Insights into Structural, Electronic, and Transport Properties of Pentagonal PdSe 2 Nanotubes Using First-Principles Calculations.
Nguyen Thanh TienPham Thi Bich ThaoNguyen Hai DangNguyen Duy KhanhVo Khuong DienPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
One-dimensional (1D) novel pentagonal materials have gained significant attention as a new class of materials with unique properties that could influence future technologies. In this report, we studied the structural, electronic, and transport properties of 1D pentagonal PdSe 2 nanotubes (p-PdSe 2 NTs). The stability and electronic properties of p-PdSe 2 NTs with different tube sizes and under uniaxial strain were investigated using density functional theory (DFT). The studied structures showed an indirect-to-direct bandgap transition with slight variation in the bandgap as the tube diameter increased. Specifically, (5 × 5) p-PdSe 2 NT, (6 × 6) p-PdSe 2 NT, (7 × 7) p-PdSe 2 NT, and (8 × 8) p-PdSe 2 NT are indirect bandgap semiconductors, while (9 × 9) p-PdSe 2 NT exhibits a direct bandgap. In addition, under low uniaxial strain, the surveyed structures were stable and maintained the pentagonal ring structure. The structures were fragmented under tensile strain of 24%, and compression of -18% for sample (5 × 5) and -20% for sample (9 × 9). The electronic band structure and bandgap were strongly affected by uniaxial strain. The evolution of the bandgap vs. the strain was linear. The bandgap of p-PdSe 2 NT experienced an indirect-direct-indirect or a direct-indirect-direct transition when axial strain was applied. A deformability effect in the current modulation was observed when the bias voltage ranged from about 1.4 to 2.0 V or from -1.2 to -2.0 V. Calculation of the field effect I-V characteristic showed that the on/off ratio was large with bias potentials from 1.5 to 2.0 V. This ratio increased when the inside of the nanotube contained a dielectric. The results of this investigation provide a better understanding of p-PdSe 2 NTs, and open up potential applications in next-generation electronic devices and electromechanical sensors.