85 research outputs found

    Optoelectronic Properties and Excitons in Hybridized Boron Nitride and Graphene Hexagonal Monolayers

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    We explain the nature of the electronic band gap and optical absorption spectrum of Carbon - Boron Nitride (CBN) hybridized monolayers using density functional theory (DFT), GW and Bethe-Salpeter equation calculations. The CBN optoelectronic properties result from the overall monolayer bandstructure, whose quasiparticle states are controlled by the C domain size and lie at separate energy for C and BN without significant mixing at the band edge, as confirmed by the presence of strongly bound bright exciton states localized within the C domains. The resulting absorption spectra show two marked peaks whose energy and relative intensity vary with composition in agreement with the experiment, with large compensating quasiparticle and excitonic corrections compared to DFT calculations. The band gap and the optical absorption are not regulated by the monolayer composition as customary for bulk semiconductor alloys and cannot be understood as a superposition of the properties of bulk-like C and BN domains as recent experiments suggested

    Optical Properties of BN in the cubic and in the layered hexagonal phases

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    Linear optical functions of cubic and hexagonal BN have been studied within first principles DFT-LDA theory. Calculated energy-loss functions compare well with experiments and previous theoretical results both for h-BN and for c-BN. Discrepancies arise between theoretical results and experiments in the imaginary part of the dielectric function for c-BN. Possible explanation to this mismatch are proposed and evaluated; lattice constant variations, h-BN contamination in c-BN samples and self-energy effects.Comment: RevTex 42 pages, 16 postscript figures embedde

    How strong is the Second Harmonic Generation in single-layer monochalcogenides? A response from first-principles real-time simulations

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    Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) of single-layer monochalcogenides, such as GaSe and InSe, has been recently reported [2D Mater. 5 (2018) 025019; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2015, 137, 79947997] to be extremely strong with respect to bulk and multilayer forms. To clarify the origin of this strong SHG signal, we perform first-principles real-time simulations of linear and non-linear optical properties of these two-dimensional semiconducting materials. The simulations, based on ab-initio many-body theory, accurately treat the electron-hole correlation and capture excitonic effects that are deemed important to correctly predict the optical properties of such systems. We find indeed that, as observed for other 2D systems, the SHG intensity is redistributed at excitonic resonances. The obtained theoretical SHG intensity is an order of magnitude smaller than that reported at the experimental level. This result is in substantial agreement with previously published simulations which neglected the electron-hole correlation, demonstrating that many-body interactions are not at the origin of the strong SHG measured. We then show that the experimental data can be reconciled with the theoretical prediction when a single layer model, rather than a bulk one, is used to extract the SHG coefficient from the experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Ab initio energy loss spectra of Si and Ge nanowires

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    We report an ab initio investigation of fast electron energy-loss probability in silicon and germanium nanowires. Computed energy loss spectra are characterized by a strong enhancement of the direct interband transition peak at low energy, in good agreement with experimental data. Our calculations predict an important diameter dependence of the bulk volume plasmon peak for very thin wires which is consistent with the blue shift observed experimentally in thicker wires

    Exciton Radiative Lifetimes in Two-Dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

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    Light emission in two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) changes significantly with the number of layers and stacking sequence. While the electronic structure and optical absorption are well understood in 2D-TMDs, much less is known about exciton dynamics and radiative recombination. Here, we show first-principles calculations of intrinsic exciton radiative lifetimes at low temperature (4 K) and room temperature (300 K) in TMD monolayers with the chemical formula MX_2 (X = Mo, W, and X = S, Se), as well as in bilayer and bulk MoS2 and in two MX_2 heterobilayers. Our results elucidate the time scale and microscopic origin of light emission in TMDs. We find radiative lifetimes of a few picoseconds at low temperature and a few nanoseconds at room temperature in the monolayers and slower radiative recombination in bulk and bilayer than in monolayer MoS_2. The MoS_2/WS_2 and MoSe_2/WSe_2 heterobilayers exhibit very long-lived (∼20–30 ns at room temperature) interlayer excitons constituted by electrons localized on the Mo-based and holes on the W-based monolayer. The wide radiative lifetime tunability, together with the ability shown here to predict radiative lifetimes from computations, hold unique potential to manipulate excitons in TMDs and their heterostructures for application in optoelectronics and solar energy conversion
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