4.5 Review

Design and exploration of semiconductors from first principles: A review of recent advances

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS EXPRESS
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.7567/APEX.11.060101

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. MEXT Elements Strategy Initiative to Form Core Research Center program
  2. Creation of Life Innovation Materials for Interdisciplinary and International Researcher Development project from MEXT
  3. JSPS [17H01318, 15H05541]
  4. PRESTO [JPMJPR16N4]
  5. Support Program for Starting Up Innovation Hub MI2I from JST, Japan

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Recent first-principles approaches to semiconductors are reviewed, with an emphasis on theoretical insight into emerging materials and in silico exploration of as-yet-unreported materials. As relevant theory and methodologies have developed, along with computer performance, it is now feasible to predict a variety of material properties ab initio at the practical level of accuracy required for detailed understanding and elaborate design of semiconductors; these material properties include (i) fundamental bulk properties such as band gaps, effective masses, dielectric constants, and optical absorption coefficients; (ii) the properties of point defects, including native defects, residual impurities, and dopants, such as donor, acceptor, and deep-trap levels, and formation energies, which determine the carrier type and density; and (iii) absolute and relative band positions, including ionization potentials and electron affinities at semiconductor surfaces, band offsets at heterointerfaces between dissimilar semiconductors, and Schottky barrier heights at metal-semiconductor interfaces, which are often discussed systematically using band alignment or lineup diagrams. These predictions from first principles have made it possible to elucidate the characteristics of semiconductors used in industry, including group III-V compounds such as GaN, GaP, and GaAs and their alloys with related Al and In compounds; amorphous oxides, represented by In-Ga-Zn-O; transparent conductive oxides (TCOs), represented by In2O3, SnO2, and ZnO; and photovoltaic absorber and buffer layer materials such as CdTe and CdS among group II-VI compounds and chalcopyrite CuInSe2, CuGaSe2, and CuIn(1-x)GaxSe(2) (CIGS) alloys, in addition to the prototypical elemental semiconductors Si and Ge. Semiconductors attracting renewed or emerging interest have also been investigated, for instance, divalent tin compounds, including SnO and SnS; wurtzite-derived ternary compounds such as ZnSnN2 and CuGaO2; perovskite oxides such as SrTiO3 and BaSnO3; and organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites, represented by CH3NH3PbI3. Moreover, the deployment of first-principles calculations allows us to predict the crystal structure, stability, and properties of as-yet-unreported materials. Promising materials have been explored via high-throughput screening within either publicly available computational databases or unexplored composition and structure space. Reported examples include the identification of nitride semiconductors, TCOs, solar cell photoabsorber materials, and photocatalysts, some of which have been experimentally verified. Machine learning in combination with first-principles calculations has emerged recently as a technique to accelerate and enhance in silico screening. A blend of computation and experimentation with data science toward the development of materials is often referred to as materials informatics and is currently attracting growing interest. (c) 2018 The Japan Society of Applied Physics

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