APL Materials (Jun 2022)

How much gallium do we need for a p-type Cu(In,Ga)Se2?

  • Omar Ramírez,
  • Evandro Martin Lanzoni,
  • Ricardo G. Poeira,
  • Thomas P. Weiss,
  • Renaud Leturcq,
  • Alex Redinger,
  • Susanne Siebentritt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0091676
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
pp. 061108 – 061108-7

Abstract

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Doping in the chalcopyrite Cu(In,Ga)Se2 is determined by intrinsic point defects. In the ternary CuInSe2, both N-type conductivity and P-type conductivity can be obtained depending on the growth conditions and stoichiometry: N-type is obtained when grown Cu-poor, Se-poor, and alkali-free. CuGaSe2, on the other hand, is found to be always a P-type semiconductor that seems to resist all kinds of N-type doping, no matter whether it comes from native defects or extrinsic impurities. In this work, we study the N-to-P transition in Cu-poor Cu(In,Ga)Se2 single crystals in dependence of the gallium content. Our results show that Cu(In,Ga)Se2 can still be grown as an N-type semiconductor until the gallium content reaches the critical concentration of 15%–19%, where the N-to-P transition occurs. Furthermore, trends in the Seebeck coefficient and activation energies extracted from temperature-dependent conductivity measurements demonstrate that the carrier concentration drops by around two orders of magnitude near the transition concentration. Our proposed model explains the N-to-P transition based on the differences in formation energies of donor and acceptor defects caused by the addition of gallium.