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 language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 325303 |
| Journal | Journal of Physics Condensed Matter |
| Volume | 26 |
| Issue number | 32 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 13 Aug 2014 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- BSb
- density functional theory
- nanoribbon
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