Amorphous silicon (a-Si) is the non-crystalline
allotropic form of
silicon. Silicon is a four-fold coordinated atom that is normally
tetrahedrally bonded to four neighboring silicon atoms. In crystalline silicon this
tetrahedral structure is continued over a large range, forming a well-ordered lattice (crystal). In amorphous silicon this long range order is not present and the atoms form a continuous random network. Not all the atoms within amorphous silicon are four-fold coordinated. Due to the disordered nature of the material some atoms have a
dangling bond. These
dangling bonds are defects in the continuous random network, which cause undesired (electrical) behaviour. The material can be passivated by hydrogen, which bonds to the dangling bonds and can reduce the dangling bond density by several orders of magnitude. Hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) has a sufficiently low amount of defects to be used within devices. However, the hydrogen is unfortunately associated with light induced degradation of the material, termed the
Staebler-Wronski Effect.
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