Growth, Properties, and Applications of Pulsed Laser Deposited Nanolaminate Ti3AlC2 Thin Films
Abhijit Biswas, Arundhati Sengupta, Umashankar Rajput, Sachin Kumar, Singh, Vivek Antad, Sk Mujaffar Hossain, Swati Parmar, Dibyata Rout, Aparna, Deshpande, Sunil Nair, and Satishchandra Ogale

TL;DR
This paper reports on the growth and comprehensive characterization of pulsed laser deposited Ti3AlC2 nanolaminate thin films, revealing their structural, electrical, optical properties, and potential applications in electronics and energy harvesting.
Contribution
It introduces a method to grow highly oriented Ti3AlC2 thin films with unique properties and demonstrates their multifunctional device applications.
Findings
Films are highly oriented along the (103) axis.
Ultrathin films exhibit good optical transparency and high conductivity.
Ti3AlC2 films show potential for various electronic and energy harvesting applications.
Abstract
Recently, nanolaminated ternary carbides have attracted immense interest due to the concomitant presence of both ceramic and metallic properties. Here, we grow nanolaminate Ti3AlC2 thin films by pulsed laser deposition on c-axis-oriented sapphire substrates and, surprisingly, the films are found to be highly oriented along the (103) axis normal to the film plane, rather than the (000l) orientation. Multiple characterization techniques are employed to explore the structural and chemical quality of these films, the electrical and optical properties, and the device functionalities. The 80-nm thick Ti3AlC2 film is highly conducting at room temperature (resistivity of 50 micro ohm-cm), and a very-low-temperature coefficient of resistivity. The ultrathin (2 nm) Ti3AlC2 film has fairly good optical transparency and high conductivity at room temperature (sheet resistance of 735 ohm). Scanning…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
