Metallic behavior in low-dimensional honeycomb SiB crystals: A first-principles prediction of atomic structure and electronic properties

We present a detailed analysis of the atomic and electronic structure of a two-dimensional monolayer of boron and silicon elements within periodic density functional theory. The proposed hSiB sheet is a structural analog of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) and exhibits a good structural stability, comp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. B, Condensed matter and materials physics Condensed matter and materials physics, 2012-11, Vol.86 (19), Article 195416
Hauptverfasser: Hansson, Anders, de Brito Mota, F., Rivelino, Roberto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present a detailed analysis of the atomic and electronic structure of a two-dimensional monolayer of boron and silicon elements within periodic density functional theory. The proposed hSiB sheet is a structural analog of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) and exhibits a good structural stability, compared to the structure of silicene. The calculated cohesive energy of an infinite sheet of h-SiB is of 4.71 eV/atom, whereas the corresponding value for silicene is 4.09 eV/atom. However, h-SiB sheets are not able to be stacked into a three-dimensional graphitelike structure, leading to a new hexagonal phase. On the other hand, h-SiB is predicted to roll up into single-walled silicon boron nanotubes (SWSiBNTs) of which we examine the electronic properties of some zigzag and armchair tubes. The strain energy of the SWSiBNTs are four to five times lower than the strain energy of the corresponding carbon nanotubes. In contrast to more polar honeycomb monolayers, the h-SiB sheet is not semiconducting or semimetallic. It has a delocalized charge density like graphene, but the [pi] band and the two highest occupied [sigma] bands are only partly filled. This results in a high density of states around the Fermi level and a metallic behavior of the h-SiB sheet. Interestingly, all the low-dimensional hSiBbased structures, including the smallest to the largest stable tubes studied here, are predicted to form metallic systems.
ISSN:1098-0121
1550-235X
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.86.195416