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Stress-Tuned Optical Transitions in Layered 1T-MX 2 (M=Hf, Zr, Sn; X=S, Se) Crystals.

Miłosz RybakTomasz WozniakMagdalena BirowskaFilip DybałaAlfredo SeguraKonrad Jerzy KapciaPaweł ScharochRobert Kudrawiec
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Optical measurements under externally applied stresses allow us to study the materials' electronic structure by comparing the pressure evolution of optical peaks obtained from experiments and theoretical calculations. We examine the stress-induced changes in electronic structure for the thermodynamically stable 1T polytype of selected MX2 compounds (M=Hf, Zr, Sn; X=S, Se), using the density functional theory. We demonstrate that considered 1T-MX2 materials are semiconducting with indirect character of the band gap, irrespective to the employed pressure as predicted using modified Becke-Johnson potential. We determine energies of direct interband transitions between bands extrema and in band-nesting regions close to Fermi level. Generally, the studied transitions are optically active, exhibiting in-plane polarization of light. Finally, we quantify their energy trends under external hydrostatic, uniaxial, and biaxial stresses by determining the linear pressure coefficients. Generally, negative pressure coefficients are obtained implying the narrowing of the band gap. The semiconducting-to-metal transition are predicted under hydrostatic pressure. We discuss these trends in terms of orbital composition of involved electronic bands. In addition, we demonstrate that the measured pressure coefficients of HfS2 and HfSe2 absorption edges are in perfect agreement with our predictions. Comprehensive and easy-to-interpret tables containing the optical features are provided to form the basis for assignation of optical peaks in future measurements.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • high resolution
  • high speed
  • molecular dynamics
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • gold nanoparticles
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • current status
  • heat stress