54 research outputs found
Phononic thermal conductivity in silicene: the role of vacancy defects and boundary scattering
We calculate the thermal conductivity of free-standing silicene using the
phonon Boltzmann transport equation within the relaxation time approximation.
In this calculation, we investigate the effects of sample size and different
scattering mechanisms such as phonon-phonon, phonon-boundary, phonon-isotope
and phonon-vacancy defect. Moreover, the role of different phonon modes is
examined. We show that, in contrast to graphene, the dominant contribution to
the thermal conductivity of silicene originates from the in-plane acoustic
branches, which is about 70\% at room temperature and this contribution becomes
larger by considering vacancy defects. Our results indicate that while the
thermal conductivity of silicene is significantly suppressed by the vacancy
defects, the effect of isotopes on the phononic transport is small. Our
calculations demonstrate that by removing only one of every 400 silicon atoms,
a substantial reduction of about 58\% in thermal conductivity is achieved.
Furthermore, we find that the phonon-boundary scattering is important in
defectless and small-size silicene samples, specially at low temperatures.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Anisotropic hybrid excitation modes in monolayer and double-layer phosphorene on polar substrates
We investigate the anisotropic hybrid plasmon-SO phonon dispersion relations
in monolayer and double-layer phosphorene systems located on the polar
substrates, such as SiO2, h-BN and Al2O3. We calculate these hybrid modes with
using the dynamical dielectric function in the RPA by considering the
electron-electron interaction and long-range electric field generated by the
substrate SO phonons via Frohlich interaction. In the long-wavelength limit, we
obtain some analytical expressions for the hybrid plasmon-SO phonon dispersion
relations which represent the behavior of these modes akin to the modes
obtaining from the loss function. Our results indicate a strong anisotropy in
plasmon-SO phonon modes, whereas they are stronger along the light-mass
direction in our heterostructures. Furthermore, we find that the type of
substrate has a significant effect on the dispersion relations of the coupled
modes. Also, by tuning the misalignment and separation between layers in
double-layer phosphorene on polar substrates, we can engineer the hybrid modes.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Many-body effects due to the electron-electron interaction in silicene under an applied exchange field:The case of valley-spin coupling
We investigate the many-body effects induced by the electron–electron interaction in a valley–spin-polarized silicene under a perpendicularly applied exchange field. We calculate the real and imaginary parts of the self-energy within the leading order dynamical screening approximation where the screened interaction is obtained from the random phase approximation. Our study on the valley- and spin-dependent real and imaginary parts of the self-energy indicates that the different coupled valley–spin subbands may exhibit distinct characteristics. Moreover, we obtain the corresponding spectral functions and find that the plasmaron and quasiparticle peaks have different spectral weights and broadenings in all states. Interestingly, it seems that there are clear dependencies for the position and broadening of the peaks on valley–spin indexes. In addition, we study the effect of the electron–electron interaction on the renormalized velocity in the on-shell approximation and show that the renormalized velocity in gapped states becomes greater, and in gapless states, it becomes smaller as the wave vector grows
Germanene: the germanium analogue of graphene
Recently, several research groups have reported the growth of germanene, a new member of the graphene family. Germanene is in many aspects very similar to graphene, but in contrast to the planar graphene lattice, the germanene honeycomb lattice is buckled and composed of two vertically displaced sub-lattices. Density functional theory calculations have revealed that free-standing germanene is a 2D Dirac fermion system, i.e. the electrons behave as massless relativistic particles that are described by the Dirac equation, which is the relativistic variant of the Schrödinger equation. Germanene is a very appealing 2D material. The spin-orbit gap in germanene (~24 meV) is much larger than in graphene (<0.05 meV), which makes germanene the ideal candidate to exhibit the quantum spin Hall effect at experimentally accessible temperatures. Additionally, the germanene lattice offers the possibility to open a band gap via for instance an externally applied electrical field, adsorption of foreign atoms or coupling with a substrate. This opening of the band gap paves the way to the realization of germanene based field-effect devices. In this topical review we will (1) address the various methods to synthesize germanene (2) provide a brief overview of the key results that have been obtained by density functional theory calculations and (3) discuss the potential of germanene for future applications as well for fundamentally oriented studies
Coulomb drag in anisotropic systems: a theoretical study on a double-layer phosphorene
We theoretically study the Coulomb drag resistivity in a double-layer
electron system with highly anisotropic parabolic band structure using
Boltzmann transport theory. As an example, we consider a double-layer
phosphorene on which we apply our formalism. This approach, in principle, can
be tuned for other double-layered systems with paraboloidal band structures.
Our calculations show the rotation of one layer with respect to another layer
can be considered a way of controlling the drag resistivity in such systems. As
a result of rotation, the off-diagonal elements of drag resistivity tensor have
non-zero values at any temperature. In addition, we show that the anisotropic
drag resistivity is very sensitive to the direction of momentum transfer
between two layers due to highly anisotropic inter-layer electron-electron
interaction and also the plasmon modes. In particular, the drag anisotropy
ratio, \r{ho}yy/\r{ho}xx, can reach up to ~ 3 by changing the temperature.
Furthermore,our calculations suggest that including the local field correction
in dielectric function changes the results significantly. Finally, We examine
the dependence of drag resistivity and its anisotropy ratio on various
parameters like inter-layer separation, electron density, short-range
interaction and insulating substrate/spacer.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Gate-tunable black phosphorus spin valve with nanosecond spin lifetimes
Two-dimensional materials offer new opportunities for both fundamental
science and technological applications, by exploiting the electron spin. While
graphene is very promising for spin communication due to its extraordinary
electron mobility, the lack of a band gap restricts its prospects for
semiconducting spin devices such as spin diodes and bipolar spin transistors.
The recent emergence of 2D semiconductors could help overcome this basic
challenge. In this letter we report the first important step towards making 2D
semiconductor spin devices. We have fabricated a spin valve based on ultra-thin
(5 nm) semiconducting black phosphorus (bP), and established fundamental spin
properties of this spin channel material which supports all electrical spin
injection, transport, precession and detection up to room temperature (RT).
Inserting a few layers of boron nitride between the ferromagnetic electrodes
and bP alleviates the notorious conductivity mismatch problem and allows
efficient electrical spin injection into an n-type bP. In the non-local spin
valve geometry we measure Hanle spin precession and observe spin relaxation
times as high as 4 ns, with spin relaxation lengths exceeding 6 um. Our
experimental results are in a very good agreement with first-principles
calculations and demonstrate that Elliott-Yafet spin relaxation mechanism is
dominant. We also demonstrate that spin transport in ultra-thin bP depends
strongly on the charge carrier concentration, and can be manipulated by the
electric field effect
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