Bismuth-alloyed Ga<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> as a novel p-type transparent conducting oxide
ORAL
Abstract
Ga2O3 is a wide-band-gap semiconductor that has attracted great attention for applications in power electronics and UV-blind detectors. It is easy to make it n-type by adding Si, Ge, or Sn, yet difficult (or impossible) to make it p-type unless its electronic structure is fundamentally changed. Here we show that adding a few percent of Bi to Ga2O3 leads to an intermediate valence band that is sufficiently high in energy to enable p-type doping. Using first-principles calculations we study the electronic structure of Bi-alloyed Ga2O3 and the doping efficiency of possible acceptor impurities in this system. Specifically, we discuss the results for Mg, Zn, and Cu acceptors in (BixGa1-x)2O3, including their most favorable incorporation sites, formation energies, and transition energy levels. We show that dilute (BixGa1-x)2O3 alloys could be good candidates for novel p-type transparent conducting oxide that will create new opportunities in Ga2O3-based device design.
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Presenters
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Xuefen Cai
University of Delaware
Authors
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Xuefen Cai
University of Delaware
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Fernando P. Sabino
University of Delaware
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Anderson Janotti
Materials Science and Engineering, University of Delaware, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Delaware, University of Delaware, Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Delaware, Department of Material Science and Engineering, University of Delaware, Univ of Delaware
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Suhuai Wei
Beijing Computational Science Research Center, Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr