Effects of Intrinsic Surface Defects on Morphology and Electronic Structure of a Thin PtSe<sub>2</sub> Film from First-principles

ORAL

Abstract

Among transition-metal dichalcogenide families, PtSe2 is relatively new. In a bulk form, it was confirmed to be a Dirac semimetal, whereas as a monolayer, it was shown to be semiconducting with a small band gap. Recently, a PtSe2 monolayer was grown on a Pt substrate and revealed interesting layer-selective Rashba splitting. Compared to MoS2 family, PtSe2 has a stronger bonding between neighboring monolayers, which allows to observe defects slightly deeper into the surface. Very recently, a scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/S) study revealed interesting morphology changes depending on types of intrinsic surface defects on a thin PtSe2 film grown on sapphire. Motivated by this, we investigate morphology, formation energies and electronic structures of five distinct surface defects in a thin PtSe2 film, by using supercells within density-functional theory. Our results will be compared with the STM/S experimental data.

*The computational support was provided by SDSC under DMR060009N and VT ARC computer clusters.

Presenters

  • Yichul Choi

    • Department of Physics, Virginia Tech

Authors

  • Yichul Choi

    • Department of Physics, Virginia Tech
  • Husong Zheng

    • Physics, Virginia Tech
    • Department of Physics, Virginia Tech
  • Fazel Baniasadi

    • Physics, Virginia Tech
    • Materials Sci & Engineering, Virginia Tech
  • Chenggang Tao

    • Virginia Tech
    • Physics, Virginia Tech
    • Department of Physics, Virginia Tech
  • Kyungwha Park

    • Virginia Tech
    • Physics, Virginia Tech
    • Department of Physics, Virginia Tech