| Literature DB >> 26657329 |
Lei Zhang1,2, Yuanjun Zhou3, Lu Guo1,2, Weiwei Zhao4, Anna Barnes5,6, Hai-Tian Zhang1,2, Craig Eaton1,2, Yuanxia Zheng1,2, Matthew Brahlek1,2, Hamna F Haneef5,6, Nikolas J Podraza5,6, Moses H W Chan4, Venkatraman Gopalan1, Karin M Rabe3, Roman Engel-Herbert1,2.
Abstract
The fundamental challenge for designing transparent conductors used in photovoltaics, displays and solid-state lighting is the ideal combination of high optical transparency and high electrical conductivity. Satisfying these competing demands is commonly achieved by increasing carrier concentration in a wide-bandgap semiconductor with low effective carrier mass through heavy doping, as in the case of tin-doped indium oxide (ITO). Here, an alternative design strategy for identifying high-conductivity, high-transparency metals is proposed, which relies on strong electron-electron interactions resulting in an enhancement in the carrier effective mass. This approach is experimentally verified using the correlated metals SrVO3 and CaVO3, which, despite their high carrier concentration (>2.2 × 10(22) cm(-3)), have low screened plasma energies (<1.33 eV), and demonstrate excellent performance when benchmarked against ITO. A method is outlined to rapidly identify other candidates among correlated metals, and strategies are proposed to further enhance their performance, thereby opening up new avenues to develop transparent conductors.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26657329 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841