September 11, 2009
Journal Article

Formation and properties of defects and small vacancy clusters in SiC: Ab initio calculations

Abstract

Large-scale ab initio simulation methods have been employed to investigate the configurations and properties of defects in SiC. Atomic structures, formation energies and binding energies of small vacancy clusters have also been studied as a function of cluster size, and their relative stabilities are determined. The calculated formation energies of point defects are in good agreement with previously theoretical calculations. The results show that the most stable configuration of a di-vacancy cluster consists of two C vacancies located at second nearest neighbor sites, while a di-vacancy with two Si vacancies is not stable and may dissociate at room temperature. In general, the formation energies of small vacancy clusters increase with size, but the formation energies for clusters with a Si vacancy and n C vacancies (VSi-nVC) are much smaller than those with a C vacancy and n Si vacancies (VC-nVSi). These results demonstrate that the VSi-nVC clusters are more stable than the VC-nVSi clusters in SiC, and provide possible nucleation sites for larger vacancy clusters or voids to grow. For these small vacancy clusters, the binding energy decreases with increasing cluster size, and ranges from 2.5 to 4.6 eV. These results indicate that the small vacancy clusters in SiC are stable at temperatures up to 1900 K, which is consistent with experimental observations.

Revised: September 14, 2010 | Published: September 11, 2009

Citation

Gao F., W.J. Weber, H.Y. Xiao, and X.T. Zu. 2009. Formation and properties of defects and small vacancy clusters in SiC: Ab initio calculations. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research. Section B, Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 267, no. 18:2995-2998. PNNL-SA-67046. doi:10.1016/j.nimb.2009.06.018