Point defects and dopants of boron arsenide from first-principles calculations: donor compensation and doping asymmetry

ORAL

Abstract

BAs has received attention due to its unusually high thermal conductivity, yet, its defect properties are relatively unknown. Particularly, point defects crucially affect its electronic, thermal, and optical properties as a semiconductor. Here, we apply hybrid density functional theory calculations to identify the formation energies and thermodynamic charge transition levels of native point defects, common impurities, and shallow dopants in BAs [1]. We find that AsB, VB, BAs, Bi-VB, AsB-BAs, are the dominant intrinsic defects, while CAs, CB, Hi are common impurities. BeB, SiAs and GeAs are predicted to be excellent shallow acceptors with low ionization energy (< 0.03 eV) and negligible compensation by other point defects. However, donors such as SeAs, TeAs, SiB, and GeB have a relatively large ionization energy (~0.15 eV) and are likely to be passivated by native defects such as BAs and VB, as well as CAs, Hi, and HB. The hole and electron doping asymmetry originates from the heavy effective mass of the conduction band due to its boron orbital character, as well as from boron-related intrinsic defects that compensate donors.
[1] arXiv:1809.09213

Presenters

  • Sieun Chae

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • Sieun Chae

    University of Michigan

  • Kelsey Mengle

    Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, University of Michigan

  • John Heron

    Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan

  • Emmanouil Kioupakis

    University of Michigan, Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Material Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor