Litcius/Paper detail

New inversion boundary structure in Sb-doped ZnO predicted by DFT calculations and confirmed by experimental HRTEM

Vesna Ribić, Aleksander Rečnik, Matej Komelj, Anton Kokalj, Zorica Branković, Mario Zlatović, Goran Branković

2020Acta Materialia27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Today, ab-initio calculations are becoming a powerful tool to perform virtual experiments that have the capacity to predict and to reproduce experimentally observed non-periodic features, such as interfaces, that are responsible for quantum properties of materials. In our paper we investigate 2D quantum-well structures, known as inversion boundaries (IB). Combining atomistic modeling, DFT calculations and HRTEM analysis we provide a new fundamental insight into the structure and stability of Sb-rich basal-plane IBs in ZnO. DFT screening for potential IB model was based on the known stacking deviations in originating wurtzite structure. The results show that the model with Aβ−Bα−AβC−γB−βC sequence (IB3) is the most stable translation for Sb-doping, as opposed to previously accepted Aβ−Bα−AβC−γA−αC (IB2) model. The key to the stability of IB structures has been found to lie in their cationic stacking. We show that the energies of constituting stacking segments can be used to predict the stability of new IB structures without the need of further ab-initio calculations. DFT optimized models of IBs accurately predict the experimentally observed IB structures with lateral relaxations down to a precision of ~1 pm. The newly determined cation sublattice expansions for experimentally confirmed IB2 and IB3 models, ΔIB(Zn-Zn) are +81 pm and +77 pm, whereas the corresponding O-sublattice contractions ΔIB(O-O) are –53 pm and –57 pm, respectively. The refined structures will help to solve open questions related to their role in electron transport, phonon scattering, p-type conductivity, affinity of dopants to generate IBs and the underlying formation mechanisms, whereas the excellent match between the calculations and experiment demonstrated in our study opens new perspectives for prediction of such properties from first principles.

Topics & Concepts

Wurtzite crystal structureStackingMaterials scienceAb initioHigh-resolution transmission electron microscopyDensity functional theoryAb initio quantum chemistry methodsCondensed matter physicsCrystallographyMolecular physicsComputational chemistryMoleculeNanotechnologyPhysicsTransmission electron microscopyZincChemistryNuclear magnetic resonanceQuantum mechanicsMetallurgyZnO doping and propertiesGa2O3 and related materialsCopper-based nanomaterials and applications