Author:
Ishizuka Hiroaki,Nagaosa Naoto
Abstract
The localization of wavefunction by disorder makes a conductive material an insulator with vanishing conductivity at zero temperature. A similar outcome is expected for the photocurrent in semiconductor p-n junctions because the photoexcited carriers cannot drift through the device. In contrast, we here show numerically that the bulk photovoltaic effect—the photovoltaic effect in noncentrosymmetric bulk materials—occurs in a noncentrosymmetric, disordered, one-dimensional insulator where all eigenstates are localized. We find this photocurrent remains, even when the energy scale of random potential is larger than the bandwidth. On the other hand, the photocurrent decays exponentially when the excitation is local, i.e., when only a part of the device is illuminated. The photocurrent also vanishes if the relaxation occurs only by contact with the electrodes. Our result implies that the ratio of the photovoltaic current and the direct current by the variable-range hopping increases with decreasing temperature. These results suggest a route to design high-efficiency solar cells and photodetectors.
Funder
MEXT | JST | Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
11 articles.
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