First-principles study of native point defects in Bi2Se3
L. Xue, P. Zhou, C. X. Zhang, C. Y. He, G. L. Hao, L. Z. Sun, J. X., Zhong

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles density functional theory to analyze native point defects in Bi2Se3, revealing their roles as donors or acceptors and how growth conditions influence defect stability and electronic properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed first-principles analysis of native defect types, their electronic activity, and stability under different growth environments in Bi2Se3.
Findings
Se vacancy acts as a double donor.
Bi vacancy acts as a triple acceptor.
Se antisite is an active donor.
Abstract
Using first-principles method within the framework of the density functional theory, we study the influence of native point defect on the structural and electronic properties of BiSe. Se vacancy in BiSe is a double donor, and Bi vacancy is a triple acceptor. Se antisite (Se) is always an active donor in the system because its donor level ((+1/0)) enters into the conduction band. Interestingly, Bi antisite(Bi) in BiSe is an amphoteric dopant, acting as a donor when 0.119eV (the material is typical p-type) and as an acceptor when 0.251eV (the material is typical n-type). The formation energies under different growth environments (such as Bi-rich or Se-rich) indicate that under Se-rich condition, Se is the most stable native defect independent of electron chemical potential . Under Bi-rich…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Semiconductor Detectors and Materials · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
