J. Tersoff
Applied Surface Science
A simple phenomenological model of the electronic structure of the pseudogap of an amorphous semiconductor is considered, and used as the starting point for a systematic investigation of the processes that determine the nature of the photoluminescence. Many of the most striking features of these materials are shown to derive in a straightforward manner from the nature of the primary luminescing entity, a "trapped exciton" in which the hole is trapped in a localized gap state and the electron is bound to the hole by their mutual Coulomb attraction. Other important properties of the photoluminescence reflect the dynamics of the hopping motion of a charged carrier through a band of localized states. © 1982 The American Physical Society.
J. Tersoff
Applied Surface Science
B.A. Hutchins, T.N. Rhodin, et al.
Surface Science
P.C. Pattnaik, D.M. Newns
Physical Review B
I. Morgenstern, K.A. Müller, et al.
Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter