MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL04.08.17 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

On the Possibility of p-Type Doping in BaSnO3

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Kieran Spooner2,Joe Willis1,David Scanlon2

University College London1,University of Birmingham2

Abstract

Kieran Spooner2,Joe Willis1,David Scanlon2

University College London1,University of Birmingham2
The discovery of a p-type transparent conductor would revolutionise optoelectronic devices by enabling fully transparent p-n junctions. Of particular interest are fully transparent homojunctions, which would greatly simplify the manufacturing process and potentially aid device performance. Recent work<sup>1</sup> has produced transparent p-n junctions from BaSnO<sub>3</sub>, but the p-type behaviour of the compound has thus far been overlooked in the literature.<br/><br/>Here we seek to understand the defect and transport behaviour of p-type BaSnO<sub>3</sub> using hybrid density functional theory (DFT).<sup>2</sup> Group 1 metals Li, Na and K and group 13 metals Al, Ga and In are assessed as extrinsic p-type dopants on the Ba and Sn sites, respectively. We find that K and In are the most promising dopants, reaching concentrations of up to 4.7x10<sup>16</sup> cm<sup>-3</sup> and 1.6x10<sup>19</sup> cm<sup>-3</sup> respectively. Both, however, are compensated by low energy O vacancies, limiting the hole carrier concentrations to 5.2x10<sup>14</sup> cm<sup>-3</sup> and 9.8x10<sup>15</sup> cm<sup>-3</sup> respectively. Such high defect concentrations also severely limit the electronic transport, with room temperature mobilities of 5.96 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>-1</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> and 1.27 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>-1</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> respectively. While this does not reach the levels seen in n-type transparent conductors, it does guide the way towards the higher doping concentrations than have so far been achieved experimentally.<br/><br/>[1] Kim, H. M. <i>et al.</i>, <i>APL Mater.</i>, 2016, <b>4</b>, 056105.<br/>[2] Willis, J. <i>et al.</i>, <i>Appl. Phys. Lett.</i>, 2023, <i>accepted</i>.

Keywords

defects

Symposium Organizers

Hideki Hirayama, RIKEN
Robert Kaplar, Sandia National Laboratories
Sriram Krishnamoorthy, University of California, Santa Barbara
Matteo Meneghini, University of Padova

Symposium Support

Silver
Taiyo Nippon Sanso

Session Chairs

Robert Kaplar
Sriram Krishnamoorthy

In this Session

EL04.08.01
Band Gap Behavior and Order/Disorder in Sn1-xGexO2 Alloys for Deep UV Transparent Conducting Oxides

EL04.08.02
Self-Aligned Fabrication of Sub-50 nm Top Gate Coplanar ITO/IGZO Thin-Film Transistors without Nanoscale Patterning

EL04.08.04
Investigating The Oxygen Defects of Nano-Heterojunction for Toxic Gas by Using Synchrotron and Raman Spectroscopy

EL04.08.05
Addressing the orientation of defect-related crystal domains by Atom Probe Tomography in III-N heterostructures

EL04.08.06
Plasma Assisted Remediation of SiC Surfaces

EL04.08.07
Precision Gas Sensing: Tuning The Defect Energy Level of SnO2 Nanofiber Devices by Surface Defect Engineering

EL04.08.08
Field-Effect Mobility Enhancement of a-InGaZnO Thin Film Transistors through Metal Capping Layer Oxidation Induced Carrier Boosting

EL04.08.09
GaN Nanowire Wrap-Gate Transistor: Barrier Height, Ideality Factor and Inhomogeneities at The AlGaN/GaN Interface

EL04.08.10
Li-Doped NiO/Un-Doped NiO/β-Ga2O3-Based p-i-n Diode for Power Device Application

EL04.08.11
Cone-shaped defects on AlGaN quantum dots for electron-beam pumped UV-emitters

View More »

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature