Stable partial dislocation complexes in GaN as charge carrier lifetime modifiers for terahertz device applications by molecular dynamics and first-principle simulations
Andrey Sarikov, Ihor Kupchak

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation and stability of partial dislocation complexes in GaN using molecular dynamics and first-principle simulations, revealing their potential to modify charge carrier lifetimes for terahertz device applications.
Contribution
It introduces a combined MD and DFT approach to analyze stable dislocation complexes in GaN and their electronic properties relevant to THz radiation sources.
Findings
Stable dislocation complexes form via attractive interactions.
Complexes introduce localized energy levels affecting recombination.
Recombination at these complexes can be tailored for device optimization.
Abstract
Wurtzite GaN is a promising material for applications in photoconductive THz radiation sources. For this purpose, the photogenerated charge carriers lifetime of the order of tenths of picoseconds is required. A controllable lifetime reduction may be considered to achieve by creating recombination active stable dislocation complexes formed by mobile basal-plane Shockley partial dislocations (PDs). In this work, formation pathways and stability of PD complexes in basal planes of wurzite GaN are studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The simulations reveal the formation of stable complexes by attractive interaction of two 30{\deg} or two 90{\deg} PDs with opposite Burgers vectors located in consecutive (0001) planes. Ones formed, these complexes change neither their positions, not the atomic configurations during simulated anneal at 1500 K up to the times of 5 ns. The MD results…
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