Synthesis and properties of highly mismatched II–O–VI alloys
Article 2004 en
Authors
KY
K. M. Yu
WS
W. Shan
OD
O. D. Dubón
Abstract
1 min read
Ternary and quaternary dilute II–VI oxides were synthesised using a highly non-equilibrium method: the combination of O ion implantation and pulsed-laser melting. CdOxTe1−x thin films have been produced with x up to 0.015 and with the energy gap reduced by 0.15 eV. Optical transitions corresponding to both the lower (E−) and upper (E+) conduction sub-bands, resulting from the anticrossing interaction between the localised O states and the extended conduction states of the matrix, are clearly observed in quaternary Cd0.6Mn0.4OxTe1−x and Zn0.88Mn0.12OxTe1−x layers. These results have important implications for the existing theoretical models of the electronic structure of the highly mismatched alloys. In Zn1−xMnxTe, where the O level lies below the conduction band edge, it was demonstrated that incorporation of a small amount of oxygen leads to the formation of a narrow, oxygen-derived band of extended states located well below the conduction band edge of the ZnMnTe matrix. The three absorption edges of this material (∼0.73, 1.83 and 2.56 eV) cover the entire solar spectrum providing a material envisioned for multiband, single-junction, high-efficiency photovoltaic devices.
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