Theory of magnetic 3d transition metal dopants in gallium nitride

PHYSICAL REVIEW B(2023)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Using first-principles density functional theory (DFT) methods and size-converged supercell models, we analyze the electronic and atomic structure of magnetic 3d transition metal dopants in cubic gallium nitride (c-GaN). All stable defect charge states for Fermi levels across the full experimental gap are computed using a method that correctly resolves the boundary condition problem (without a jellium approximation) and eliminates finite-size errors. The resulting computed defect levels are not impacted by the DFT band-gap problem, they span a width consistent with the experimental gap rather than being limited to the single-particle DFT gap. All defects with electronically degenerate (half-metal) Td ground states are found to have significant distortions, relaxing to D2d structures driven by the Jahn-Teller instability. This leads to insulating ground states for all substitutional 3d dopants, refuting claims in the literature that +U or hybrid functional methods are required to avoid artificial half-metal results. Interpreting the dn atomic occupations within a crystal-field model and exchange splittings, we identify a systematic trend across the 3d transition metal series. Approaches to estimate excited-state energies as observed in photoluminescence from defect centers are assessed, ranging from a Koopmans-type single-particle energy interpretation to relaxed total energy differences in fully self-consistent DFT. The single-particle interpretations are found to be qualitatively predictive and the calculations are consistent with the limited available experimental data across the 3d dopant series. These results provide a baseline understanding to guide future studies and a conceptual framework within which to interpret new results.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要