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Deep vs shallow nature of oxygen vacancies and consequent n -type carrier concentrations in transparent conducting oxides

TLDR
In this paper, the formation and ionization energies of oxygen vacancies in three representative transparent conducting oxides (In 2 O 3, SnO 2, and ZnO) were computed using a hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical embedded cluster approach.
Abstract
The source of n -type conductivity in undoped transparent conducting oxides has been a topic of debate for several decades. The point defect of most interest in this respect is the oxygen vacancy, but there are many conflicting reports on the shallow versus deep nature of its related electronic states. Here, using a hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical embedded cluster approach, we have computed formation and ionization energies of oxygen vacancies in three representative transparent conducting oxides: In 2 O 3 , SnO 2 , and ZnO. We find that, in all three systems, oxygen vacancies form well-localized, compact donors. We demonstrate, however, that such compactness does not preclude the possibility of these states being shallow in nature, by considering the energetic balance between the vacancy binding electrons that are in localized orbitals or in effective-mass-like diffuse orbitals. Our results show that, thermodynamically, oxygen vacancies in bulk In 2 O 3 introduce states above the conduction band minimum that contribute significantly to the observed conductivity properties of undoped samples. For ZnO and SnO 2 , the states are deep, and our calculated ionization energies agree well with thermochemical and optical experiments. Our computed equilibrium defect and carrier concentrations, however, demonstrate that these deep states may nevertheless lead to significant intrinsic n -type conductivity under reducing conditions at elevated temperatures. Our study indicates the importance of oxygen vacancies in relation to intrinsic carrier concentrations not only in In 2 O 3 , but also in SnO 2 and ZnO.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic and thermodynamic properties of native point defects in V2O5: a first-principles study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors carried out first-principles calculations to systematically study the properties of possible native defects in V2O5 using the DFT+U method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do We Need "Ionosorbed" Oxygen Species? (Or, "A Surface Conductivity Model of Gas Sensitivity in Metal Oxides Based on Variable Surface Oxygen Vacancy Concentration").

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an alternative framework of a "surface conductivity" model based on recent advances in theoretical and experimental investigations in solid state physics, and use this framework as a guide toward design rules for future improvement of gas sensor performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dopant-induced cationic bivalency in hierarchical antimony-doped tin oxide nano-particles for room-temperature SO2 sensing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrated how antimony doping in a 3+ state triggers the generation of cationic bivalency in tin oxide-based gas sensors, and it is the quantitative presence of unstable Sn2+ species that determines the fate of SO2-sensing responses by antimony-doped tin oxide gas sensors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid-DFT Modeling of Lattice and Surface Vacancies in MnO

TL;DR: In this paper, the properties of defects in MnO bulk and at (100) surfaces, as used in catalytic applications, using hybrid-level density functional theory (i.e., inclusion of exact exchange within the exchange-correlation evaluation) in a hybrid QM/MM embedded-cluster approach.
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Ultrabroadband density of states of amorphous In-Ga-Zn-O

TL;DR: In this article, the density of states of amorphous-InGaZnOx was measured on thin-film transistors, and the spectral and temporal photoconductive responses classified each sub-gap peak as either electron-donor or acceptor vacancies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient iterative schemes for ab initio total-energy calculations using a plane-wave basis set.

TL;DR: An efficient scheme for calculating the Kohn-Sham ground state of metallic systems using pseudopotentials and a plane-wave basis set is presented and the application of Pulay's DIIS method to the iterative diagonalization of large matrices will be discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Projector augmented-wave method

TL;DR: An approach for electronic structure calculations is described that generalizes both the pseudopotential method and the linear augmented-plane-wave (LAPW) method in a natural way and can be used to treat first-row and transition-metal elements with affordable effort and provides access to the full wave function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Special points for brillouin-zone integrations

TL;DR: In this article, a method for generating sets of special points in the Brillouin zone which provides an efficient means of integrating periodic functions of the wave vector is given, where the integration can be over the entire zone or over specified portions thereof.
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Efficiency of ab-initio total energy calculations for metals and semiconductors using a plane-wave basis set

TL;DR: A detailed description and comparison of algorithms for performing ab-initio quantum-mechanical calculations using pseudopotentials and a plane-wave basis set is presented in this article. But this is not a comparison of our algorithm with the one presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ab initio molecular dynamics for liquid metals.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an ab initio quantum-mechanical molecular-dynamics calculations based on the calculation of the electronic ground state and of the Hellmann-Feynman forces in the local density approximation.
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