A realistic dimension-independent approach for charged defect calculations in semiconductors
ORAL
Abstract
First-principles calculations of charged defects have become a cornerstone of research in semiconductors and insulators by providing insights into their fundamental physical properties. But current standard approach using the so-called “jellium model” has encountered computational difficulty for low-dimensional semiconducting materials. In this presentation, we propose a physical, straightforward, and dimension-independent universal model to calculate the formation energies of charged defects in both three-dimensional (3D) bulk and low-dimensional semiconductors. This realistic model reproduces the same accuracy as the traditional jellium model for most of the 3D semiconducting materials, and remarkably, for the low-dimensional structures, it is able to cure the divergence caused by the artificial long-range electrostatic energy introduced in the jellium model, and hence gives meaningful formation energies of defects in charged state and transition energy levels of the corresponding defects. Our realistic method, therefore, will have significant impact for the study of defect physics in all low-dimensional systems including quantum dots, nanowires, surfaces, interfaces, and 2D materials.
Presenters
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Hui-Xiong Deng
- Institute of Semiconductors