Electronic Trap Detection with Carrier-Resolved Photo-Hall Effect
Oki Gunawan, Chaeyoun Kim, Bonfilio Nainggolan, Minyeul Lee, Jonghwa Shin, Dong Suk Kim, Yimhyun Jo, Minjin Kim, Julie Euvrard, Douglas Bishop, Frank Libsch, Teodor Todorov, Yunna Kim, and Byungha Shin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel photo-Hall effect method for non-invasively detecting and characterizing electronic trap states and carrier properties in semiconductors, demonstrated on silicon and halide perovskites.
Contribution
The paper presents a new photo-Hall technique that simplifies trap detection and carrier analysis by revealing a hyperbolic relationship between photo-Hall and electrical conductivities.
Findings
Successfully applied to silicon and perovskite films
Revealed detailed trap density and energy levels
Enabled extraction of carrier mobility and recombination lifetime
Abstract
Electronic trap states are a critical yet unavoidable aspect of semiconductor devices, impacting performance of various electronic devices such as transistors, memory devices, solar cells, and LEDs. The density, energy level, and position of these trap states often enable or constrain device functionality, making their measurement crucial in materials science and device fabrication. Most methods for measuring trap states involve fabricating a junction, which can inadvertently introduce or alter traps, highlighting the need for alternative, less-invasive techniques. Here, we present a unique photo-Hall-based method to detect and characterize trap density and energy level while concurrently extracting key carrier properties, including mobility, photocarrier density, recombination lifetime, and diffusion length. This technique relies on analyzing the photo-Hall data in terms of "photo-Hall…
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