4.6 Article

Stacking faults in 3C-, 4H-, and 6H-SiC polytypes investigated by an ab initio supercell method -: art. no. 155204

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 67, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.67.155204

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Recent attempts to make SiC diodes have revealed a problem with stacking fault expansion in the material, leading to unstable devices. In this paper, we present detailed results from a density-functional supercell calculation on the electronic structure of stacking faults which result from glide of Shockley partials in 3C-, 4H- and 6H-SiC. It was found [Phys. Rev. B 65, 033203 (2002)] that both types of stacking faults in 4H-SiC and two types of stacking faults in 6H-SiC give rise to band states, which are strongly localized (confined within around 10 Angstrom) in the direction orthogonal to the stacking fault plane. Based on estimates of the band offsets between different polytypes and a simple quantum-well theory, we show that it is possible to interpret this one-dimensional localization as a quantum-well confinement effect. We also find that the third type of stacking fault in 6H-SiC and the only stacking fault in 3C-SiC do not give rise to states clearly separated from the band edges, but instead give rise to rather strongly localized band states with energies very close to the band edges. We argue that these localized near band edge states are created by stacking fault induced changes in the dipole moment associated with the hexagonal symmetry. In addition, we have also calculated the stacking fault energies, using both the supercell method and the simpler ANNNI (axial next nearest-neighbor Ising) model. Both theories agree well with the low stacking fault energies found experimentally.

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