Design Principle for Tetrahedral Semiconductors and Their Functional Derivatives: Cation Stabilizing Charged Cluster Network
Jingjing Min, Jingwen Zhai, Tieshuan Dong, Dangdang Xu, Yuli Yan, Christos S. Garoufalis, Sotirios Baskoutas, Zaiping Zeng, Yu Jia
Abstract
Colloidal quantum dots (QDs) of groups II-VI and III-V are key ingredients for next-generation light-emitting devices. Yet, many of them are heavy-element-containing or indirect bandgap, causing limited choice of environmental friendly efficient light-emitting materials. Herein, we resolve this issue by exploring potential derivatives of the parent semiconductors, thus expanding the material space. The key to success is the discovery of a principle for designing those materials, namely, cation stabilizing charged cluster network. Guided by this principle, three novel categories of cubic materials have been predicted, namely, porous binary compounds, I-II-VI ternary compounds, and I-II-III-V quaternary compounds. Using first-principles calculations, 65 realistic highly stable candidate materials have been theoretically screened. Their structural and compositional diversity enables a wide tunability of emitting wavelength from far-infrared to ultraviolet region. This work enriches the family of tetrahedral semiconductors and derivatives, which may be of interest for a broad field of optoelectronic applications.