Spin-lattice relaxation in bismuth chalcogenides
Robert E. Taylor, Belinda Leung, Michael P. Lake, Louis-S. Bouchard

TL;DR
This study uses solid-state NMR to investigate spin-lattice relaxation in Bi₂Se₃ and Bi₂Te₃, revealing defect distributions and differences in electronic interactions related to spin-orbit coupling.
Contribution
First NMR analysis of $^{77}$Se and $^{125}$Te in these materials, linking defect content to relaxation behavior and electronic structure differences.
Findings
Defect regions segregate into domains in Bi₂Se₃.
Bi₂Te₃ shows defects throughout the sample.
Stronger coupling to conduction electrons in Bi₂Te₃.
Abstract
Bismuth chalcogenides BiSe and BiTe are semiconductors, which can be both thermoelectric materials (TE) and topological insulators (TI). Lattice defects arising from vacancies, impurities, or dopants in these materials are important in that they provide the charge carriers in TE applications and compromise the performance of these materials as TIs. We present the first solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study of the Se and Te NMR resonances in polycrystalline powders of BiSe and BiTe, respectively. The spin-lattice () relaxation is modeled by at most two exponentials. Within the framework of this model, the NMR measurement is sensitive to the distribution of native defects within these materials. One component corresponds to a stoichiometric fraction, an insulator with a very long , whereas the other component is…
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