Vacancy defects induced changes in the electronic and optical properties of NiO studied by spectroscopic ellipsometry and first-principles calculations
Kingsley O. Egbo, Chao Ping Liu, Chinedu E. Ekuma, and Kin Man Yu

TL;DR
This study investigates how native vacancy defects in NiO influence its electronic and optical properties, combining spectroscopic ellipsometry and first-principles calculations to understand defect-induced changes.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of NiO with different vacancy types, revealing how Ni and O vacancies affect electronic states and optical transparency, guiding defect engineering.
Findings
Ni vacancies introduce gap states mainly of Ni 3d and O 2p character.
Ni vacancies significantly increase sub-gap absorption, reducing transparency.
Vacancy type critically influences NiO's optoelectronic properties and potential for transparent electronics.
Abstract
Native defects in semiconductors play an important role in their optoelectronic properties. Nickel oxide (NiO) is one of the few wide-gap p-type oxide semiconductors and its conductivity is believed to be controlled primarily by Ni-vacancy acceptors. Herein, we present a systematic study comparing the optoelectronic properties of stoichiometric NiO, oxygen-rich NiO with Ni vacancies (NiO:VNi), and Ni-rich NiO with O vacancies (NiO:VO). The optical properties were obtained by spectroscopic ellipsometry, while valence band spectra were probed by high-resolution x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The experimental results are directly compared to first-principles density functional theory + U calculations. Computational results confirm that gap states are present in both NiO systems with vacancies. Gap states in NiO:Vo are predominantly Ni 3d states, while those in NiO:VNi are composed of…
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