Hi,
The Fermi-broadening does have a significant impact on DFT results.
Specifically, it impacts how fast scf converges and the final state (if the broadening is too large).
For a semiconductor I would reduce the smearing to 100-300 K. This means that more k-points are needed.
For a metal a larger broadening can be used and lower k-points sampling.
In any case, the broadening should be reduced and k-point sampling increased until simulations are converged.
In general the defaults are good but you seem to use a much larger broadening.