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Next: Acknowledgements Up: THEORY OF GOLD-HYDROGEN COMPLEXES Previous: The substitutional Au centre

Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline346

We investigated the Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline346 complexes when H lies both at anti-bonding sites outside the nearest neighbour shell of Si atoms to the impurity, and inside the shell. Similar sized clusters were used as in the Au defect discussed above.

For the tex2html_wrap_inline522 Au-H defect, the H atom lies near a bond centred site as illustrated in Fig. 2. This configuration is more stable than the AB one by tex2html_wrap_inline524  eV. The Au-H and H-Si lengths are 1.78 and 1.57 Å respectively with an Au-H-Si angle of 118 tex2html_wrap_inline404 . The difference in energy between a configuration where the H atom is constrained to lie along [100] with tex2html_wrap_inline374 symmetry is 0.15 eV and this represents an estimate of the energy barrier to reorientation.

The tex2html_wrap_inline472 level (Fig. 1) now contains four electrons and is split and displaced downwards in the gap by the proton. Inevitably, this will decrease the donor and deepen the acceptor levels -- as observed for G2 and G4 --, and encourages the possibility of a second acceptor level. The Slater method locates the acceptor (-/0) level at 0.63 eV which is the same as that of Au. This agrees with the assignment of the mid-gap G4 level. A second acceptor (-2/-) level is found at tex2html_wrap_inline536  eV and about 0.17 eV deeper that the (-2/-) G1 level. The donor (0/+) level at tex2html_wrap_inline542  eV is slightly lower than that of Au at tex2html_wrap_inline492  eV and is 0.17 eV above G2. Given that the levels are generally deeper than about 0.1-0.2 eV, the results support the finding that the G1, G2, G4 levels all arise from the same defect which contains just one H atom. In addition, they support the claim that the G3 level at tex2html_wrap_inline426  eV cannot arise from this defect.

  
Table 2: Bond lengths for the different complexes. The bottom row of the table gives the distance (d) of the Au atom from the centre of the cluster. Bond lengths in Å.

Adding additional H atoms to the defect will fill the tex2html_wrap_inline472 level and shift it downwards (Fig. 1). The level becomes filled for Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline366 . The H atoms prefer to be inside the vacancy as the energy of this structure is 0.8 eV below that of the outside configuration. Two H atoms are strongly bonded to the Si radicals with lengths of 1.50 Å whereas the third is 1.67 Å from a third radical and 1.64 Å from Au. The gold atom is displaced off-site by tex2html_wrap_inline562  Å along [100]. The defect has tex2html_wrap_inline522 and the filled Kohn-Sham levels now are low lying and there are no empty gap levels. Thus the defect cannot act as an acceptor. The donor level as calculated by Slater's method is placed at tex2html_wrap_inline568 eV. Since our method leeds to deeper levels by tex2html_wrap_inline408 0.2 eV than observed, the defect may identify Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline366 with the passive PA complex. This suggests that the Au-H defect is passivated by a direct combination with a mobile hydrogen molecule.

The Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline414 and Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline576 defects are electrically and magnetically active but will not be discussed here. It seems unlikely that the G3 level is one of these defects.

  
Figure 1: One-electron Kohn-Sham eigenvalues in the vicinity of the gap for the Au tex2html_wrap_inline578 -H tex2html_wrap_inline346 complexes in their relaxed configurations, with tex2html_wrap_inline582 . Arrows indicate filled spin states, boxes indicate empty one-electron states (these are only shown in region of the gap).

In conclusion, our calculations have found:

  1. The substitutional Au centre has (0/+) and (0/-) levels within 0.2 eV of the experimental values and a second acceptor level lies close to (and probably in) the conduction band;
  2. The Au-H complex is diamagnetic and more stable with H close to Au near a bond centred configuration. The reorientation energy for Au is close to 0.15 eV;
  3. The Au-H defect has deeper acceptor and more shallow donor levels than Au. We find the (-2/-), (0/-), (0/+) levels within 0.2 eV of those of G1, G2 and G4 which are associated with one defect;
  4. Two further H atoms add to Au-H by saturating two of the Si dangling bonds. The defect is diamagnetic;
  5. Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline366 has no acceptor levels and a shallow donor level. We identify it with the passive defect first detected by Pearton and Tavendale;
  6. Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline414 and Au-H tex2html_wrap_inline576 are electrically and magnetically active defects with deep levels.

 
Figure 2: Relaxed structure of the Au tex2html_wrap_inline578 -H tex2html_wrap_inline346 in Si, n =1,2 and 3. Box edges mark the {100} directions. Note the increasing (Au-H-Si) with increasing number of H atoms.


next up previous
Next: Acknowledgements Up: THEORY OF GOLD-HYDROGEN COMPLEXES Previous: The substitutional Au centre

Antonio Resende
Tue Feb 24 13:21:56 GMT 1998