Abstract

The ability to tune band gaps of semiconductors is important for many optoelectronics applications including photocatalysis. A common approach to this is doping, but this often has the disadvantage of introducing defect states in the electronic structure that can result in poor charge mobility and increased recombination losses. In this work, density functional theory calculations are used to understand how co-doping and solid solution formation can allow tuning of semiconductor band gaps through indirect effects. The addition of ZnS to GaP alters the local environments of the Ga and P atoms, resulting in shifts in the energies of the P and Ga states that form the valence and conduction band edges, and hence changes the band gap without altering which atoms form the band edges, providing an explanation for previous experimental observations. Similarly, N doping of ZnO is known from previous experimental work to reduce the band gap and increase visible-light absorption; here we show that, when co-doped with Al, the Al changes the local environment of the N atoms, providing further control of the band gap without introducing new states within the band gap or at the band edges, while also providing an energetically more favourable state than N-doped ZnO. Replacing Al with elements of different electronegativity is an additional tool for band gap tuning, since the different electronegativities correspond to different effects on the N local environment. The consistency in the parameters identified here that control the band gaps across the various systems studied indicates some general concepts that can be applied in tuning the band gaps of semiconductors, without or only minimally affecting charge mobility.

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