4.6 Article

Flexoelectronic doping of degenerate silicon and correlated electron behavior

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 105, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.105.245112

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In the metal/degenerately doped silicon bilayer structure, the interfacial flexoelectric effect leads to charge carrier transfer from metal layer to the silicon layer, resulting in an electronically polarized silicon layer with magnetism. By controlling the flexoelectronic doping, material behavior can be engineered for quantum, spintronics, and electronics applications in semiconductor materials.
In the metal/degenerately doped silicon bilayer structure, the interfacial flexoelectric effect due to strain gradient leads to charge carrier transfer from metal layer to the silicon layer. This excess charge carrier concentration is called flexoelectronic doping or flexoelectronic charge transfer, which gives rise to an electronically polarized (order of magnitude larger than ferroelectric materials) silicon layer. In the transport measurements, the charge carrier concentration in silicon is found to increase by two orders of magnitude due to flexoelectronic doping, which changes the Fermi level and the Hall response. The flexoelectronic charge accumulation modifies the electron-electron and the electron-phonon coupling, which gives rise to Mott metal-insulator transition and magnetism of phonons, respectively. The coexistence of flexoelectronic polarization and magnetism gives rise to a class of materials called electronic multiferroics or magnetoelectronics. By controlling the flexoelectronic doping, material behavior can potentially be engineered for quantum, spintronics, and electronics applications in semiconductor materials.

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