Hole-Doping to a Cu(I)-Based Semiconductor with an Isovalent Cation: Utilizing a Complex Defect as a Shallow Acceptor.
Kosuke MatsuzakiNaoki TsunodaYu KumagaiYalun TangKenji NomuraFumiyasu ObaHideo HosonoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
p-Type doping in Cu(I)-based semiconductors is pivotal for solar cell photoabsorbers and hole transport materials to improve the device performance. Impurity doping is a fundamental technology to overcome the intrinsic limits of hole concentration controlled by native defects. Here, we report that alkali metal impurities are prominent p-type dopants for the Cu(I)-based cation-deficient hole conductors. When the size mismatch with Cu + in the host lattice is increased, these isovalent impurities are preferentially located at interstitial positions to interact with the constituent Cu cations, forming stable impurity-defect complexes. We demonstrate that the Cs impurity in γ-CuI semiconductors enhances hole concentration controllability for single crystals and thin films in the range of 10 13 -10 19 cm -3 . First-principles calculations indicate that the Cs impurity forms impurity-defect complexes that act as shallow acceptors leading to the increased p-type conductivity. This isovalent doping provides an approach for controlled doping into cation-deficient semiconductors through an interaction of impurities with native defects.