First-principles investigation of polytypic defects in InP

Sci Rep. 2022 Nov 16;12(1):19724. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-24239-w.

Abstract

In this paper we study polytypic defects in Indium Phosphide (InP) using the complementary first-principles methods of density functional theory and non-equilibrium Greens functions. Specifically we study interfaces between the ground state Zincblende crystal structure and the meta-stable Wurtzite phase, with an emphasis on the rotational twin plane defect, which forms due to the polytypic nature of InP. We found that the transition of the band structure across the interface is anisotropic and lasts 7 nm (3.5 nm). Due to this, a crystal-phase quantum well would require a minimal width of 10 nm, which eliminates rotational twin planes as possible quantum wells. We also found that for conducting current, the interfaces increase conductivity along the defect-plane ([11[Formula: see text]]), whereas due to real growth limitations, despite the interfaces reducing conductivity across the defect-plane ([111]), we found that a high degree of polytypic defects are still desirable. This was argued to be the case, due to a higher fraction of Wurtzite segments in a highly phase-intermixed system.