Single-wall
nanotubes of isostructural AsPS4–xSex (x = 0, 1) are grown
from solid-state reaction of stoichiometric amounts
of the elements. The structure of AsPS4 was determined
using single-crystal X-ray diffraction and refined in space group P1̅. The infinite, single-walled AsPS4 nanotubes have an
outer diameter of ≈1.1 nm and are built
of corner-sharing PS4 tetrahedra and AsS3 trigonal
pyramids. Each nanotube is nearly hexagonal, but the ≈3.4 Å
distance between S atoms on adjacent nanotubes allows them to easily
slide past one another, resulting in the loss of long-range order.
Substituting S with Se disrupted the crystallization of the nanotubes,
resulting in amorphous products that precluded the determination of
the structure for AsPS3Se. 31P solid-state NMR
spectroscopy indicated a single unique tetrahedral P environment in
AsPS4 and five different P environments all with different
degrees of Se substitution in AsPS3Se. Optical absorption
spectroscopy revealed an energy band gap of 2.7 to 2.4 eV for AsPS4 and AsPS3Se, respectively. Individual AsPS4 microfibers showed a bulk conductivity of 3.2 × 10–6 S/cm and a negative photoconductivity effect under
the illumination of light (3.06 eV) in ambient conditions. Thus, intrinsic
conductivity originates from hopping through empty trap states along
the length of the AsPS4 nanotubes