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Giant modulation of the electron mobility in semiconductor Bi$_2$O$_2$Se via incipient ferroelectric phase transition

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 Added by Wenbin Li
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We discover that, in the layered semiconductor Bi$_2$O$_2$Se, an incipient ferroelectric transition endows the material a surprisingly large dielectric permittivity, providing it with a robust protection against mobility degradation by extrinsic Coulomb scattering. Based on state-of-the-art first-principles calculations, we show that the low-temperature electron mobility of Bi$_2$O$_2$Se, taking into account both electron-phonon and ionized impurity scattering, can reach an unprecedented level of $10^5$ to $10^7$ cm$^2$V$^{-1}$s$^{-1}$ over a wide range of realistic doping levels. Moreover, a small elastic strain of 1.7% can drive Bi$_2$O$_2$Se toward the ferroelectric phase transition, which further induces a giant increase in the permittivity, enabling the strain-tuning of carrier mobility by orders of magnitude. These results open a new avenue for the discovery of high-mobility layered semiconductors via phase and dielectric engineering.



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Bi$_2$O$_2$Se is a promising material for next-generation semiconducting electronics. It exhibits premature metallicity on the introduction of a tiny amount of electrons, the physics behind which remains elusive. Here we report on transport and dielectric measurements in Bi$_2$O$_2$Se single crystals at various carrier densities. The temperature-dependent resistivity ($rho$) indicates a smooth evolution from the semiconducting to the metallic state. The critical concentration for the metal-insulator transition (MIT) to occur is extraordinarily low ($n_textrm{c}sim10^{16}$ cm$^{-3}$). The relative permittivity of the insulating sample is huge ($epsilon_textrm{r}approx155(10)$) and varies slowly with temperature. Combined with the light effective mass, a long effective Bohr radius ($a_textrm{B}^*approx36(2)$ $textrm{nm}$) is derived, which provides a reasonable interpretation of the metallic prematurity according to Motts criterion for MITs. The high electron mobility ($mu$) at low temperatures may result from the screening of ionized scattering centers due to the huge $epsilon_textrm{r}$. Our findings shed light on the electron dynamics in two dimensional (2D) Bi$_2$O$_2$Se devices.
Semiconductor Bi$_2$O$_2$Se nanolayers of high crystal quality have been realized via epitaxial growth. These two-dimensional (2D) materials possess excellent electron transport properties with potential application in nanoelectronics. It is also strongly expected that the 2D Bi$_2$O$_2$Se nanolayers could be of an excellent material platform for developing spintronic and topological quantum devices, if the presence of strong spin-orbit interaction in the 2D materials can be experimentally demonstrated. Here, we report on experimental determination of the strength of spin-orbit interaction in Bi$_2$O$_2$Se nanoplates through magnetotransport measurements. The nanoplates are epitaxially grown by chemical vapor deposition and the magnetotransport measurements are performed at low temperatures. The measured magnetoconductance exhibits a crossover behavior from weak antilocalization to weak localization at low magnetic fields with increasing temperature or decreasing back gate voltage. We have analyzed this transition behavior of the magnetoconductance based on an interference theory which describes the quantum correction to the magnetoconductance of a 2D system in the presence of spin-orbit interaction. Dephasing length and spin relaxation length are extracted from the magnetoconductance measurements. Comparing to other semiconductor nanostructures, the extracted relatively short spin relaxation length of ~150 nm indicates the existence of strong spin-orbit interaction in Bi$_2$O$_2$Se nanolayers.
97 - Hai Lin , Jin Si , Xiyu Zhu 2018
By using solid-state reactions, we successfully synthesize new oxyselenides CsV$_2$Se$_{2-x}$O (x = 0, 0.5). These compounds containing V$_2$O planar layers with a square lattice crystallize in the CeCr$_2$Si$_2$C structure with the space group of $P4/mmm$. Another new compound V$_2$Se$_2$O which crystallizes in space group $I4/mmm$ is fabricated by topochemical deintercalation of cesium from CsV$_2$Se$_2$O powder with iodine in tetrahydrofuran(THF). Resistivity measurements show a semiconducting behavior for CsV$_2$Se$_2$O, while a metallic behavior for CsV$_2$Se$_{1.5}$O, and an insulating feature for V$_2$Se$_2$O. A charge- or spin-density wave-like anomaly has been observed at 168 K for CsV$_2$Se$_2$O and 150 K for CsV$_2$Se$_{1.5}$O, respectively. And these anomalies are also confirmed by the magnetic susceptibility measurements. The resistivity in V$_2$Se$_2$O exhibits an anomalous log(1/$T$) temperature dependence, which is similar to the case in parent phase or very underdoped cuprates indicating the involvement of strong correlation. Magnetic susceptibility measurements show that the magnetic moment per V-site in V$_2$Se$_2$O is much larger than that of CsV$_2$Se$_{2-x}$O, which again suggests the correlation induced localization effect in the former.
We report spin- and angle-resolved photoemission studies of a topological insulator from the infinitely adaptive series between elemental Bi and Bi$_2$Se$_3$. The compound, based on Bi$_4$Se$_3$, is a 1:1 natural superlattice of alternating Bi$_2$ layers and Bi$_2$Se$_3$ layers; the inclusion of S allows the growth of large crystals, with the formula Bi$_4$Se$_{2.6}$S$_{0.4}$. The crystals cleave along the interfaces between the Bi$_2$ and Bi$_2$Se$_3$ layers, with the surfaces obtained having alternating Bi or Se termination. The resulting terraces, observed by photoemission electron microscopy, create avenues suitable for the study of one-dimensional topological physics. The electronic structure, determined by spin- and angle- resolved photoemission spectroscopy, shows the existence of a surface state that forms a large, hexagonally shaped Fermi surface around the $Gamma$ point of the surface Brillouin zone, with the spin structure indicating that this material is a topological insulator.
Three-dimensional topological insulators (3D-TIs) possess a specific topological order of electronic bands, resulting in gapless surface states via bulk-edge correspondence. Exotic phenomena have been realized in ferromagnetic TIs, such as the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect with a chiral edge conduction and a quantized value of the Hall resistance ${R_{yx}}$. Here, we report on the emergence of distinct topological phases in paramagnetic Fe-doped (Bi,Sb)${_2}$Se${_3}$ heterostructures with varying structure architecture, doping, and magnetic and electric fields. Starting from a 3D-TI, a two-dimensional insulator appears at layer thicknesses below a critical value, which turns into an Anderson insulator for Fe concentrations sufficiently large to produce localization by magnetic disorder. With applying a magnetic field, a topological transition from the Anderson insulator to the QAH state occurs, which is driven by the formation of an exchange gap owing to a giant Zeeman splitting and reduced magnetic disorder. Topological phase diagram of (Bi,Sb)${_2}$Se${_3}$ allows exploration of intricate interplay of topological protection, magnetic disorder, and exchange splitting.
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