ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

A Rigorous Method of Calculating Exfoliation Energies from First Principles

66   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Jong Hyun Jung
 تاريخ النشر 2018
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The exfoliation energy, the energy required to peel off an atomic layer from the surface of a bulk material, is of fundamental importance in the science and engineering of two-dimensional materials. Traditionally, the exfoliation energy of a material has been obtained from first principles by calculating the difference in the ground-state energy between (i) a slab of $N$ atomic layers ($N gg 1$) and (ii) a slab of $N-1$ atomic layers plus an atomic layer separated from the slab. In this paper, we prove that the exfoliation energy can be obtained exactly as the difference in the ground-state energy between a bulk material (per atomic layer) and a single isolated layer. The proposed method is (i) tremendously lower in computational cost than the traditional approach since it does not require calculations on thick slabs, (ii) still valid even if there is a surface reconstruction of any kind, (iii) capable of taking into account the relaxation of the single exfoliated layer (both in-plane lattice parameters and atomic positions), and (iv) easily combined with all kinds of many-body computational methods. As a proof of principles, we calculated exfoliation energies of graphene, hexagonal boron nitride, MoS$_2$ and phosphorene using density-functional theory. In addition, we found that the in-plane relaxation of an exfoliated layer accounts for 5% of one-layer exfoliation energy of phosphorene while it is negligible (< 0.4%) in the other cases.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Defects in 2D materials are becoming prominent candidates for quantum emitters and scalable optoelectronic applications. However, several physical properties that characterize their behavior, such as charged defect ionization energies, are difficult to simulate with conventional first-principles methods, mainly because of the weak and anisotropic dielectric screening caused by the reduced dimensionality. We establish fundamental principles for accurate and efficient calculations of charged defect ionization energies and electronic structure in ultrathin 2D materials. We propose to use the vacuum level as the reference for defect charge transition levels (CTLs) because it gives robust results insensitive to the level of theory, unlike commonly used band edge positions. Furthermore, we determine the fraction of Fock exchange in hybrid functionals for accurate band gaps and band edge positions of 2D materials by enforcing the generalized Koopmans condition of localized defect states. We found the obtained fractions of Fock exchange vary significantly from 0.2 for bulk $h$-BN to 0.4 for monolayer $h$-BN, whose band gaps are also in good agreement with experimental results and calculated GW results. The combination of these methods allows for reliable and efficient prediction of defect ionization energies (difference between CTLs and band edge positions). We motivate and generalize these findings with several examples including different defects in monolayer to few-layer hexagonal boron nitride ($h$-BN), monolayer MoS$_2$ and graphane. Finally, we show that increasing the number of layers of $h$-BN systematically lowers defect ionization energies, mainly through CTLs shifting towards vacuum, with conduction band minima kept almost unchanged.
Core-level X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) is often used to study the surfaces of heterogeneous copper-based catalysts, but the interpretation of measured spectra, in particular the assignment of peaks to adsorbed species, can be extremely cha llenging. In this study we demonstrate that first principles calculations using the delta Self Consistent Field (delta-SCF) method can be used to guide the analysis of experimental core-level spectra of complex surfaces relevant to heterogeneous catalysis. Specifically, we calculate core-level binding energy shifts for a series of adsorbates on Cu(111) and show that the resulting C1s and O1s binding energy shifts for adsorbed CO, CO2, C2H4, HCOO, CH3O, H2O, OH and a surface oxide on Cu(111) are in good overall agreement with the experimental literature. In the few cases where the agreement is less good, the theoretical results may indicate the need to re-examine experimental peak assignments.
We present a method for calculating the electronic structure of correlated materials based on a truly first-principles LDA+U scheme. Recently we suggested how to calculate U from first-principles, using a method which we named constrained RPA (cRPA). The input is simply the Kohn-Sham eigenfunctions and eigenvalues obtained within the LDA. In our proposed self-consistent LDA+U scheme, we calculate the LDA+U eigenfunctions and eigenvalues and use these to extract U. The updated U is then used in the next iteration to obtain a new set of eigenfunctions and eigenvalues and the iteration is continued until convergence is achieved. The most significant result is that our numerical approach is indeed stable: it is possible to find the effective exchange and correlation interaction matrix in a self-consistent way, resulting in a significant improvement over the LDA results, regarding both the bandgap in NiO and the f-band exchange spin-splitting in Gd, but some discrepancies still remain.
Core-electron x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy is a powerful technique for studying the electronic structure and chemical composition of molecules, solids and surfaces. However, the interpretation of measured spectra and the assignment of peaks to at oms in specific chemical environments is often challenging. Here, we address this problem and introduce a parameter-free computational approach for calculating absolute core-electron binding energies. In particular, we demonstrate that accurate absolute binding energies can be obtained from the total energy difference of the ground state and a state with an explicit core hole when exchange and correlation effects are described by a recently developed meta-generalized gradient approximation and relativistic effects are included even for light elements. We carry out calculations for molecules, solids and surface species and find excellent agreement with available experimental measurements. For example, we find a mean absolute error of only 0.16 eV for a reference set of 103 molecular core-electron binding energies. The capability to calculate accurate absolute core-electron binding energies will enable new insights into a wide range of chemical surface processes that are studied by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
We develop a formalism and a computational method to study polarons in insulators and semi-conductors from first principles. Unlike in standard calculations requiring large supercells, we solve a secular equation involving phonons and electron-phonon matrix elements from density-functional perturbation theory, in a spirit similar to the Bethe-Salpeter equation for excitons. We show that our approach describes seamlessly large and small polarons, and we illustrate its capability by calculating wavefunctions, formation energies, and spectral decomposition of polarons in LiF and Li2O2.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا