January 6, 2016
Journal Article

Infrared Optical Absorption in Low-spin Fe2+-doped SrTiO3

Abstract

Band gap engineering in SrTiO3 and related titanate perovskites has long been explored due to the intriguing properties of the materials for photocatalysis and photovoltaic applications. A popular approach in the materials chemistry community is to substitutionally dope aliovalent transition metal ions onto the B site in the lattice to alter the valence band. However, in such a scheme there is limited control over the dopant valence, and compensating defects often form. Here we demonstrate a novel technique to controllably synthesize Fe2+- and Fe3+-doped SrTiO3 thin films without formation of compensating defects by co-doping with La3+ ions on the A site. We stabilize Fe2+-doped films by doping with two La ions for every Fe dopant, and find that the Fe ions exhibit a low-spin electronic configuration, producing optical transitions in the near infrared regime and degenerate doping. The novel electronic states observed here offer a new avenue for band gap engineering in perovskites for photocatalytic and photovoltaic applications.

Revised: April 20, 2020 | Published: January 6, 2016

Citation

Comes R.B., T.C. Kaspar, S.M. Heald, M.E. Bowden, and S.A. Chambers. 2016. Infrared Optical Absorption in Low-spin Fe2+-doped SrTiO3. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter 28, no. 3:Article No. 035901. PNNL-SA-113483. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/28/3/035901