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Two-dimension (2D) semiconductor materials have attracted much attention and research interest for their novel properties suitable for electronic and optoelectronic applications. In this paper, we have proposed an idea in new 2D materials design by using adjacent group elements to substitute half of the atoms in the primitive configurations to form isoelectronic compounds. We have successfully taken this idea on group V monolayers and have obtained many unexplored Group IV-V-VI monolayer compounds: P2SiS, As2SiS, As2GeSe, Sb2GeSe, Sb2SnTe, and Bi2SnTe. Relative formation energy calculations, phonon spectrum calculations, as well as finite-temperature molecular dynamics simulations confirm their stability and DFT calculations indicate that they are all semiconductors. This idea broadens the scope of group V semiconductors and we believe it can be extended to other type of 2D materials to obtain new semiconductors with better properties for optoelectronic and electronic applications.
Heteroepitaxial growth of selected group IV-VI nitrides on various orientations of sapphire (alpha-Al2O3) is demonstrated using atomic layer deposition. High quality, epitaxial films are produced at significantly lower temperatures than required by c
Spin injection efficiency based on conventional and/or half-metallic ferromagnet/semiconductor is greatly limited by the Schmidt obstacle due to conductivity mismatch, here we proposed that by replacing the metallic injectors with spin gapless semico
We present a stochastic simulation method designed to study at an atomic resolution the growth kinetics of compounds characterized by the sp3-type bonding symmetry. Formalization and implementation details are discussed for the particular case of the
Here, we clarify the central role of the miscut during group III-V/ group IV crystal growth. We show that the miscut first impacts the initial antiphase domain distribution, with two distinct nucleation-driven and terraces-driven regimes. It is then
We perform systematic investigation on the geometric, energetic and electronic properties of group IV-VI binary monolayers (XY), which are the counterparts of phosphorene, by employing density functional theory based electronic structure calculations