Publication | Closed Access
Hydrogen and fluorine co-decorated silicene: A first principles study of piezoelectric properties
30
Citations
75
References
2015
Year
EngineeringPiezoelectric PropertiesPiezoelectric CoefficientsChemistryBoron NitrideHexagonal Boron NitrideNanoelectronicsSilicenePiezoelectric MaterialFirst Principles StudyMaterials ScienceLow-buckled Silicene MonolayerPhysicsPiezoelectricityFluorine Co-decorated SilicenePiezoelectric NanogeneratorsNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsPiezoelectric Strain ConstantsGrapheneGraphene NanoribbonMolecule-based MaterialFunctional Materials
A low-buckled silicene monolayer being centrosymmetric like graphene, in contrast to a piezoelectric hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), is not intrinsically piezoelectric. However, based on first principles calculations, we show that chemical co-decoration of hydrogen (H) and fluorine (F) on opposite sides of silicene (i.e., one side is decorated with H, while the other one is with F) breaks the centrosymmetry. Redistributing the charge density due to the electronegativity difference between the atoms, non-centrosymmetric co-decoration induces an out-of-plane dipolar polarization and concomitant piezoelectricity into non-piezoelectric silicene monolayer. Our piezoelectric coefficients are comparable with other known two-dimensional piezoelectric materials (e.g., hydrofluorinated graphene/h-BN) and some bulk semiconductors, such as wurtzite GaN and wurtzite BN. Moreover, because of silicene's lower elastic constants compared to graphene or h-BN, piezoelectric strain constants are found significantly larger than those of hydrofluorinated graphene/h-BN. We also predict that a wide range of band gaps with an average of 2.52 eV can be opened in a low-buckled gapless semi-metallic silicene monolayer by co-decoration of H and F atoms on the surface.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1