Optoelectronic and transport properties of epitaxially strained BiVO$_4$ from first principles
ORAL
Abstract
Bismuth vanadate (BiVO$_4$) is a promising photo-catalyst for water-splitting. However, the photo-electrochemical performance of BiVO$_4$ is limited by a relatively large band gap ($\sim$2.5eV) and low electron mobilities. Previous theoretical work has focused on the role of extrinsic and intrinsic defects to control and tune the optical and transport properties of BiVO$_4$; however, the effect of anisotropic strain remains largely unexplored. Recently, thin films BiVO$_4$ have been grown using molecular beam epitaxy, opening new possibilities to design BiVO$_4$-based renewable solar-energy devices. In this work, we use density functional theory and GW/BSE many-body perturbation theory calculations to investigate the effect of epitaxial strain in the structural, optoelectronic and transport properties of BiVO$_4$. We find that compressive epitaxial strain leads to a moderate decrease of the band gap and an enhancement of hole effective mass and majority carrier small polaron formation energy. In addition, we determine the effect of epitaxial strain on the transport properties of electron and hole polarons and their interaction with oxygen vacancies. This work is supported by DOE, computational resources are provided by NERSC.
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