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Atom Substitution Defects of Hexagonal Boron Phosphide Suppress Charge Recombination.

Lili XuAolei WangBingwen LiJin ZhaoHai-Bo ZengShengli Zhang
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
Point defects, during e-h recombination, are a key factor in impacting optoelectronic device performance. Using nonadiabatic molecular dynamics (NAMD), here we investigate the nonradiative recombination of pristine, missing atom defects, including phosphorus vacancies ( V P ) and phosphorus and boron vacancies ( V BP ), and atom substitution defects, containing boron on the phosphorus site (B P ) and phosphorus on the boron site (P B ) of 2D monolayer hexagonal boron phosphide (h-BP). Carrier dynamics in the pristine h-BP and the defect engineered systems reveal that atom substitution defects B P and P B can suppress e-h nonradiative recombination. This is caused by the introduction of several low-frequency phonons in defect states. Electron-phonon coupling between the electronic state and these low-frequency phonons shortens the decoherence time and the nonadiabatic coupling. Also, the atom substitution systems with one defect state introduce fewer carrier recombination channels. Such a mechanism can be extended to other 2D materials with the same structure as h-BP.
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