4.5 Article

Accuracy of dielectric-dependent hybrid functionals in the prediction of optoelectronic properties of metal oxide semiconductors: a comprehensive comparison with many-body GW and experiments

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-648X/aa9725

Keywords

transition metal oxides; dielectric-dependent hybrid functionals; GW; defects in oxides; oxide surfaces and interfaces

Funding

  1. NSF under the NSF center [NSF-CHE-1305124]
  2. Italian MIUR through the PRIN Project [2015K7FZLH]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's HORIZON research and innovation programme (ERC Grant) [647020]
  4. EU [654360]

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Understanding the electronic structure of metal oxide semiconductors is crucial to their numerous technological applications, such as photoelectrochemical water splitting and solar cells. The needed experimental and theoretical knowledge goes beyond that of pristine bulk crystals, and must include the effects of surfaces and interfaces, as well as those due to the presence of intrinsic defects (e.g. oxygen vacancies), or dopants for band engineering. In this review, we present an account of the recent efforts in predicting and understanding the optoelectronic properties of oxides using ab initio theoretical methods. In particular, we discuss the performance of recently developed dielectric-dependent hybrid functionals, providing a comparison against the results of many-body GW calculations, including G(0)W(0) as well as more refined approaches, such as quasiparticle self-consistent GW. We summarize results in the recent literature for the band gap, the band level alignment at surfaces, and optical transition energies in defective oxides, including wide gap oxide semiconductors and transition metal oxides. Correlated transition metal oxides are also discussed. For each method, we describe successes and drawbacks, emphasizing the challenges faced by the development of improved theoretical approaches. The theoretical section is preceded by a critical overview of the main experimental techniques needed to characterize the optoelectronic properties of semiconductors, including absorption and reflection spectroscopy, photoemission, and scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS).

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