2008 Annual Meeting
(646d) First-Principles Theoretical Analysis of Dopant Adsorption and Diffusion on Surfaces of II-VI Compound Semiconductor Nanocrystals
Authors
In this presentation, we report results on dopant adsorption and diffusion on surface facets of ZnSe nanocrystals based on first-principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations within the generalized gradient approximation. In our DFT calculations, we have employed slab supercells, plane-wave basis sets, and ultrasoft pseudopotentials. We have also implemented the nudged elastic band method including a climbing image to construct fully optimized dopant diffusion pathways and obtained accurate saddle-point configurations and activation energy barriers.
Specifically, we have focused on the incorporation of Mn dopant atoms into ZnSe nanocrystals through their surface facets. We found that the (001) facet is the dominant nanocrystal surface for Mn incorporation consistent with previously published findings [S. C. Erwin, et al., Nature 436, 91 (2005)]. Our DFT calculations indicate that the binding energy for Mn adsorption onto various sites of the ZnSe(001)-(2x1) surface increases with increasing dopant surface concentration. This low binding energy at low dopant surface concentration provides an explanation for doping difficulties during nanocrystal growth. In addition, we have analyzed several dopant migration pathways for Mn diffusion on the ZnSe(001)-(2x1) surface. The calculated activation barriers for migration along the Se dimer rows range from 0.17 eV to 0.43 eV, depending upon the dopant surface concentration. Due to the low activation barriers, dopant atoms can migrate fast along the Se dimer rows without substantial surface relaxation. However, migration of the Mn atom across the Se dimer rows from the dimer site (Mn adsorbed onto the Se dimer) to the trough site (Mn adsorbed in the trough between Se dimers), is governed by a high-barrier pathway. At higher dopant surface concentrations, the binding energy for Mn adsorption onto the trough site is greater than that for Mn adsorption onto the dimer site. In conjunction with the high activation barriers for Mn migration in the trough parallel to the Se dimer rows, this implies that migration to a trough site may lead to dopant incorporation into the ZnSe nanocrystal