4.8 Article

Computational design of direct-bandgap semiconductors that lattice-match silicon

Journal

NATURE
Volume 409, Issue 6816, Pages 69-71

Publisher

MACMILLAN PUBLISHERS LTD
DOI: 10.1038/35051054

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Crystalline silicon is an indirect-bandgap semiconductor, making it an inefficient emitter of light. The successful integration of silicon-based electronics with optical components will therefore require optically active (for example, direct-bandgap) materials that can be grown on silicon with high-quality interfaces. For well ordered materials, this effectively translates into the requirement that such materials lattice-match silicon: lattice mismatch generally causes cracks and poor interface properties once the mismatched overlayer exceeds a very thin critical thickness. But no direct-bandgap semiconductor has yet been produced that can lattice-match silicon, and previously suggested structures(1) pose formidable challenges for synthesis. Much recent work has therefore focused on introducing compliant transition layers between the mismatched components(2-4). Here we propose a more direct solution to integrating silicon electronics with optical components. We have computationally designed two hypothetical direct-bandgap semiconductor alloys, the synthesis of which should be possible through the deposition of specific group-IV precursor molecules(5,6) and which lattice-match silicon to 0.5-1% along lattice planes with low Miller indices. The calculated bandgaps (and hence the frequency of emitted light) lie in the window of minimal absorption in current optical fibres.

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