N-type chalcogenides by ion implantation

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Abstract

Carrier-type reversal to enable the formation of semiconductor p-n junctions is a prerequisite for many electronic applications. Chalcogenide glasses are p-type semiconductors and their applications have been limited by the extraordinary difficulty in obtaining n-type conductivity. The ability to form chalcogenide glass p-n junctions could improve the performance of phase-change memory and thermoelectric devices and allow the direct electronic control of nonlinear optical devices. Previously, carrier-type reversal has been restricted to the GeCh (Ch=S, Se, Te) family of glasses, with very high Bi or Pb 'doping' concentrations (∼5-11 at.%), incorporated during higherature glass melting. Here we report the first n-type doping of chalcogenide glasses by ion implantation of Bi into GeTe and GaLaSO amorphous films, demonstrating rectification and photocurrent in a Bi-implanted GaLaSO device. The electrical doping effect of Bi is observed at a 100 times lower concentration than for Bi melt-doped GeCh glasses.

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Hughes, M. A., Fedorenko, Y., Gholipour, B., Yao, J., Lee, T. H., Gwilliam, R. M., … Curry, R. J. (2014). N-type chalcogenides by ion implantation. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6346

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