wagner-Sillars interfacial polarization [
35]. Thus, the higher apparent dielectric permittivity of these last films indicates a space charge polarization effect, which is more pronounced at lower frequencies, as clearly observed in the BFO2 film.
In
Figure 4(b), BFO3 exhibits the highest dielectric loss
(~57) at low frequencies, indicating possibly higher leakage currents. At frequencies above ~ 10⁴ Hz, BFO2 exhibits a higher
(~ 10), while BFO1 and BFO3 show very similar behavior and much lower losses (~ 2), with BFO1 having the lowest value, approaching zero at high frequencies (~ 0.7 at 1 MHz). The decrease in both
and
with increasing frequency, it can be understood by considering carriers in the dielectric material hopping from highly conductive grains to grain boundaries with lower conductivity, from highly conductive grains compared to grain boundaries (
>
), in an analogy with the heterogeneous model of the polycrystalline structure given by Koops [
36]. This means that increasing the frequency of the applied field decreases the probability that carriers reach the grain boundary. Consequently, the polarization produced by the migratory species decreases as it accumulates at the grain boundaries. Thus, the observed behaviors for
and
in
Figure 4(a) and
Figure 4(b) have become comprehensive in the view of this model. As the decrease of
reflects the reduced conductive contribution in the sample, lower values of
indicate thin films with lower conductivities.
Figure 4(c) shows the frequency-dependent ac conductivity (
) of BiFeO
3 thin films (BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3) in the range 10²-10⁶ Hz, plotted on a log-log scale. The ac conductivity can be described by the power-law relation
, as proposed by Jonscher [
37]. Often used for different materials,
in this equation is the frequency independent conductivity,
represents the dielectric dispersion, while the exponent
and the coefficient
are parameters dependent on temperature and material. The red lines in
Figure 4(c) are theoretical fits using the Jonscher model. For the BFO3 film, the frequency-independent plateau-like region observed at low frequencies (
< 1 kHz) is attributed to the
conductivity, which is expected to be frequency-independent at
. The plateau at room temperature and lower frequencies suggests a dc conduction behavior, indicating a single relaxation process in the BFO3 film [
38]. On the other hand, no plateaus were observed in the conductivity curves of the BFO1 and BFO2 films within the studied frequency range. From the fittings in
Figure 4(c), the obtained dc conductivities at room temperature were
= 1.2 x 10
-10, 3.6 x 10
-10 and 2.7 x 10
-9 S.cm
-1 for the BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films, respectively. These results are comparable with those reported in the literature for BiFeO
3 thin films obtained from rf-sputtering (
~ 2.8 x 10
-10 S.cm
-1 [
38]) and for films obtained by chemical solution method (
~ 8.0 x 10
-8 S.cm
-1), whose differences indicates the influence of the synthesis route.
The temperature dependence of the real (
) and imaginary (
) dielectric permittivities of the studied BiFeO
3 thin films (BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3), measured at different frequencies from 100 Hz to 1 MHz, in the temperature range 300 - 500 K, is shown in
Figure 4(d) and
Figure 4(e), respectively. For the BFO1 and BFO2 films, both
and
increases gradually with temperature for all frequencies, showing a stronger rise above ~ 400 K. For these films, the pronounced increase in
near 450 - 500 K suggests space charge or interfacial polarization contributions, possibly at grain boundaries, since the temperature dependence indicates thermally activated polarization processes. The frequency dispersion in
below ~ 10 kHz corroborates the presence of space-charge relaxation arising from inhomogeneous microstructures induced by defects. A similar increase in
with temperature is also observed in BFO3 film, with a sharp rise above ~ 375 K, but the increase in
is approximately linear in a log scale, following an Arrhenius-type loss behavior.
3.4. Impedance Spectroscopy Analysis
Impedance spectroscopy is a powerful tool for separating the contributions of grains and grain boundaries to the transport properties of materials, providing important insights into the dielectric relaxation mechanisms.
Figure 5 shows the frequency dependence of the normalized imaginary parts (
) of impedance and (
) of electric modulus for studied BiFeO
3 thin films (BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3) at selected temperature range. The peaks shifting to high frequencies with increasing temperature confirm a thermally activated dielectric relaxation in these BiFeO3 films, so that the hopping mechanism of charge carriers dominates. Increasing the temperature provides more thermal energy for the charge carriers, allowing them to move faster, and leading to a decrease in relaxation time and a peak shift towards higher frequencies. Only a single relaxation peak (
) was observed for BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films in
Figure 5 (top), while for the electric modulus in
Figure 5 (bottom), a single relaxation peak (
) was observed for BFO3 film in
Figure 5(c), but the presence of two peaks were observed for BFO1 and BFO2 films in
Figure 5(a) and (b), which can be associated with grain and grain boundary contributions. Point defects, especially oxygen vacancies, increase the number of mobile charge carriers and have a significant effect on the electric modulus (
) peak. Since defect-related carriers respond more readily to the alternating electric field, the Mʺ peak often shifts to higher frequencies, indicating a faster relaxation process. However, if defects are more complex and trap charge carriers, they can shift the spectrum to lower frequencies, reflecting slower relaxation. From
Figure 5 (bottom), the peak of the electric modulus (
) at 480 K was observed at ~ 3.7 kHz, 570 Hz, and 38.4 kHz for BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films, respectively. It indicates that the relaxation peak shifts to lower frequencies for the BFO1 and BFO2 films, compared to the BFO3 film. The pyrolysis of BFO1 and BFO2 films at a low temperature (300 °C) differs significantly from that of the BFO3 film at a higher temperature (360 °C) in promoting the formation of oxygen vacancies due to incomplete organic removal. This partially explains the high concentration of oxygen vacancies in the BFO1 and BFO2 films, and the low concentration in the BFO3 film, as shown in
Figure 3(c). Although the post-annealing in an O2 atmosphere for the BFO2 film potentially reduces the oxygen vacancies compared to the BFO1 film, crystallized in an open atmosphere at the same temperature, the process is favorable to the crystallization of traces of secondary phases, introducing additional defects that favor the trapping of charge carriers, which leads to the observed shift of the
peak to lower frequencies.
Figure 6(a), (b), and (c) shows the frequency dependence of the real (
) and imaginary (
) parts of the impedance of the BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films, at selected temperatures, while the frequency dependence of the real (
) and imaginary (
) electric modulus are shown in
Figure 6(d), (e), and (f). The lines in these figures refer to the theoretical results obtained by using Equations (1) to (4). The plots in these figures are shown on a logarithmic scale to explicitly demonstrate the good agreement between the experimental data and the theoretical fits, as the fit accuracy can be obscured when the impedance data are presented on a linear scale. The good fits of
and
, considering effects of grain boundary at low frequencies and grain at high frequencies, confirm the presence of a non-Debye type of relaxation in these samples.
Figure 6(g), (h), and (i) compare the frequency dependence of the normalized imaginary impedance (
) and imaginary electric modulus (
) at two particular temperatures for the studied BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 films. These combined plots of impedance (
) and electric modulus (
) as a function of frequency are a valuable tool for inferring the conduction mechanism and distinguishing relaxation processes associated with the short-range or long-range motion of charge carriers in ferroelectric thin films [
39]. An appreciable mismatch is observed at the
and
of the BFO1 and BFO2 films, while an almost perfect overlap is observed for the BFO3 film. Slight overlapping of the Z″ and M″ peaks confirms that the relaxation process departs from ideal Debye-type behavior and indicates the predominance of grain boundary response for the BFO3 film within the studied frequency and temperature range, corroborating what was observed in
Figure 5(c).
For several solid materials, the frequency at which the
and
peaks occur correspond to the transitions from long-range (delocalized) to short-range (localized) relaxation. The overlapping of the
and
peaks indicate long-range relaxation, whereas an appreciable mismatch between these peaks is associated with the coexistence of both short and long-range relaxation [
40]. In typical dielectric materials, localized relaxation dominates so that the electrical response is more effective in terms of permittivity and dielectric loss. On the other hand, long-range conductivity dominates ionic conductive materials so that the impedance and the electric modulus better reflect the response. For a physical process that exhibits a distribution of relaxation time, the imaginary parts of the impedance and the electric modulus show different relaxation times such that separated
and
peaks characterize short-range relaxation and overlapped peaks indicate long-range relaxation [
40]. Thus, the two partially overlapping relaxation
and
peaks in
Figure 6(i) suggests a predominance of long-range relaxation in the BFO3. In contrast, the observed mismatch between the
and
peaks in
Figure 6(g) and (h) indicates the coexistence of both short and long-range relaxation in the BFO1 and BFO2 films, most likely associated with the coexistence of electron/hole hopping and diffusion of oxygen vacancies, most introduced due to low-temperature pyrolysis during the synthesis of these films.
The activation energies were evaluated from the Arrhenius relations for the dc conductivity
, where
is a pre-exponential factor,
is the Boltzmann constant, and
is the activation energy. From the
and
values obtained from theoretical fits of the impedance and the electric modulus in
Figure 6, the dc conductivities (
) associated with the grain and grain boundary were obtained, considering the relation
, where
(film thickness) and
(electrode area) are geometrical parameters. Thus,
Figure 7 shows the reciprocal temperature dependence
for both the grain and grain boundary, whose the respective activation energies were evaluated from linear fits in this figure. The inset table in
Figure 7 summarizes the obtained activation energies for grains and grain boundaries. The grain and grain boundary activation energies were 0.71 eV and 0.81 eV for the BFO1 film, and 0.76 eV and 1.40 eV for the BFO2 film. Both films were pyrolyzed at 300 °C, crystallized at 600 °C in an open atmosphere (in air), and post-annealed in an O2 atmosphere, respectively. On the other hand, for the BFO3 film, pyrolyzed and crystallized at a higher temperature and in an O
2 atmosphere, the activation energies for the grain and the grain boundary were the same and equal to 0.44 eV. The different activation energies indicate that distinct mechanisms are responsible for electrical conduction in the studied films, indicative of defects introduced during synthesis.
In the literature, different values of activation energies have been reported for BiFeO
3 thin films. For films prepared by rf-sputtering, two distinct conduction activation energies of 0.37 eV and 0.73 eV were reported [
38], attributed respectively to the first ionization of oxygen vacancies and to electron hopping for conduction at low temperatures, and to the thermal excitation of carriers from the second ionization of oxygen vacancies. For La-Ti-co-doped BiFeO
3 films, the activation energies of 0.46 and 0.47 eV for the grain and grain boundary, respectively, were associated with the first ionization of oxygen vacancies [
38]. Furthermore, studies on the fatigue process of polycrystalline BiFeO
3 thin films revealed that defect evolution during polarization switching reduces the activation energy from 0.9 eV to 0.2 eV [
41]. Independent of defect type, there is consensus that oxygen vacancies play an essential role in the mechanism responsible for dielectric relaxation and electric conduction in BiFeO
3 [
38]. In this scenario, the grain and grain boundary activation energies for the BFO1 (0.71 eV and 0.81 eV) and BFO2 films (0.76 and 1.40 eV) indicate a conduction mechanism associated with the second ionization of oxygen vacancies in these films. In contrast, the first ionization of oxygen vacancies governs the conduction mechanism in both grains and grain boundaries of the BFO3 film (0.44 eV), a consequence of reduced defect concentration in this sample.
3.5. Leakage Current and Photovoltaic Properties
Figure 8(a) shows typical leakage current density electric field (
) characteristics of the studied BiFeO3 films in the dark condition, measured at room temperature for both negative and positive biases in the electric field range of ± 50 kV/cm. In this figure, the
curves show similar shapes with the positive and negative branches symmetrical for the BFO1 and BFO2 films, pyrolyzed at 300 °C, crystallized at 600 °C in an open atmosphere (in air), and post-annealed in an O
2 atmosphere. In contrast, for the BFO3 film, pyrolyzed and crystallized (in O
2 atmosphere) at higher temperatures, the positive and negative branches are slightly asymmetrical, such that its leakage current density (23 μA/cm
2) at 50 kV/cm is one order of magnitude lower than that of the BFO1 (123 μA/cm
2), and 3.6 times smaller than the leakage current density for the BFO2 (84 μA/cm
2) film, which present a similar behavior compared to BFO1.
A leakage current in BiFeO3 thin films has often been attributed mainly to oxygen vacancies [
16], as several studies have shown that reducing their concentration minimizes leakage current in ferroelectric thin films. As demonstrated by the
values from XPS results, the BFO1 film shows the highest concentration of oxygen vacancies among the samples studied, the BFO2 film shows an intermediate concentration, and the BFO3 film shows the lowest concentration. The observed leakage current density follows the concentration of oxygen vacancies in the studied films, suggesting a correlation. However, the mechanisms of leakage current can be more intricate and may correlate with defects associated with the Bi/Fe and Fe
3+/Fe
2+ ratios rather than with the oxygen vacancy concentration. Deviation changes the Fe ions' valence from Fe
3+ to Fe
2+, leading to highly conductive samples, while equation
describes the origin of bismuth vacancies and the consequent Bi
2O
3 formation [
42]. Bi vacancies introduce three holes in the system, and the presence of Fe
2+ and oxygen vacancies with different valence states justifies the presence of free electrons. In the BiFeO
3 system, deep localized oxygen vacancy traps the holes, and the charge neutrality condition determines the equivalence or not between the free electrons and holes [
12]. Thus, it is plausible that free electrons and holes compensate for the charge, mutually remaining in a competition between Bi and oxygen vacancies. This scenario shows that the synthesis process is fundamentally important to control defects during the preparation of BiFeO
3 thin films. According to the EDS analyses, the Bi/Fe ≈ 1 for all studied films within experimental accuracy, while from XPS analyses, the Fe
3+/Fe
2+ ≈ 2 for all films, indicating the coexistence of Fe
2+ and Fe
3+ ions, with the predominance of Fe
3+ ions. Although the presence of a small amount of secondary phases in films BFO2 and BFO3 should act as significant sources and mediators for various defects, the results indicate that oxygen vacancies are the main factor contributing to the leakage current in the studied films.
The analysis of conduction mechanisms offers additional insights into the conductivity. Among different mechanisms, the ohmic is given by the linear relation
, where
is the electrical conductivity and generally dominates in the regime of low electric fields. The SCLC mechanism is provided by the relation
, where
is the charge mobility,
the vacuum permittivity,
the low-frequency relative dielectric permittivity and
the sample thickness [
43].
Figure 8(b) shows
versus
plots of the studied BFO films for positive bias. The linear fits to the
curves at electric fields below 30 kV/cm yield slopes ~ 1 for all films, as shown in
Figure 8(b), confirming ohmic conduction at low electric fields and excluding the SCLC mechanism for these films within the studied electric field range.
The measured photocurrent densities (JSC) of the studied BiFeO3 films at short-circuit conditions are shown in
Figure 9 under light-on and light-off illumination, alternated for 2 s and repeated 4 times. Under illumination, all studied BFO films show a clear and distinct photovoltaic response. The most significant photocurrent density of the BFO3 film (
~ 2.97 μA/cm
-2) is about 6.9 times higher than the lowest value observed for the BFO1 film (
~ 0.43 μA/cm
-2), and about 1.7 times higher than the photocurrent density of the BFO2 film (
~ 1.72 μA/cm
-2). The highest photocurrent density of the BFO3 film is in the same order as those reported for BiFeO
3 films prepared by the chemical solution deposition method on Pt/Ti/SiO
2/Si(100) substrates (
~ 7.50 μA/cm
-2) [
44] or on FTO substrate (
~ 10.96 μA/cm
-2) [
16], but one magnitude order smaller than that observed for films prepared by the sol-gel method on Pt/Ti/SiO
2/Si substrate (
~ 20.3 μA/cm
-2) [
45]. These differences are comprehensible in this qualitative comparison, since the photocurrent responses in the present work were obtained under green light illumination (λ = 532 nm) while those reported were under near-ultraviolet (λ = 405 nm) illumination or solar simulator.
The respective maximum and minimum photocurrent densities for the BFO3 and BFO1 films in
Figure 9, along with their lower and higher leakage currents in
Figure 8(a), confirm that a high oxygen vacancy concentration is mainly responsible for the photocurrent degradation in the studied BiFeO
3 thin films. The influence of defects on the leakage current and conduction mechanisms of BiFeO
3 thin films has been widely studied [
6,
7], as well as the relationship between their leakage current and photovoltaic response [
16]. In these cases, the oxygen vacancies acted as trap centers that greatly influenced the recombination of photogenerated carriers. Comparing the BFO1 (crystallized in air) and BFO2 films (post-annealed in O
2), both pyrolyzed (300 °C) and crystallized (600 °C) at lower temperatures, it was observed that post-annealing in O2 reduces the oxygen vacancies, thereby favoring the crystallization of traces of secondary phases. As traces of secondary phases are also present in the BFO3 film, pyrolyzed and crystallized at higher temperatures in an O2 atmosphere, it is clear that defects associated with these phases are dominant over the reduction of oxygen vacancies. Although the photocurrent response depends on a combination of defects, the oxygen vacancies still dominate. The results indicate that increasing the pyrolysis temperature can be more effective for reducing oxygen vacancies during synthesis by the chemical method, thereby improving photovoltaic performance.
3.6. Magnetic Properties
The magnetic properties of the studied films were also characterized.
Figure 10 shows the magnetization hysteresis loops (
) of BFO1, BFO2, and BFO3 thin films, measured at 300 K and 5 K in
Figure 10(a) and
Figure 10(b), respectively, with an applied magnetic field within ± 30 kOe. The diamagnetic contribution was removed from all magnetic hysteresis loops by subtracting the high-field linear slope from the raw data in these figures. The well-saturated
hysteresis at 300 K and 5 K temperatures suggests the ferromagnetic nature of BiFeO
3 thin films. It is evident in
Figure 10(a) and
Figure 10(b) that the saturation magnetization is higher for the BFO3 and minimum for the BFO1 film, and intermediate for the BFO2 film, at high temperature (300 K) as well as at low temperature (5 K). From the magnified
curves inserted in
Figure 10(a) and
Figure 10(b), it is observed that the remanent magnetization (
) for BFO3 film (
= 0.4 emu/cm
3) is almost four times higher than both BFO1 and BFO2 films (
= 0.1 emu/cm
3) at 300 K, while all films showed essentially the same (
= 0.8 emu/cm
3) at 5 K. On the other hand, the coercive field is almost the same (
≈ 813 Oe) for BFO1 and BFO2 films and smaller (
= 128 Oe) for the BFO3 film at 300 K, showing the same behavior at 5 K with higher coercive fields.
Figure 10(c), 9(d), and 9(e) show the magnetization curves of the BFO3, BFO2, and BFO1 films, respectively, as a function of temperature in the zero-field cooling (ZFC) and field cooling (FC) regimes at
= 1 and 3 kOe applied fields, as indicated. While the ZFC and FC curves show the same shape for all studied films, the magnetization magnitude is similar for the BFO1 and BFO2 films, differing from the higher magnetization of the BFO3 film. The magnetization of the BFO3 film is greater than that of the BFO2 and BFO1 films at any given temperature. In the ZFC regime, the magnetization of the BFO3 film is 5 times greater than that of the BFO2 film and 8 times greater than that of the BFO1 film at 300 K, and at 5 K it is 6 times greater than that of the BFO2 film and 12 times greater than that of the BFO1 film. The magnetization in the FC regime decreases monotonically with increasing temperature for all films, whereas the curves in the ZFC regime exhibit a maximum magnetization at the blocking temperature (
). This temperature is generally attributed to a spin-glass-like transition or a typical blocking process for superparamagnetic spin moments, where the magnetic moments of independent ferromagnetic regions become "blocked" below this temperature; in other words, they are unable to reorient themselves with temperature changes in the ZFC process. Above this temperature, the thermal energy is sufficient to allow the moments to randomly fluctuate [
46]. Although the blocking temperature is not an intrinsic characteristic of the BiFeO3 thin films,
is an important characteristic, especially for applications in spintronics, that depends on the synthesis conditions, such as film thickness, composition, and strain [
47]. In the present study, based on the curves shown in
Figure 10,
presents essentially the same value around 79 K for all the studied films.
Despite the blocking temperature in BiFeO3 thin films being a dynamic parameter that often depends on processing conditions or point defects, in the present work, this temperature was apparently unaffected, showing essentially the same value across all films prepared under different conditions. On the other hand, the magnetization magnitude, remanent magnetization, and coercive field showed clear dependence on point defects, such as oxygen vacancies, which are strongly influenced by processing conditions. The high oxygen vacancy concentration and low crystallinity in BFO1 and BFO2 films decrease their magnetization and remanent magnetization, while increasing their coercive field, compared to the BFO3 film, at low (5 K) and room temperature (300 K).