1,855 research outputs found
Role of defects and impurities in doping of GaN
We have calculated formation energies and position of the defect levels for
all native defects and for a variety of donor and acceptor impurities employing
first-principles total-energy calculations. An analysis of the numerical
results gives direct insight into defect concentrations and impurity solubility
with respect to growth parameters (temperature, chemical potentials) and into
the mechanisms limiting the doping levels in GaN. We show how compensation and
passivation by native defects or impurities, solubility issues, and
incorporation of dopants on other sites influence the acceptor doping levels.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, to appear in "The Physics of Semiconductors
Self-driven lattice-model Monte Carlo simulations of alloy thermodynamic
Monte Carlo (MC) simulations of lattice models are a widely used way to
compute thermodynamic properties of substitutional alloys. A limitation to
their more widespread use is the difficulty of driving a MC simulation in order
to obtain the desired quantities. To address this problem, we have devised a
variety of high-level algorithms that serve as an interface between the user
and a traditional MC code. The user specifies the goals sought in a high-level
form that our algorithms convert into elementary tasks to be performed by a
standard MC code. For instance, our algorithms permit the determination of the
free energy of an alloy phase over its entire region of stability within a
specified accuracy, without requiring any user intervention during the
calculations. Our algorithms also enable the direct determination of
composition-temperature phase boundaries without requiring the calculation of
the whole free energy surface of the alloy system
Theoretical evidence for efficient p-type doping of GaN using beryllium
Ab initio calculations predict that Be is a shallow acceptor in GaN. Its
thermal ionization energy is 0.06 eV in wurtzite GaN; the level is valence
resonant in the zincblende phase. Be incorporation is severely limited by the
formation of Be_3N_2. We show however that co-incorporation with reactive
species can enhance the solubility. H-assisted incorporation should lead to
high doping levels in MOCVD growth after post-growth annealing at about 850 K.
Be-O co-incorporation produces high Be and O concentrations at MBE growth
temperatures.Comment: revised Feb 24 199
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Dangling Bonds in Hexagonal Boron Nitride as Single-Photon Emitters.
Hexagonal boron nitride has been found to host color centers that exhibit single-photon emission, but the microscopic origin of these emitters is unknown. We propose boron dangling bonds as the likely source of the observed single-photon emission around 2Â eV. An optical transition where an electron is excited from a doubly occupied boron dangling bond to a localized B p_{z} state gives rise to a zero-phonon line of 2.06Â eV and emission with a Huang-Rhys factor of 2.3. This transition is linearly polarized with the absorptive and emissive dipole aligned. Because of the energetic position of the states within the band gap, indirect excitation through the conduction band will occur for sufficiently large excitation energies, leading to the misalignment of the absorptive and emissive dipoles seen in experiment. Our calculations predict a singlet ground state and the existence of a metastable triplet state, in agreement with experiment
Limitations of In2O3 as a transparent conducting oxide
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Appl. Phys. Lett. 115, 082105 (2019); doi: 10.1063/1.5109569 and may be found at https://aip.scitation.org/doi/full/10.1063/1.5109569.Sn-doped In2O3 or ITO is the most widely used transparent conducting oxide. We use first-principles calculations to investigate the limitations to its transparency due to free-carrier absorption mediated by phonons or charged defects. We find that the main contribution to the phonon-assisted indirect absorption is due to emission (as opposed to absorption) of phonons, which explains why the process is relatively insensitive to temperature. The wavelength dependence of this indirect absorption process can be described by a power law. Indirect absorption mediated by charged defects or impurities is also unavoidable since doping is required to obtain conductivity. At high carrier concentrations, screening by the free carriers becomes important. We find that charged-impurity-assisted absorption becomes larger than phonon-assisted absorption for impurity concentrations above 1020 cm–3. The differences in the photon-energy dependence of the two processes can be explained by band structure effects
First-principles study of ternary fcc solution phases from special quasirandom structures
In the present work, ternary Special Quasirandom Structures (SQSs) for a fcc
solid solution phase are generated at different compositions,
and , ,
whose correlation functions are satisfactorily close to those of a random fcc
solution. The generated SQSs are used to calculate the mixing enthalpy of the
fcc phase in the Ca-Sr-Yb system. It is observed that first-principles
calculations of all the binary and ternary SQSs in the Ca-Sr-Yb system exhibit
very small local relaxation. It is concluded that the fcc ternary SQSs can
provide valuable information about the mixing behavior of the fcc ternary solid
solution phase. The SQSs presented in this work can be widely used to study the
behavior of ternary fcc solid solutions.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
Measurement and Control of Single Nitrogen-Vacancy Center Spins above 600 K
We study the spin and orbital dynamics of single nitrogen-vacancy (NV)
centers in diamond between room temperature and 700 K. We find that the ability
to optically address and coherently control single spins above room temperature
is limited by nonradiative processes that quench the NV center's
fluorescence-based spin readout between 550 and 700 K. Combined with electronic
structure calculations, our measurements indicate that the energy difference
between the 3E and 1A1 electronic states is approximately 0.8 eV. We also
demonstrate that the inhomogeneous spin lifetime (T2*) is temperature
independent up to at least 625 K, suggesting that single NV centers could be
applied as nanoscale thermometers over a broad temperature range.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, and 14 pages of supplemental material with
additional figures. Title change and minor revisions from previous version.
DMT and DJC contributed equally to this wor
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