Role of carbon and hydrogen in limiting n-type doping of monoclinic (AlxGa1-x)2O3
Abstract
We use hybrid density functional calculations to assess n-type doping in monoclinic (AlxGa1-x)2O3 alloys. We focus on Si, the most promising donor dopant, and study the structural properties, formation energies and charge-state transition levels of its various configurations. We also explore the impact of C and H, which are common impurities in metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). In Ga2O3, SiGa is an effective shallow donor, but in Al2O3 SiAl acts as a DX center with a (+/-) transition level in the band gap. Interstitial H acts as a shallow donor in Ga2O3, but behaves as a compensating acceptor in n-type Al2O3. Interpolation indicates that Si is an effective donor in (AlxGa1-x)2O3 up to 70% Al, but it can be compensated by H already at 1% Al. We also assess the diffusivity of H and study complex formation. Sication-H complexes have relatively low binding energies. Substitutional C on a cation site acts as a shallow donor in Ga2O3, but can be stable in a negative charge state in (AlxGa1-x)2O3 when x>5%. Substitutional C on an O site (CO) always acts as an acceptor in n-type (AlxGa1-x)2O3, but will incorporate only under relatively O-poor conditions. CO-H complexes can actually incorporate more easily, explaining observations of C-related compensation in Ga2O3 grown by MOCVD. We also investigate Ccation-H complexes, finding they have high binding energies and act as compensating acceptors when x>56%; otherwise the H just passivates the unintentional C donors. C-H complex formation explains why MOCVD grown Ga2O3 can exhibit record-low free-carrier concentrations, in spite of the unavoidable incorporation of C. Our study highlights that, while Si is a suitable shallow donor in ALGO alloys, control of unintentional impurities is essential to avoid compensation.
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