Shallow Acceptor State in Mg-Doped CuAlO2 and Its Effect on Electrical and Optical Properties: An Experimental and First-Principles Study.
Ruijian LiuYong-Feng LiBin YaoZhanhui DingYuhong JiangLei MengRui DengLigong ZhangZhenzhong ZhangHaifeng ZhaoLei LiuPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Shallow acceptor states in Mg-doped CuAlO2 and their effect on structural, electrical, and optical properties are investigated by combining first-principles calculations and experiments. First-principles calculations demonstrate that Mg substituting at the Al site in CuAlO2 plays the role of shallow acceptor and has a low formation energy, suggesting that Mg doping can increase hole concentration and improve the conductivity of CuAlO2. Hall effect measurements indicate that the hole concentration of the Mg-doped CuAlO2 thin film is 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of undoped CuAlO2. The best room temperature conductivity of 8.0 × 10-2 S/cm is obtained. A band gap widening is observed in the optical absorption spectra of Mg-doped CuAlO2, which is well supported by the results from first-principles electronic structure calculations.