Resonant states and nuclear dynamics in solid-state systems: the case of silicon-hydrogen bond dissociation
Woncheol Lee, Mark E. Turiansky, Dominic Waldh\"or, Byounghak Lee, Tibor Grasser, Chris G. Van de Walle

TL;DR
This paper develops a non-adiabatic theoretical framework to understand silicon-hydrogen bond dissociation in solid-state systems, crucial for semiconductor device stability, by explicitly obtaining diabatic states from first-principles calculations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to obtain diabatic states in solid-state systems using a partitioning scheme applied to first-principles Hamiltonians, enabling detailed analysis of bond dissociation processes.
Findings
Bond dissociation occurs via electrons occupying antibonding states.
Excited-state potentials cause rapid hydrogen atom movement.
Dissociation probability can be estimated using the MGR model.
Abstract
Bond breaking in the presence of highly energetic carriers is central to many important phenomena in physics and chemistry, including radiation damage, hot-carrier degradation, activation of dopant-hydrogen complexes in semiconductors, and photocatalysis. Describing these processes from first principles has remained an elusive goal. Here we introduce a comprehensive theoretical framework for the dissociation process, emphasizing the need for a non-adiabatic approach. We benchmark the results for the case of silicon-hydrogen bond dissocation, a primary process for hot-carrier degradation. Passivation of Si dangling bonds by hydrogen is vital in all Si devices because it eliminates electrically active mid-gap states; understanding the mechanism for dissociation of these bonds is therefore crucial for device technology. While the need for a non-adiabatic approach has been previously…
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