240 research outputs found
The response of mechanical and electronic properties of graphane to the elastic strain
Based on first-principles calculations, we resent a method to reveal the
elastic properties of recently synthesized monolayer hydrocarbon, graphane. The
in-plane stiffness and Poisson's ratio values are found to be smaller than
those of graphene, and its yielding strain decreases in the presence of various
vacancy defects and also at high ambient temperature. We also found that the
band gap can be strongly modified by applied strain in the elastic range.Comment: accepted version at: http://link.aip.org/link/?APL/96/09191
Armchair nanoribbons of silicon and germanium honeycomb structures
We present a first-principles study of bare and hydrogen passivated armchair
nanoribbons of the puckered single layer honeycomb structures of silicon and
germanium. Our study includes optimization of atomic structure, stability
analysis based on the calculation of phonon dispersions, electronic structure
and the variation of band gap with the width of the ribbon. The band gaps of
silicon and germanium nanoribbons exhibit family behavior similar to those of
graphene nanoribbons. The edges of bare nanoribbons are sharply reconstructed,
which can be eliminated by the hydrogen termination of dangling bonds at the
edges. Periodic modulation of the nanoribbon width results in a superlattice
structure which can act as a multiple quantum wells. Specific electronic states
are confined in these wells. Confinement trends are qualitatively explained by
including the effects of the interface. In order to investigate wide and long
superlattice structures we also performed empirical tight binding calculations
with parameters determined from \textit{ab initio} calculations.Comment: please find the published version in
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.81.19512
Stable single-layer honeycomb like structure of silica
Silica or SiO, the main constituent of earth's rocks has several 3D
complex crystalline and amorphous phases, but it does not have a graphite like
layered structure in 3D. Our theoretical analysis and numerical calculations
from the first-principles predict a single-layer honeycomb like allotrope,
h-silica, which can be viewed to be derived from the oxidation of
silicene and it has intriguing atomic structure with re-entrant bond angles in
hexagons. It is a wide band gap semiconductor, which attains remarkable
electromechanical properties showing geometrical changes under external
electric field. In particular, it is an auxetic metamaterial with negative
Poisson's ratio and has a high piezoelectric coefficient. While it can form
stable bilayer and multilayer structures, its nanoribbons can show metallic or
semiconducting behavior depending on their chirality. Coverage of dangling Si
orbitals by foreign adatoms can attribute new functionalities to
h-silica. In particular, SiO, where Si atoms are saturated by
oxygen atoms from top and bottom sides alternatingly can undergo a structural
transformation to make silicatene, another stable, single layer structure of
silica.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Superlubricity through graphene multilayers between Ni(111) surfaces
A single graphene layer placed between two parallel Ni(111) surfaces screens
the strong attractive force and results in a significant reduction of adhesion
and sliding friction. When two graphene layers are inserted, each graphene is
attached to one of the metal surfaces with a significant binding and reduces
the adhesion further. In the sliding motion of these surfaces the transition
from stick-slip to continuous sliding is attained, whereby non-equilibrium
phonon generation through sudden processes is suppressed. The adhesion and
corrugation strength continues to decrease upon insertion of the third graphene
layer and eventually saturates at a constant value with increasing number of
graphene layers. In the absence of Ni surfaces, the corrugation strength of
multilayered graphene is relatively higher and practically independent of the
number of layers. Present first-principles calculations reveal the
superlubricant feature of graphene layers placed between pseudomorphic Ni(111)
surfaces, which is achieved through the coupling of Ni-3d and graphene-
orbitals. The effect of graphene layers inserted between a pair of parallel
Cu(111) and Al(111) surfaces are also discussed. The treatment of sliding
friction under the constant loading force, by taking into account the
deformations corresponding to any relative positions of sliding slabs, is the
unique feature of our study.Comment: Accepted paper for Physical Review
Two-dimensional C/BN core/shell structures
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Single-layer core-shell structures consisting of graphene as the core and hexagonal boron nitride as the shell are studied using the first-principles plane-wave method within density functional theory. Electronic energy level structure is analyzed as a function of the size of both core and shell. It is found that the confinement of electrons in a two-dimensional graphene quantum dot is reduced by the presence of a boron nitride shell. The energy gap is determined by the graphene states. Comparison of round, hexagonal, rectangular, and triangular core-shell structures reveals that their electronic and magnetic states are strongly affected by their geometrical shapes. The energy level structure, energy gap, and magnetic states can be modified by external charging. The core part acts as a two-dimensional quantum dot for both electrons and holes. The of extra electron intake capacity of these quantum dots is shown to be limited by the Coulomb blockade in two dimensions
A first-principles systematic study of GaAs nanowires
In this paper we present a detailed analysis of the atomic and electronic
structure of GaAs nanowires using first-principles pseudopotential
calculations. We consider six different types of nanowires with different
diameters all grown along [111] direction and reveal interesting trends between
cohesive energy and nanowire type with varying diameters. Generally, the
average cohesive energy of nanowires with wurtzite stacking is higher than
those with zinc blende stacking for small diameters. We found that most of the
bare nanowires considered here are semiconducting and continue to be
semiconducting upon the passivation of surface dangling bonds with hydrogen
atom. However, the surface states associated with the surface atoms having two
dangling bonds in zinc blende stacking occur in the band gap and can decrease
the band gap to change the nanowire from semiconducting to metallic state.
These nanowires become semiconducting upon hydrogen passivation. Even if the
band gap of some nanowires decreases with increasing diameter and hence reveals
the quantum confinement effect, generally the band gap variation is rather
complex and depends on the type and geometry, diameter, type of relaxation and
also whether the dangling bonds of surface atoms are saturated with hydrogen.Comment: Please find the published version in
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.79.16511
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