Clustering of hydrogen, phosphorus, and vacancies in diamond - A density functional theory analysis
At a Glance
Section titled âAt a Glanceâ| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2018-08-29 |
| Journal | Physical review. B./Physical review. B |
| Authors | Kamil Czelej, Marcin Roland ZemĹa, Paulina KamiĹska, Piotr Ĺpiewak, Krzysztof J. KurzydĹowski |
| Institutions | Warsaw University of Technology |
| Citations | 31 |
Abstract
Section titled âAbstractâPhosphorus-doped $n$-type diamond is currently one of the most promising wide-band-gap materials for next-generation high-power electronics and optoelectronics. Artificial diamond growth methods such as chemical vapor deposition involve hydrogen-containing precursors; therefore, the hydrogen atoms can be simultaneously introduced into the diamond lattice as a contamination and form complexes with other defects. In this work, we used the spin-polarized, hybrid density functional theory method to investigate the electronic structure, stability, and magnetic and optical properties of phosphorus, vacancy, and hydrogen clusters in diamond. Our results indicate a thermodynamic driving force for the formation of previously unidentified phosphorus-vacancy-hydrogen complexes that can be electrically, magnetically, or optically active centers. We found an unusual extremely large hyperfine coupling with the $^{31}\mathrm{P}$ nuclei ($A>2$ GHz) for some of the investigated defects that requires further experimental verification. Finally, we demonstrate that the ${\text{PV}}_{2}{\text{H}}^{0}$ complex has two metastable triplets between the ground- and excited-state singlets, and it may exhibit a highly selective spin decay channel to a ground state, which makes the defect a promising candidate for realizing long-living solid-state quantum memory. These results provide deep insight into the donor compensation effect associated with vacancy-related clusters, and they may be useful in future identification of P-related defects suitable for quantum information processing applications.