27 research outputs found
Recent progress in thermoelectric MXene-based structures versus other 2D materials
Thermoelectricity is a next-generation solution for efficient waste heat
management. Although various thermoelectric materials exist, there is still a
lot of scope for advancement. Recently, two-dimensional (2D) materials,
including MXenes, showed promise as thermoelectric materials. The progress of
MXenes as magnificent thermoelectric materials is very well established in the
form of a tailor-made review. MXenes outstanding thermoelectric activity comes
from a unique band structure created from its atomically thin layers and the
defective surface of the external layers of atoms. Furthermore, the variety of
MXenes chemical composition and MXenes-based nanostructures facilitates the
research path based on energy band engineering, optimization, carrier
concentration and mobility. The thermoelectric efficiency of MXenes has been
mapped over the landscape of other 2D and traditional thermoelectric materials.
Meanwhile, MBenes, the latest family member of the flatland, exhibits an
incredible diversity of structures with additional crystal symmetries. Owing to
the orthorhombic crystal structure, an in-plane structural anisotropy, and
hence, the in-plane dependent thermoelectric properties are plausible. As a
future prospective, certain strategies that can enhance the thermoelectric
performance of MBenes have been presented. In addition, few insights and
challenges that have to be considered to overcome the limitations in the
thermoelectric field have been debated.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, 1 tabl
Origin of bulk uniaxial anisotropy in zinc-blende dilute magnetic semiconductors
It is demonstrated that the nearest neighbor Mn pair on the GaAs (001)
surface has a lower energy for the [-110] direction comparing to the [110]
case. According to the group theory and the Luttinger's method of invariants,
this specific Mn distribution results in bulk uniaxial in-plane and
out-of-plane anisotropies. The sign and magnitude of the corresponding
anisotropy energies determined by a perturbation method and ab initio
computations are consistent with experimental results.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Exact Exchange Scheme in the Parallel r-Space Implementation of the Kohn-Sham Realization of the Density Functional Theory
In this communication, we present the r-space implementation of the Kohn-Sham realization of the density functional theory with the exact exchange functional within the computational algorithm for computers of parallel architecture. In comparison to the standard approach employing the local density functional, the scheme with exact exchange functional requires roughly ten times larger computational burden. The developed parallelization procedure accelerates the computations by a factor of four and six for the exact exchange and the local density functional schemes, respectively. It brings us closer to the treatment of dispersive van der Waals interactions on the fully ab initio level in the large class of systems
Controlling magnetic exchange and anisotropy by non-magnetic ligand substitution in layered MPX3 (M = Ni, Mn; X = S, Se)
Recent discoveries in two-dimensional (2D) magnetism have intensified the
investigation of van der Waals (vdW) magnetic materials and further improved
our ability to tune their magnetic properties. Tunable magnetism has been
widely studied in antiferromagnetic metal thiophosphates MPX3. Substitution of
metal ions M has been adopted as an important technique to engineer the
magnetism in MPX3. In this work, we have studied the previously unexplored
chalcogen X substitutions in MPX3 (M = Mn/Ni; X = S/Se). We synthesized the
single crystals of MnPS3-xSex (0 < x < 3) and NiPS3-xSex (0 < x < 1.3) and
investigated the systematic evolution of the magnetism with varying x. Our
study reveals the effective tuning of magnetic interactions and anisotropies in
both MnPS3 and NiPS3 upon Se substitution. Such efficient engineering of the
magnetism provides a suitable platform to understand the low-dimensional
magnetism and develop future magnetic devices
Optical markers of magnetic phase transition in CrSBr
Here, we investigate the role of the interlayer magnetic ordering of CrSBr in
the framework of calculations and by using optical
spectroscopy techniques. These combined studies allow us to unambiguously
determine the nature of the optical transitions. In particular,
photoreflectance measurements, sensitive to the direct transitions, have been
carried out for the first time. We have demonstrated that optically induced
band-to-band transitions visible in optical measurement are remarkably well
assigned to the band structure by the momentum matrix elements and energy
differences for the magnetic ground state (A-AFM). In addition, our study
reveals significant differences in electronic properties for two different
interlayer magnetic phases. When the magnetic ordering of A-AFM to FM is
changed, the crucial modification of the band structure reflected in the
direct-to-indirect band gap transition and the significant splitting of the
conduction bands along the direction are obtained. In addition,
Raman measurements demonstrate a splitting between the in-plane modes
/, which is temperature dependent and can be assigned to
different interlayer magnetic states, corroborated by the DFT+U study.
Moreover, the mode has not been experimentally observed before.
Finally, our results point out the origin of interlayer magnetism, which can be
attributed to electronic rather than structural properties. Our results reveal
a new approach for tuning the optical and electronic properties of van der
Waals magnets by controlling the interlayer magnetic ordering in adjacent
layers.Comment: 33 pages, 15 figure
Electronic Band Structure Changes across the Antiferromagnetic Phase Transition of Exfoliated MnPS3 Flakes Probed by μ-ARPES
Exfoliated magnetic 2D materials enable versatile tuning of magnetization, e.g., by gating or providing proximity-induced exchange interaction. However, their electronic band structure after exfoliation has not been probed, presumably due to their photochemical sensitivity. Here, we provide micrometer-scale angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of the exfoliated intralayer antiferromagnet MnPS3 above and below the Néel temperature down to one monolayer. Favorable comparison with density functional theory calculations enables identifying the orbital character of the observed bands. Consistently, we find pronounced changes across the Néel temperature for bands consisting of Mn 3d and 3p levels of adjacent S atoms. The deduced orbital mixture indicates that the superexchange is relevant for the magnetic interaction. There are only minor changes between monolayer and thicker films, demonstrating the predominant 2D character of MnPS3. The novel access is transferable to other MPX3 materials (M: transition metal, P: phosphorus, X: chalcogenide), providing several antiferromagnetic arrangements
Exact Exchange Scheme in the Parallel r-Space Implementation of the Kohn-Sham Realization of the Density Functional Theory
In this communication, we present the r-space implementation of the Kohn-Sham realization of the density functional theory with the exact exchange functional within the computational algorithm for computers of parallel architecture. In comparison to the standard approach employing the local density functional, the scheme with exact exchange functional requires roughly ten times larger computational burden. The developed parallelization procedure accelerates the computations by a factor of four and six for the exact exchange and the local density functional schemes, respectively. It brings us closer to the treatment of dispersive van der Waals interactions on the fully ab initio level in the large class of systems
Van Der Waals Density Functionals for Graphene Layers and Graphite
In this communication, we present results of theoretical studies of various systems where Van der Waals interaction plays a considerable role. In the first-principle calculations performed in the density functional theory framework we implement novel functionals accounting for Van der Waals forces and employ to the test cases of graphite and graphene layers. It turns out that this approach provides a solution to the long standing problem of overbinding between graphene layers in bulk graphite, giving the distance between the carbon layers in excellent agreement with experiment. In graphene bilayers, Van der Waals functionals lead to energetic barriers for A-B to A-A ordering of graphene bilayers that are by a factor of two smaller than the barriers obtained with standard functionals. It may be of crucial importance, particularly, if one uses atomistic ab initio methods as a starting point for multi-scale modeling of materials and for determination of effective potentials