31,118 research outputs found
Structure and energetics of carbon, hexagonal boron nitride and carbon/hexagonal boron nitride single-layer and bilayer nanoscrolls
Single-layer and bilayer carbon and hexagonal boron nitride nanoscrolls as
well as nanoscrolls made of bilayer graphene/hexagonal boron nitride
heterostructure are considered. Structures of stable states of the
corresponding nanoscrolls prepared by rolling single-layer and bilayer
rectangular nanoribbons are obtained based on the analytical model and
numerical calculations. The lengths of nanoribbons for which stable and
energetically favorable nanoscrolls are possible are determined. Barriers to
rolling of single-layer and bilayer nanoribbons into nanoscrolls and barriers
to nanoscroll unrolling are calculated. Based on the calculated barriers
nanoscroll lifetimes in the stable state are estimated. Elastic constants for
bending of graphene and hexagonal boron nitride layers used in the model are
found by density functional theory calculations.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Interface of graphene nanopore and hexagonal boron nitride as a sensing device
The atomically-precise controlled synthesis of graphene stripes embedded in
hexagonal boron nitride opens up new possibilities for the construction of
nanodevices with applications in sensing. Here, we explore properties related
to electronic structure and quantum transport of a graphene nanoroad embedded
in hexagonal boron nitride, using a combination of density functional theory
and the non-equilibrium Green's functions method to calculate the electric
conductance. We find that the graphene nanoribbon signature is preserved in the
transmission spectra and that the local current is mainly confined to the
graphene domain. When a properly sized nanopore is created in the graphene part
of the system, the electronic current becomes restricted to a carbon chain
running along the border with hexagonal boron nitride. This circumstance could
allow the hypothetical nanodevice to become highly sensitive to the electronic
nature of molecules passing through the nanopore, thus opening up ways for the
detection of gas molecules, amino acids, or even DNA sequences based on a
measurement of the real-time conductance modulation in the graphene nanoroad
Study of Uniaxial Tensile Properties of Hexagonal Boron Nitride Nanoribbons
Uniaxial tensile properties of hexagonal boron nitride nanoribbons and
dependence of these properties on temperature, strain rate, and the inclusion
of vacancy defects have been explored with molecular dynamics simulations using
Tersoff potential. The ultimate tensile strength of pristine hexagonal boron
nitride nanoribbon of 26 nm x 5 nm with armchair chirality is found to be 100.5
GPa. The ultimate tensile strength and strain have been found decreasing with
increasing the temperature while an opposite trend has been observed for
increasing the strain rate. Furthermore, the vacancy defects reduce ultimate
tensile strength and strain where the effect of bi-vacancy is clearly
dominating over point vacancy
Boron Nitride Monolayer: A Strain-Tunable Nanosensor
The influence of triaxial in-plane strain on the electronic properties of a
hexagonal boron-nitride sheet is investigated using density functional theory.
Different from graphene, the triaxial strain localizes the molecular orbitals
of the boron-nitride flake in its center depending on the direction of the
applied strain. The proposed technique for localizing the molecular orbitals
that are close to the Fermi level in the center of boron nitride flakes can be
used to actualize engineered nanosensors, for instance, to selectively detect
gas molecules. We show that the central part of the strained flake adsorbs
polar molecules more strongly as compared with an unstrained sheet.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Quantum Emission From Hexagonal Boron Nitride Monolayers
Atomically thin van der Waals crystals have recently enabled new scientific
and technological breakthroughs across a variety of disciplines in materials
science, nanophotonics and physics. However, non-classical photon emission from
these materials has not been achieved to date. Here we report room temperature
quantum emission from hexagonal boron nitride nanoflakes. The single photon
emitter exhibits a combination of superb quantum optical properties at room
temperature that include the highest brightness reported in the visible part of
the spectrum, narrow line width, absolute photo-stability, a short excited
state lifetime and a high quantum efficiency. Density functional theory
modeling suggests that the emitter is the antisite nitrogen vacancy defect that
is present in single and multi-layer hexagonal boron nitride. Our results
constitute the unprecedented potential of van der Waals crystals for
nanophotonics, optoelectronics and quantum information processing
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