Nitrophosphorene: A 2D Semiconductor with Both Large Direct Gap and Superior Mobility
ORAL
Abstract
A new two-dimensional phosphorus nitride monolayer (P21/c-PN) with distinct structural and electronic properties is predicted based on first-principle calculations. The energy of this allotrope is slightly above the convex hull between black phosphorous and phosphorous nitride (P3N5) and is 46.4 meV/PN lower than the most stable phosphorus nitride allotropes in previous reports. Unlike pristine single-atom group V monolayers such as nitrogene, phosphorene, arsenene, and antimonene, P21/c-PN has an intrinsic direct band gap of 2.77 eV and remains as a direct gap semiconductor under compressive and tensile strains as large as 10%. Strikingly, P21/c-PN shows excellent electron mobility up to 290829.81 cm2 V-1s-1 along a direction, which is about 18 times of that in monolayer black phosphorus, and electric transport also show high anisotropy. This put P21/c-PN way above the general relation that carrier mobility is inversely proportional to bandgap, making it a very unique two-dimensional material for nanoelectronics devices.
*This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 21673085).Part of the calculations are performed on NSF-funded XSEDE resources (TGDMR130005) run by Texas Advanced Computing Center.
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Presenters
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Lei Zhao
- California State University, Northridge