Structural simplicity as a restraint on the structure of amorphous silicon

Understanding the structural origins of the properties of amorphous materials remains one of the most important challenges in structural science. In this study, we demonstrate that local “structural simplicity”, embodied by the degree to which atomic environments within a material are similar to eac...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. B 2017-06, Vol.95 (22), p.224108, Article 224108
Hauptverfasser: Cliffe, Matthew J., Bartók, Albert P., Kerber, Rachel N., Grey, Clare P., Csányi, Gábor, Goodwin, Andrew L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the structural origins of the properties of amorphous materials remains one of the most important challenges in structural science. In this study, we demonstrate that local “structural simplicity”, embodied by the degree to which atomic environments within a material are similar to each other, is a powerful concept for rationalizing the structure of amorphous silicon (a-Si) a canonical amorphous material. We show, by restraining a reverse Monte Carlo refinement against pair distribution function (PDF) data to be simpler, that the simplest model consistent with the PDF is a continuous random network (CRN). A further effect of producing a simple model of a-Si is the generation of a (pseudo)gap in the electronic density of states, suggesting that structural homogeneity drives electronic homogeneity. That this method produces models of a-Si that approach the state-of-the-art without the need for chemically specific restraints (beyond the assumption of homogeneity) suggests that simplicity-based refinement approaches may allow experiment-driven structural modeling techniques to be developed for the wide variety of amorphous semiconductors with strong local order.
ISSN:2469-9950
2469-9969
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.95.224108