Electronic structure of BSb defective monolayers and nanoribbons

F. Ersan, G. Gökoǧlu, E. Aktürk

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24 Scopus citations

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate two- and one-dimensional honeycomb structures of boron antimony (BSb) using a first-principles plane wave method within the density functional theory. BSb with a two-dimensional honeycomb structure is a semiconductor with a 0.336eV band gap. The vacancy defects, such as B, Sb, B+Sb divacancy, and B+Sb antisite disorder affect the electronic and magnetic properties of the 2D BSb sheet. All the structures with vacancies have nonmagnetic metallic characters, while the system with antisite disorder has a semiconducting band structure. We also examine bare and hydrogen-passivated quasi-one-dimensional armchair BSb nanoribbons. The effects of ribbon width (n) on an armchair BSb nanoribbon and hydrogen passivation on both B and Sb edge atoms are considered. The band gaps of bare and H passivated A-Nr-BSb oscillate with increasing ribbon width; this property is important for quantum dots. For ribbon width n=12, the bare A-Nr-BSb is a nonmagnetic semiconductor with a 0.280eV indirect band gap, but it becomes a nonmagnetic metal when B edge atoms are passivated with hydrogen. When Sb atoms are passivated with hydrogen, a ferromagnetic half-metallic ground state is observed with 2.09μB magnetic moment. When both B and Sb edges are passivated with hydrogen, a direct gap semiconductor is obtained with 0.490eV band gap with disappearance of the bands of edge atoms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number325303
JournalJournal of Physics Condensed Matter
Volume26
Issue number32
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Aug 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • BSb
  • density functional theory
  • nanoribbon

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