Theory of inelastic multiphonon scattering and carrier capture by defects in semiconductors. Application to capture cross sections
Georgios D. Barmparis (1,2), Yevgeniy S. Puzyrev (1), X.-G. Zhang, (2,3,4), and Sokrates T. Pantelides (1,5,6) ((1) Department of Physics and, Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, (2) Center for Nanophase Materials, Sciences, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, (3) Computer Science

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive quantum-mechanical theory for inelastic multiphonon scattering and carrier capture by defects in semiconductors, addressing key issues in device degradation and performance.
Contribution
It introduces a unified theory distinguishing equilibrium and non-equilibrium capture mechanisms, with first-principles calculations of capture cross sections using density functional theory.
Findings
Density functional theory calculations of defect capture cross sections.
Identification of primary capture mechanisms under different conditions.
Foundation for engineering models of device degradation.
Abstract
Inelastic scattering and carrier capture by defects in semiconductors are the primary causes of hot-electron-mediated degradation of power devices, which holds up their commercial development. At the same time, carrier capture is a major issue in the performance of solar cells and light-emitting diodes. A theory of nonradiative inelastic scattering by defects, however, is non-existent, while the the- ory for carrier capture by defects has had a long and arduous history. Here we report the construction of a comprehensive theory of inelastic scattering by defects, with carrier capture being a special case. We distinguish between capture under thermal equilibrium conditions and capture under non-equilibrium conditions, e.g., in the presence of electrical current or hot carriers where carriers undergo scattering by defects and are described by a mean free path. In the thermal-equilibrium…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
