Does the Fermi Level in Insulators Always Reside Near the Band Gap Center?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the position of the Fermi level in insulators, particularly whether it must reside near the center of the band gap. Participants explore the implications of band gap size, effective masses of charge carriers, and the influence of doping on the Fermi level's position.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question whether the intrinsic Fermi level of an insulator must lie close to the middle of the band gap, suggesting that deviations could occur, particularly in materials with different effective masses for electrons and holes.
  • One participant notes that while the Fermi level is often considered to be arbitrary within the band gap for low-temperature calculations, it can be significant in specific applications, such as determining barrier heights in metal-insulator-metal structures.
  • Another participant raises the idea that for wide band gap insulators, the Fermi level might not be well-defined and could be influenced by gap states at interfaces, complicating its utility in calculations.
  • There is a mention of the potential impact of unintentional doping on the Fermi level's position, indicating that nominally intrinsic materials may not have the Fermi level perfectly centered between the conduction and valence bands.
  • One participant references a specific equation related to charge carrier concentrations, suggesting a relationship between the intrinsic Fermi level and the effective density of states.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the necessity of the Fermi level being near the band gap center, with some suggesting it is common while others argue that it can vary significantly based on factors like doping and material properties. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the generality of the Fermi level's position in insulators.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the dependence on definitions of intrinsic versus doped materials, the influence of effective masses, and the potential for unintentional doping to affect the Fermi level's position.

erst
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Does the (intrinsic) Fermi level of an insulator HAVE to lie very near the middle of the band gap? I know it might deviate slightly if electrons and holes have different effective masses, e.g. in Si. But can it be radically different? For example, are there insulators with 5 eV band gaps that have the Fermi level 4 eV above the valence band (so 1 eV from the conduction band)? Or is it a very general result that the Fermi level ends up very close to the middle?
 
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It's fairly common. The definition of the Fermi level is E_F = \lim_{T \rightarrow 0} \mu(T) where \mu is the chemical potential. I think you might get a more unusual value for a charge-transfer insulator, where the valence states are wide, like O 2p bands, and the conduction states are narrow, like a 3d or 4f type of band.

But usually it doesn't matter, since for most purposes the Fermi level could be taken to be any arbitrary value within the gap and you wouldn't know the difference for the vast majority of low temperature calculations.
 
It matters significantly for the calculations I'm trying to do. I want to get the equilibrium band alignment of a metal-insulator-metal structure (i.e. a tunnel junction). Depending on how the insulator is aligned with the metals, the electrons at the metal Fermi level see significantly different barrier heights, which impacts conductivity exponentially.

I thought that the Fermi level for wide band gap insulators (>5 eV) would be a well-defined quantity as it is for the common semiconductors. But from reading around, increasingly it seems that the quantity is almost meaningless and people read it off ab initio DOS rather arbitrarily. I guess that at the interface, there must be gap states that determine the alignment even if the bulk insulator Fermi level is meaningless. Is that what I should be concerned with for determining barrier height?
 
erst said:
Does the (intrinsic) Fermi level of an insulator HAVE to lie very near the middle of the band gap? I know it might deviate slightly if electrons and holes have different effective masses, e.g. in Si. But can it be radically different? For example, are there insulators with 5 eV band gaps that have the Fermi level 4 eV above the valence band (so 1 eV from the conduction band)? Or is it a very general result that the Fermi level ends up very close to the middle?


For an insulator, you can be quite sure that it's in the middle, in semiconductors it depends if there are added donors/acceptors.

n_i² = np =

n_i=N_c.exp]-(E_c-E_i)/kT]
With Nc the effective density (not sure if they call it like that in English), E_c energy of conductingband, E_i intrinstik Fermi level and np the amount of conducting electrons/holes
 
I'm curious if Dreak's point answers your question. For wide-bandgap materials, as with any, the position of the Fermi level is highly dependent on how much activated dopant there is. Or is this too basic an explanation to address your question?

Of course, the value of a nominally intrinsic (undoped) material is usually not perfectly centered between Ec and Ev because of unintentional doping. Perhaps that's why you read different values? For instance, AlN is quite easily grown as an insulating material normally, but if you accidentally get Se impurity, you quickly have a p-type semiconductor on your hands.
 

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