No Arabic abstract
Materials with low work functions are critical for an array of applications requiring the facile removal or efficient transport of electrons through a device. Perovskite oxides are a promising class of materials for finding low work functions, and here we target applications in thermionic and field electron emission. Perovskites have highly malleable compositions which enable tunable work function values over a wide range, robust stability at high temperatures, and high electronic conductivities. In this work, we screened over 2900 perovskite oxides in search of stable, conductive, low-work-function materials using Density Functional Theory (DFT) methods. Our work provides insight into the materials chemistry governing the work function value of a perovskite, where materials with barely filled d bands possess the lowest work functions. Our screening has resulted in a total of seven promising compounds, such as BaMoO3 and SrNb0.75Co0.25O3 with work functions of 1.1 eV and 1.5 eV, respectively. These promising materials and others presented in this study may find use as low work function electron emitters in high power vacuum electronic and thermionic energy conversion devices. Moreover, the database of calculated work functions and materials chemistry trends governing the value of the work function may aid in the engineering of perovskite heterojunction devices.
LaB6 has been used as a commercial electron emitter for decades. Despite the large number of studies on the work function of LaB6, there is no comprehensive understanding of work function trends in the hexaboride materials family. In this study, we use Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations to calculated trends of rare earth hexaboride work function and rationalize these trends based on the electronegativity of the metal element. We predict that alloying LaB6 with Ba can further lower the work function by ~0.2 eV. Interestingly, we find that alloyed (La, Ba)B6 can have lower work functions than either LaB6 or BaB6, benefitting from an enhanced surface dipole due to metal element size mismatch. In addition to hexaborides we also investigate work function trends of similar materials families, namely tetraborides and transition metal nitrides, which, like hexaborides, are electrically conductive and refractory and thus may also be promising materials for electron emission applications. We find that tetraborides consistently have higher work functions than their hexaboride analogues as the tetraborides having less ionic bonding and smaller positive surface dipoles. Finally, we find that HfN has a low work function of about 2.2 eV, making HfN a potentially promising new electron emitter material.
Polymer diodes require cathodes that do not corrode the polymer but do have low work function to minimize the electron injection barrier. First-principles calculations demonstrate that the work function of the (1000) surface of the compound Ca2N is half an eV lower than that of the elemental metal Ca (2.35 vs. 2.87 eV). Moreover its reactivity is expected to be smaller. This makes Ca2N an interesting candidate to replace calcium as cathode material for polymer light emitting diode devices.
MXenes are a set of two-dimensional transition metal carbides and nitrides that offer many potential applications in energy storage and electronic devices. As an important parameter to design new electronic devices, we investigate the work functions of bare MXenes and their functionalized ones with F, OH, and O chemical groups using first-principles calculations. From our calculations, it turns out that the OH terminated MXenes attain ultralow work functions between 1.6 and 2.8 eV. Moreover, depending on the type of the transition metal, the F or O functionalization affects increasing or decreasing the work functions. We show that the changes in the work functions upon functionalizations are linearly correlated with the changes in the surface dipole moments. It is shown that the work functions of the F or O terminated MXenes are controlled by two factors: the induced dipole moments by the charge transfers between F/O and the substrate, and the changes in the total surface dipole moments caused by surface relaxation upon the functionalization. However, in the cases of the OH terminated MXenes, in addition to these two factors, the intrinsic dipole moments of the OH groups play an important role in determining the total dipole moments and consequently justify their ultralow work functions.
Perovskite stability is of the core importance and difficulty in current research and application of perovskite solar cells. Nevertheless, over the past century, the formability and stability of perovskite still relied on simplified factor based on human knowledge, such as the commonly used tolerance factor t. Combining machine learning (ML) with first-principles density functional calculations, we proposed a strategy to firstly calculate the decomposition energies, considered to be closely related to thermodynamic stability, of 354 kinds halide perovskites, establish the machine learning relationship between decomposition energy and compositional ionic radius and investigate the stabilities of 14,190 halide double perovskites. The ML-predicted results enable us to rediscover a series of stable rare earth metal halide perovskites (up to ~1000 kinds), indicating the generalization of this model and further provide elemental and concentration suggestion for improving the stability of mixed perovskite.
Metal halide perovskites have recently emerged as promising materials for the next generation of optoelectronic devices owing to their remarkable intrinsic properties. In the growth of perovskite crystals, the substrates are essential and play a vital role. Herein, substrate engineering in the growth of perovskite crystals have been reviewed. Particularly, various modified strategies and corresponding mechanism based on the substrate engineering applied to the optimization of thickness, nucleation and growth rate are highlighted. Then the alterable adhesion to substrates will also be discussed. Furthermore, applying the structural coherence of epitaxial crystals with substrate, scalable perovskite single-crystalline thin films have been obtained and can be transferred onto arbitrary substrates. Substrate engineering also can stabilize the desired perovskite phases by modulating the strain between crystals and substrates. Finally, several key challenges and related solutions in the growth of perovskite crystals based on substrate engineering are proposed. This review aims to guide the future of substrate engineering in perovskite crystals for various optoelectronic applications.