First-principles calculations of charge carrier mobility in semiconductors including charged impurity scattering
ORAL
Abstract
Ionized impurities are present in and strongly effect the behaviors of semiconductors in a wide variety of electronic and opto-electronic devices. Ionized impurities generate long-range scattering centers that reduce the electron and hole mobilities. Though a variety of historical models are available to predict carrier mobility as a function of ionized impurity concentration, first-principles calculations offer a way to more accurately describe the physics of ionized impurity scattering in a variety of materials. In this work, we calculate from first principles the electron and hole mobilities and scattering rates limited by both carrier-phonon and carrier-ionized impurity scattering in three prominent semiconductor materials: Si, 3C-SiC, and GaP. We show that the influence of ionized impurity scattering and its balance with phonon scattering are strongly material dependent and influence the expected carrier mobilities as a function of impurity concentration and temperature. Further, we show how the Matthiessen's rule for carrier mobilities limited by different scattering mechanisms breaks down outside of the constant relaxation time approximation. Lastly, we demonstrate the importance of screening and effective mass corrections on calculated carrier mobilities.
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Presenters
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Joshua A Leveillee
University of Texas at Austin
Authors
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Joshua A Leveillee
University of Texas at Austin
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Xiao Zhang
Univeristy of Michigan, University of Michigan
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Emmanouil Kioupakis
University of Michigan
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Feliciano Giustino
University of Texas, University of Texas at Austin, The University of Texas at Austin