Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Materials and Technologies School of Materials Sun Yat‐sen University Shenzhen 518107 China
Abstract
AbstractBoron‐doped diamond is a wide‐bandgap semiconductor with excellent semiconductor properties, which is widely utilized in various applications. Till now, the thermodynamic rules governing the carrier transitions in this material have not been fully understood. In this research, the different luminescence behaviors of boron‐doped diamond under 193 nm pulse laser with high‐ and low‐ power density excitation are analyzed. Under high‐power density excitation (@≈63 kW cm−2), the emission intensity of excitons is nearly ten times higher than that of defect luminescence. Conversely, under low‐power density excitation (@≈1.4 kW cm−2, different emission peaks exhibit similar intensities, indicating a competitive relationship among them. Based on experimental and theoretical analyses, the difference is attributed to the thermodynamic distribution of carriers at varying excitation powers. Specifically, high excitation power brings an independent behavior of each emission peak, and the exciton emission is described by a phonon‐assisted radiation model; different from that, the competition among different emission centers under the condition of low excitation power cannot be neglected, and now the thermodynamic evolution of each emission peak is described by a carrier trapping‐dissociation model.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China