\textit{Ab initio} study of the optical properties of Si-XII
ORAL
Abstract
We present a first-principles calculation of the optical excitation spectrum of Si-XII, a high-pressure, metastable phase of silicon in the R8 structure. Recent calculations of the quasiparticle spectrum have shown Si-XII to be semiconducting with a small, indirect band gap. In this paper we solve the Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE) to obtain the optical spectrum of this material. We then compare our calculated optical spectrum with experimental data for other forms of silicon commonly used in photovoltaic devices. These include cubic, polycrystalline, and amorphous forms of silicon. We find that the calculated values of the optical functions relevant to photovoltaic absorption in Si-XII show greater overlap with the incident solar spectrum than those found in these other silicon phases.
*This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. DMR07-05941, the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Computational resources have been provided by NERSC.
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Authors
Brad Malone
Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Jay Sau
Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Marvin L. Cohen
The department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Labratory
University of California Berkeley
Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720
Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley and Materials Sciences Division of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Physics Dept, UC Berkeley
University of California, Berkeley and MSD, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory