No Arabic abstract
Phosphorene has been attracted intense interest due to its unexpected high carrier mobility and distinguished anisotropic optoelectronic and electronic properties. In this work, we unraveled strain engineered phosphorene as a photocatalyst in the application of water splitting hydrogen production based on density functional theory calculations. Lattice dynamic calculations demonstrated the stability for such kind of artificial materials under different strains. The phosphorene lattice is unstable under compression strains and could be crashed. Whereas, phosphorene lattice shows very good stability under tensile strains. Further guarantee of the stability of phosphorene in liquid water is studied by ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. Tunable band gap from 1.54 eV at ambient condition to 1.82 eV under tensile strains for phosphorene is evaluated using parameter-free hybrid functional calculations. Appropriate band gaps and band edge alignments at certain pH demonstrate the potential application of phosphorene as a sufficiently efficient photocatalyst for visible light water splitting. We found that the strained phosphorene exhibits significantly improved photocatalytic properties under visible-light irradiation by calculating optical absorption spectra. Negative splitting energy of absorbed H2O indicates the water splitting on phosphorene is energy favorable both without and with strains.
A multi-scale approach for the theoretical description of deformed phosphorene is presented. This approach combines a valence-force model to relate macroscopic strain to microscopic displacements of atoms and a tight-binding model with distance-dependent hopping parameters to obtain electronic properties. The resulting self-consistent electromechanical model is suitable for large-scale modeling of phosphorene devices. We demonstrate this for the case of an inhomogeneously deformed phosphorene drum, which may be used as an exciton funnel.
Phosphorene, a single layer of black phosphorous (BLK-P), has a significant potential for flexible and tunable electronics, but attempts to grow it epitaxially have been unsuccessful to date. Meanwhile, hexagonal blue phoshorous (BL-P) has been achieved on closed-packed (111) metal surfaces in special growth conditions of high vapor pressure and high reactivity of phosphorous. The (111) surfaces favors BL-P over BLK-P due to its hexagonal symmetry. Here, we investigate computationally the alternative offered by stepped substrates. Using the Cu(311) surface as a model, we find that surface steps can favor energetically BLK-P over BL-P. This can be rationalized in terms of surface density of states and orbital hybridization, which lead to a stronger surface bonding of the lower BLK-P half-layer. This work suggests that vicinal metal surfaces of metals can offer a viable path towards phosphorene synthesis.
Perovskite SrTiO3 (STO) is an attractive photocatalyst for solar water splitting, but suffers from a limited photoresponse in the ultraviolet spectral range due to its wide band gap. By means of hybrid density functional theory calculations, we systematically study engineering its band gap via doping 4d and 5d transition metals M (M=Zr, Nb, Mo, Tc, Ru, Rh, Pd, Hf, Ta, W, Re, Os, Ir and Pt) and chalcogen elements Y (Y=S and Se). We find that transition metal dopant M either has no effect on STO band gap or introduces detrimental mid-gap states, except for Pd and Pt that are able to reduce the STO band gap. In contrast, doping S and Se significantly reduces STOs direct band gap, thus leading to appreciable optical absorption transitions in the visible spectral range. Our findings provide that Pd, S and Se doped STO are potential promising photocatalysts for water splitting under visible light irradiation, thereby providing insightful theoretical guides for experiments to improve the photocatalytic activity of STO.
The surface potential and the efficiency of interfacial charge transfer are extremely important for designing future semiconductor devices based on the emerging two-dimensional (2D) phosphorene. Here, we directly measured the strongly layer-dependent surface potential of mono- and few-layer phosphorene on gold, which confirms with the reported theoretical prediction. At the same time, we used an optical way - photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy to probe the charge transfer in phosphorene-gold hybrid system. We firstly observed highly anisotropic and layer-dependent PL quenching in the phosphorene-gold hybrid system, which is attributed to the highly anisotropic/layer-dependent interfacial charge transfer.
The capacity and stability of constituent electrodes determine the performance of Li-ion batteries. In this study, density functional theory is employed to explore the potential application of recently synthesized two dimensional phosphorene as electrode materials. Our results show that Li atoms can bind strongly with phosphorene monolayer and double layer with significant electron transfer. Besides, the structure of phosphorene is not much influenced by lithiation and the volume change is only 0.2%. A semiconducting to metallic transition is observed after lithiation. The diffusion barrier is calculated to 0.76 and 0.72 eV on monolayer and double layer phosphorene. The theoretical specific capacity of phosphorene monolayer is 432.79 mAh/g, which is larger than other commercial anodes materials. Our findings show that the high capacity, low open circuit voltage, small volume change and electrical conductivity of phosphorene make it a good candidate as electrode material.