4.8 Article

Gated Hall Effect of Nanoplate Devices Reveals Surface-State-Induced Surface Inversion in Iron Pyrite Semiconductor

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages 6754-6760

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nl501942w

Keywords

Gated Hall effect; nanoplate devices; surface states; surface inversion; iron pyrite; solar energy conversion

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, SunShot NextGen PV II program [DE-EE0005330]
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. Research Corporation SciaLog Award for Solar Energy Conversion
  4. UW-Madison Vilas Associate and Romnes Award

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Understanding semiconductor surface states is critical for their applications, but fully characterizing surface electrical properties is challenging. Such a challenge is especially crippling for semiconducting iron pyrite (FeS2), whose potential for solar energy conversion has been suggested to be held back by rich surface states. Here, by taking advantage of the high surface-to-bulk ratio in nanostructures and effective electrolyte gating, we develop a general method to fully characterize both the surface inversion and bulk electrical transport properties for the first time through electrolyte-gated Hall measurements of pyrite nanoplate devices. Our study shows that pyrite is n-type in the bulk and p-type near the surface due to strong inversion and yields the concentrations and mobilities of both bulk electrons and surface holes. Further, solutions of the Poisson equation reveal a high-density of surface holes accumulated in a 1.3 nm thick strong inversion layer and an upward band bending of 0.91.0 eV. This work presents a general methodology for using transport measurements of nanostructures to study both bulk and surface transport properties of semiconductors. It also suggests that high-density of surface states are present on surface of pyrite, which partially explains the universal p-type conductivity and lack of photovoltage in polycrystalline pyrite.

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