Menu
Home Explore People Places Arts History Plants & Animals Science Life & Culture Technology
On this page
Mercury telluride
Topologically insulating chemical compound

Mercury telluride (HgTe) is a binary chemical compound of mercury and tellurium. It is a semi-metal related to the II-VI group of semiconductor materials. Alternative names are mercuric telluride and mercury(II) telluride.

HgTe occurs in nature as the mineral form coloradoite.

Related Image Collections Add Image
We don't have any YouTube videos related to Mercury telluride yet.
We don't have any PDF documents related to Mercury telluride yet.
We don't have any Books related to Mercury telluride yet.
We don't have any archived web articles related to Mercury telluride yet.

Physical properties

All properties are at standard temperature and pressure unless stated otherwise. The lattice parameter is about 0.646 nm in the cubic crystalline form. The bulk modulus is about 42.1 GPa. The thermal expansion coefficient is about 5.2×10−6/K. Static dielectric constant 20.8, dynamic dielectric constant 15.1. Thermal conductivity is low at 2.7 W·m2/(m·K). HgTe bonds are weak leading to low hardness values. Hardness 2.7×107 kg/m2.123

Doping

N-type doping can be achieved with elements such as boron, aluminium, gallium, or indium. Iodine and iron will also dope n-type. HgTe is naturally p-type due to mercury vacancies. P-type doping is also achieved by introducing zinc, copper, silver, or gold.45

Topological insulation

Main article: Topological insulator

Mercury telluride was the first topological insulator discovered, in 2007. Topological insulators cannot support an electric current in the bulk, but electronic states confined to the surface can serve as charge carriers.6

Chemistry

HgTe bonds are weak. Their enthalpy of formation, around −32kJ/mol, is less than a third of the value for the related compound cadmium telluride. HgTe is easily etched by acids, such as hydrobromic acid.78

Growth

Bulk growth is from a mercury and tellurium melt in the presence of a high mercury vapour pressure. HgTe can also be grown epitaxially, for example, by sputtering or by metalorganic vapour phase epitaxy.910

Nanoparticles of mercury telluride can be obtained via cation exchange from cadmium telluride nanoplatelets.11

See also

References

  1. Brice, J. and Capper, P. (eds.) (1987) Properties of mercury cadmium telluride, EMIS datareview, INSPEC, IEE, London, UK.

  2. Capper, P. (ed.) (1994) Properties of Narrow-Gap Cadmium-Based Compounds. INSPEC, IEE, London, UK. ISBN 0-85296-880-9 /wiki/ISBN_(identifier)

  3. Boctor, N.Z.; Kullerud, G. (1986). "Mercury selenide stoichiometry and phase relations in the mercury-selenium system". Journal of Solid State Chemistry. 62 (2): 177. Bibcode:1986JSSCh..62..177B. doi:10.1016/0022-4596(86)90229-X. /wiki/Bibcode_(identifier)

  4. Brice, J. and Capper, P. (eds.) (1987) Properties of mercury cadmium telluride, EMIS datareview, INSPEC, IEE, London, UK.

  5. Capper, P. (ed.) (1994) Properties of Narrow-Gap Cadmium-Based Compounds. INSPEC, IEE, London, UK. ISBN 0-85296-880-9 /wiki/ISBN_(identifier)

  6. König, M; Wiedmann, S; Brüne, C; Roth, A; Buhmann, H; Molenkamp, L. W.; Qi, X. L.; Zhang, S. C. (2007). "Quantum Spin Hall Insulator State in HgTe Quantum Wells". Science. 318 (5851): 766–770. arXiv:0710.0582. Bibcode:2007Sci...318..766K. doi:10.1126/science.1148047. PMID 17885096. S2CID 8836690. /wiki/ArXiv_(identifier)

  7. Brice, J. and Capper, P. (eds.) (1987) Properties of mercury cadmium telluride, EMIS datareview, INSPEC, IEE, London, UK.

  8. Capper, P. (ed.) (1994) Properties of Narrow-Gap Cadmium-Based Compounds. INSPEC, IEE, London, UK. ISBN 0-85296-880-9 /wiki/ISBN_(identifier)

  9. Brice, J. and Capper, P. (eds.) (1987) Properties of mercury cadmium telluride, EMIS datareview, INSPEC, IEE, London, UK.

  10. Capper, P. (ed.) (1994) Properties of Narrow-Gap Cadmium-Based Compounds. INSPEC, IEE, London, UK. ISBN 0-85296-880-9 /wiki/ISBN_(identifier)

  11. Izquierdo, Eva; Robin, Adrien; Keuleyan, Sean; Lequeux, Nicolas; Lhuillier, Emmanuel; Ithurria, Sandrine (2016-08-12). "Strongly Confined HgTe 2D Nanoplatelets as Narrow Near-Infrared Emitters". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 138 (33): 10496–10501. Bibcode:2016JAChS.13810496I. doi:10.1021/jacs.6b04429. ISSN 0002-7863. PMID 27487074. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/jacs.6b04429