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Journal of Synthetic Crystals ›› 2026, Vol. 55 ›› Issue (5): 782-790.DOI: 10.16553/j.cnki.issn1000-985x.2025.0258

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First-Principles Study on Electronic Structure, Optical Properties, and Intrinsic Defect-Induced p-Type Conductivity of RbYS2

ZOU Jiang1(), XIE Quan2   

  1. 1.School of Physics and Electronic Science,Zunyi Normal University,Zunyi 563006,China
    2.School of Information Engineering,Guizhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine,Guiyang 550025,China
  • Received:2025-12-22 Online:2026-05-20 Published:2026-06-09

Abstract: Transparent conductive materials have significant application value in the field of optoelectronic devices due to their combination of high visible light transmittance and good electrical conductivity. However, the development of high-performance p-type transparent conductive materials still faces challenges. Based on the first-principles calculations of density functional theory, this study systematically analyzed the electronic structure, optical properties and p-type conductive behavior dominated by intrinsic defects of RbYS2. The calculation results show that RbYS2 is an indirect bandgap semiconductor with a bandgap width of 3.30 eV. The optical property calculations indicate that RbYS2 exhibits weak absorption in the visible light region, demonstrating good transparency. Calculations of mechanical properties indicate that RbYS2 has good mechanical stability and exhibits obvious mechanical anisotropy. Further studies on intrinsic defects and carrier thermodynamics simulations reveal that under S-rich growth conditions, Rb vacancy VRb is the most favorably formed acceptor-type defect, with a formation energy of 1.14 eV, and a transition levelε(0/-) locates 0.225 eV above the valence band maximum(VBM). When the defects are formed during high-temperature growth and their concentration is fixed at 1 200 K followed by rapid quenching to room temperature, the hole concentration of the system can reach 5.78×1018 cm-3, presenting stable p-type conductive characteristics at room temperature while maintaining good optical transparency.

Key words: RbYS2; mechanical property; optical property; intrinsic defect; thermodynamic simulation; first-principle; density functional theory

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