Phosphorene Nanoribbons, Phosphorus Nanotubes, and van der Waals Multilayers

Hongyan Guo(University of Science and Technology of China), Ning Lü(Anhui Normal University), Jun Dai(University of Nebraska–Lincoln), Xiaojun Wu(Hefei National Center for Physical Sciences at Nanoscale), Xiao Cheng Zeng(University of Science and Technology of China)
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
June 6, 2014
Cited by 617Open Access
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Abstract

We perform a comprehensive first-principles study of the electronic properties of phosphorene nanoribbons, phosphorus nanotubes, multilayer phosphorene sheets, and heterobilayers of phosphorene and two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMDC) monolayer. The tensile strain and electric-field effects on electronic properties of low-dimensional phosphorene nanostructures are also investigated. Our calculations show that the bare zigzag phosphorene nanoribbons (z-PNRs) are metals regardless of the ribbon width, whereas the bare armchair phosphorene nanoribbons (a-PNRs) are semiconductors with indirect bandgaps and the bandgaps decrease with increasing ribbon width. We find that compressive (or tensile) strains can reduce (or enlarge) the bandgap of the bare a-PNRs while an in-plane electric field can significantly reduce the bandgap of the bare a-PNRs, leading to the semiconductor-to-metal transition beyond certain electric field. For edge-passivated PNR by hydrogen, z-PNRs become semiconductor with nearly direct bandgaps and a-PNRs are still semiconductor but with direct bandgaps. The response to tensile strain and electric field for the edge-passivated PNRs is similar to that for the edge-unpassivated (bare) a-PNRs. For single-walled phosphorus nanotubes, both armchair and zigzag nanotubes are semiconductors with direct bandgaps. With either tensile strains or transverse electric field, behavior of bandgap modulation similar to that for a-PNRs can arise. It is known that multilayer phosphorene sheets are semiconductors whose bandgaps decrease with an increase in the number of multilayers. In the presence of a vertical electric field, the bandgaps of multilayer phosphorene sheets decrease with increasing electric field and the bandgap modulation is more significant with more layers. Lastly, heterobilayers of phosphorene (p-type) with an n-type TMDC (MoS2 or WS2) monolayer are still semiconductors while their bandgaps can be reduced by applying a vertical electric field as well. We also show that the combined phosphorene/MoS2 heterolayers can be an effective solar cell material. Our estimated power conversion efficiency for the phosphorene/MoS2 heterobilayer has a theoretical maximum value of 17.5%.


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