Bilayer
Phosphorene: Effect of Stacking Order on Bandgap
and Its Potential Applications in Thin-Film Solar Cells
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Abstract
Phosphorene, a monolayer
of black phosphorus, is promising for
nanoelectronic applications not only because it is a natural p-type
semiconductor but also because it possesses a layer-number-dependent
direct bandgap (in the range of 0.3 to 1.5 eV). On basis of the density
functional theory calculations, we investigate electronic properties
of the bilayer phosphorene with different stacking orders. We find
that the direct bandgap of the bilayers can vary from 0.78 to 1.04
eV with three different stacking orders. In addition, a vertical electric
field can further reduce the bandgap to 0.56 eV (at the field strength
0.5 V/Å). More importantly, we find that when a monolayer of
MoS<sub>2</sub> is superimposed with the p-type AA- or AB-stacked
bilayer phosphorene, the combined trilayer can be an effective solar-cell
material with type-II heterojunction alignment. The power conversion
efficiency is predicted to be ∼18 or 16% with AA- or AB-stacked
bilayer phosphorene, higher than reported efficiencies of the state-of-the-art
trilayer graphene/transition metal dichalcogenide solar cells