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$\textit{Ab initio}$ density functional theory study on the atomic and electronic structure of GaP/Si(001) heterointerfaces

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Romanyuk, O 
Supplie, O 
Susi, T 
May, MM 
Hannappel, T 

Abstract

The atomic and electronic band structures of GaP/Si(001) heterointerfaces were investigated by ab initio density functional theory calculations. Relative total energies of abrupt interfaces and mixed interfaces with Si substitutional sites within a few GaP layers were derived. It was found that Si diffusion into GaP layers above the first interface layer is energetically unfavorable. An interface with Si/Ga substitution sites in the first layer above the Si substrate is energetically the most stable one in thermodynamic equilibrium. The electronic band structure of the epitaxial GaP/Si(001) heterostructure terminated by the (2×2) surface reconstruction consists of surface and interface electronic states in the common band gap of two semiconductors. The dispersion of the states is anisotropic and differs for the abrupt Si-Ga, Si-P, and mixed interfaces. Ga 2p, P 2p, and Si 2p core-level binding-energy shifts were computed for the abrupt and the lowest-energy heterointerface structures. Negative and positive core-level shifts due to heterovalent bonds at the interface are predicted for the abrupt Si-Ga and Si-P interfaces, respectively. The distinct features in the heterointerface electronic structure and in the core-level shifts open new perspectives in the experimental characterization of buried polar-on-nonpolar semiconductor heterointerfaces.

Description

Keywords

51 Physical Sciences, 34 Chemical Sciences, 3406 Physical Chemistry, 5104 Condensed Matter Physics

Journal Title

Physical Review B

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2469-9950
2469-9969

Volume Title

94

Publisher

American Physical Society
Sponsorship
O.R. acknowledges funding from the Czech Science Foundation (Project No. 16-34856L). The access to the MetaCentrum computing facilities provided under Project No. LM2010005 funded by the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports of the Czech Republic is highly appreciated. Parts of this work were supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, Project No. HA 3096/4-2) and by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, Project No. 03SF0404A). M.M.M. acknowledges funding from the fellowship program of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. T.S. acknowledges funding from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF; Project No. P 28322-N36) and ample computational resources from the Vienna Scientific Cluster.