Mind the Interface Gap.:  Exposing Hidden Interface Defects at the Epitaxial Heterostructure between CuO and Cu2O

Publication date

2022-12-21

Authors

Zivkovic, AleksandarORCID 0000-0003-1347-6203ISNI 0000000485090198
Mallia, Giuseppe
King, HelenISNI 0000000355993460
de Leeuw, Nora H.ISNI 0000000124340366
Harrison, Nicholas M

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Well designed and optimized epitaxial heterostructures lie at the foundation of materials development for photovoltaic, photocatalytic, and photoelectrochemistry applications. Heterostructure materials offer tunable control over charge separation and transport at the same time preventing recombination of photogenerated excitations at the interface. Thus, it is of paramount importance that a detailed understanding is developed as the basis for further optimization strategies and design. Oxides of copper are nontoxic, low cost, abundant materials with a straightforward and stable manufacturing process. However, in individual applications, they suffer from inefficient charge transport of photogenerated carriers. Hence, in this work, we investigate the role of the interface between epitaxially aligned CuO and Cu 2O to explore the potential benefits of such an architecture for more efficient electron and hole transfer. The CuO/Cu 2O heterojunction nature, stability, bonding mechanism, interface dipole, electronic structure, and band bending were rationalized using hybrid density functional theory calculations. New electronic states are identified at the interface itself, which are originating neither from lattice mismatch nor strained Cu-O bonds. They form as a result of a change in coordination environment of CuO surface Cu 2+ cations and an electron transfer across the interface Cu 1+-O bond. The first process creates occupied defect-like electronic states above the valence band, while the second leaves hole states below the conduction band. These are constitutional to the interface and are highly likely to contribute to recombination effects competing with the improved charged separation from the suitable band bending and alignment and thus would limit the expected output photocurrent and photovoltage. Finally, a favorable effect of interstitial oxygen defects has been shown to allow for band gap tunability at the interface but only to the point of the integral geometrical contact limit of the heterostructure itself.

Keywords

Cu2O, CuO, band alignment, density functional theory, epitaxial interface, heterostructure, General Materials Science, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure

Citation

Živković, A, Mallia, G, King, H E, de Leeuw, N H & Harrison, N M 2022, 'Mind the Interface Gap.  Exposing Hidden Interface Defects at the Epitaxial Heterostructure between CuO and Cu2O', ACS applied materials & interfaces, vol. 14, no. 50, pp. 56331-56343. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c16889