Electron trapping and impurity segregation without defects: Ab initio study of perfectly rebonded grain boundaries

T. A. Arias and J. D. Joannopoulos
Phys. Rev. B 49, 4525 – Published 15 February 1994
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Abstract

We present the results of an extensive ab initio study of the Σ=5 tilt [310] grain boundary in germanium. We find that the boundary reliably reconstructs to the tetrahedrally bonded network observed in high-resolution electron microscopy experiments without the proliferation of false local minima observed in similar twist boundaries. The reduced density of bonds crossing the grain-boundary plane leads us to conjecture that the boundary may be a preferred fracture interface. Though there are no dangling bonds or miscoordinated sites in the reconstruction, the boundary presents electron-trap states just below the conduction band. Further, we show that lattice relaxation effects are irrelevant to the segregation of impurities to tetrahedrally reconstructed defects and that the interfacial electron-trap states give rise to an electronic frustration mechanism that selectively drives the segregation of only n-type dopants to the boundary.

  • Received 3 September 1993

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.4525

©1994 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

T. A. Arias and J. D. Joannopoulos

  • Physics Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

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Vol. 49, Iss. 7 — 15 February 1994

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