134 research outputs found

    Electronic Properties of Mn-Compounds Under Strain

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    We study the physical properties of MnAs under strain by using accurate first-principles pseudopotential calculations. Our results provide new insight on the physics of strained multilayer that are grown epitaxially on different lattice mismatched substrates and which are presently of interest for spintronic applications. We compute the strain dependence of the structural parameters, electronic bands, density of states and magnetization. In the region of strain/stress that is easily directly accessible to measurements, the effects on these physical quantities are linear. We also address the case of uniaxial stress inducing sizeable and strongly non linear effects on electronic and magnetic properties.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Floating bonds and gap states in a-Si and a-Si:H from first principles calculations

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    We study in detail by means of ab-initio pseudopotential calculations the electronic structure of five-fold coordinated (T_5) defects in a-Si and a-Si:H, also during their formation and their evolution upon hydrogenation. The atom-projected densities of states (DOS) and an accurate analysis of the valence charge distribution clearly indicate the fundamental contribution of T_5 defects in originating gap states through their nearest neighbors. The interaction with hydrogen can reduce the DOS in the gap annihilating T_5 defects.Comment: To appear in Europhysics Let

    ZnSe/GaAs(001) heterostructures with defected interfaces: structural, thermodynamic and electronic properties

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    We have performed accurate \emph{ab--initio} pseudopotential calculations for the structural and electronic properties of ZnSe/GaAs(001) heterostructures with interface configurations accounting for charge neutrality prescriptions. Beside the simplest configurations with atomic interdiffusion we consider also some configurations characterized by As depletion and cation vacancies, motivated by the recent successfull growth of ZnSe/GaAs pseudomorphic structures with minimum stacking fault density characterized by the presence of a defected (Zn,Ga)Se alloy in the interface region. We find that--under particular thermodynamic conditions--some defected configurations are favoured with respect to undefected ones with simple anion or cation mixing, and that the calculated band offsets for some defected structures are compatible with those measured. Although it is not possible to extract indications about the precise interface composition and vacancy concentration, our results support the experimental indication of (Zn,Ga)Se defected compounds in high-quality ZnSe/GaAs(001) heterojunctions with low native stacking fault density. The range of measured band offset suggests that different atoms at interfaces rearrange, with possible presence of vacancies, in such a way that not only local charges but also ionic dipoles are vanishing.Comment: 26 pages. 5 figures, revised version, in press (Physical Review B

    Coordination defects in a-Si and a-Si:H : a characterization from first principles calculations

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    We study by means of first-principles pseudopotential method the coordination defects in a-Si and a-Si:H, also in their formation and their evolution upon hydrogen interaction. An accurate analysis of the valence charge distribution and of the ``electron localization function'' (ELF) allows to resolve possible ambiguities in the bonding configuration, and in particular to identify clearly three-fold (T_3) and five-fold (T_5) coordinated defects. We found that electronic states in the gap can be associated to both kind of defects, and that in both cases the interaction with hydrogen can reduce the density of states in the gap.Comment: To appear in Philos. Ma

    Properties of (Ga1x_{1-x}Inx_x)2_2O3_3 over the whole xx range

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    Using density-functional ab initio theoretical techniques, we study (Ga1x_{1-x}Inx_x)2_2O3_3 in both its equilibrium structures (monoclinic β\beta and bixbyite) and over the whole range of composition. We establish that the alloy exhibits a large and temperature-independent miscibility gap. On the low-xx side, the favored phase is isostructural with β\beta-Ga2_2O3_3; on the high-xx side, it is isostructural with bixbyite In2_2O3_3. The miscibility gap opens between approximately 15\% and 55\% In content for the bixbyite alloy grown epitaxially on In2_2O3_3, and 15\% and 85\% In content for the free-standing bixbyite alloy. The gap, volume and band offsets to the parent compound also exhibit anomalies as function of xx. Specifically, the offsets in epitaxial conditions are predominantly type-B staggered, but have opposite signs in the two end-of-range phases.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Role of defects in the electronic properties of amorphous/crystalline Si interface

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    The mechanism determining the band alignment of the amorphous/crystalline Si heterostructures is addressed with direct atomistic simulations of the interface performed using a hierarchical combination of various computational schemes ranging from classical model-potential molecular dynamics to ab-initio methods. We found that in coordination defect-free samples the band alignment is almost vanishing and independent on interface details. In defect-rich samples, instead, the band alignment is sizeably different with respect to the defect-free case, but, remarkably, almost independent on the concentration of defects. We rationalize these findings within the theory of semiconductor interfaces.Comment: 4 pages in two-column format, 2 postscript figures include

    Accurate quadratic-response approximation for the self-consistent pseudopotential of semiconductor nanostructures

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    Quadratic-response theory is shown to provide a conceptually simple but accurate approximation for the self-consistent one-electron potential of semiconductor nanostructures. Numerical examples are presented for GaAs/AlAs and InGaAs/InP (001) superlattices using the local-density approximation to density-functional theory and norm-conserving pseudopotentials without spin-orbit coupling. When the reference crystal is chosen to be the virtual-crystal average of the two bulk constituents, the absolute error in the quadratic-response potential for Gamma(15) valence electrons is about 2 meV for GaAs/AlAs and 5 meV for InGaAs/InP. Low-order multipole expansions of the electron density and potential response are shown to be accurate throughout a small neighborhood of each reciprocal lattice vector, thus providing a further simplification that is confirmed to be valid for slowly varying envelope functions. Although the linear response is about an order of magnitude larger than the quadratic response, the quadratic terms are important both quantitatively (if an accuracy of better than a few tens of meV is desired) and qualitatively (due to their different symmetry and long-range dipole effects).Comment: 16 pages, 20 figures; v2: new section on limitations of theor
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