Title: The crystal structure of the III-V semiconductors
1The crystal structure of the III-V semiconductors
Diamond and Zincblende Lattices
Unit cells for silicon (Si) and gallium arsenide
(GaAs) Silicon - diamond lattice GaAs -
zincblende (cubic zinc sulfide) lattice (most
other III-V and many II-VI semiconductors have
zincblende lattice)Diamond and zincblende lattice
based on tetragonal pattern of bonds from each
atom to nearest neighbors-two interlocking
facecentered- cubic lattices lattice parameter
(or constant), a- repeat length of the unit
cells e. g., GaAs, a 5.65 Ã… (Angstroms) 0.565
nm.
2The band structure ?
3First Brillouin zone E vs. k banddiagram of
zincblende semiconductors
- One relevant conduction band is
- formed from S- like atomic orbitals
- unit cell part of wavefunction is
- approximately spherically symmetric.
- The three upper valence bands are
- formed from (three) P- like orbitals
- and the spin-orbit interaction splits off
- lowest, split-off hole (i. e., valence)
- band. The remaining two hole bands
- have the same energy (degenerate)
- at zone center, but their curvature is
- different, forming a heavy hole (hh)
- band (broad), and a light hole (lh)
- band (narrower)
4Compound Semiconductors (alloys)
- For optoelectronics, most devices are fabricated
ofcompound - semiconductors particularly III-V materials made
from - Group III (Al, Ga, In) and
- Group V (N, P, As, Sb) elements
- Sometimes Si and Ge (Group IV) are used as
photodetectors - Sometimes II-VI (e.g. ZnSe) and IV-VI materials
(e.g., PbTe) - Alloys of compound semiconductors used
extensively to adjust the basic materials
properties, e.g., lattice constant,
bandgap,refractive index, optical emission or
detection wavelength - EXAMPLE
- InxGa1- xAs (where x is the mole fraction of
indium) - InxGa1- xAs is not strictly crystalline because
not every unit cell - is identical (random III site location), but we
treat such alloys as - crystalline to a first approximation
5The Human eye response
Lasers and LEDs for displays or lighting must
emit in the 430-670 nm wavelength region
(bandgaps of 3.0-1.9 eV).
6Technologically Available Materials
7Some of the applacations
Large Area, Full Color Displays
LED Traffic Lights
8the first principles calculation guess first
compare charge convergence
new
9Empirical tight binding
H?v lt
H?v-ES?v 0
10The Hamiltonian in sp3d2
11The equation came from ETB
12Volume optimization for InN by wien2K
13Volume optimization for InAs by wien2K
14Volume optimization for InSb by wien2K
15Band structure of InN by wien2k
16Band structure of InAs by wien2k
17Band structure of InSb by wien2k
18Band structure of InN by ETB
19Density of states for InN
20Band structure of InAs by ETB
21Density of states for InAs
22Band structure of InSb by ETB
23Density of states for InSb
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