Ultrahigh Out-of-Plane Piezoelectricity Meets Giant Rashba Effect in 2D Janus Monolayers and Bilayers of Group IV Transition-Metal Trichalcogenides

The simultaneous occurrence of gigantic piezoelectricity and Rashba effect in two-dimensional (2D) materials is unusually scarce. Inversion symmetry occurring in MX3 (M = Ti, Zr, Hf; X = S, Se) monolayers is broken upon constructing their Janus monolayer structures MX2Y (X ≠ Y =S, Se), thereby induc...

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Published inJournal of physical chemistry. C Vol. 124; no. 39; pp. 21250 - 21260
Main Authors Ahammed, Raihan, Jena, Nityasagar, Rawat, Ashima, Mohanta, Manish K, Dimple, De Sarkar, Abir
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 01.10.2020
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Summary:The simultaneous occurrence of gigantic piezoelectricity and Rashba effect in two-dimensional (2D) materials is unusually scarce. Inversion symmetry occurring in MX3 (M = Ti, Zr, Hf; X = S, Se) monolayers is broken upon constructing their Janus monolayer structures MX2Y (X ≠ Y =S, Se), thereby inducing a large out-of-plane piezoelectric constant d 33 (∼68 pm/V) in them. d 33 can be further enhanced to a super high value of ∼1000 pm/V upon applying vertical compressive strain in the van der Waals bilayers constituted by interfacing these Janus monolayers. Therefore, d 33 in these Janus transition-metal trichalcogenide (TMTC) bilayers reach more than 4-fold times that of bulk ceramic PZT material (∼268 pm/V). The absence of a horizontal mirror symmetry and the presence of strong spin–orbit coupling cause Rashba spin-splitting in electronic bands in these Janus 2D monolayers, which shows up as an ultrahigh Rashba parameter, αR ∼ 1.1 eV Å. It can be raised to 1.41 eV Å via compressive strain. Most of the 2D materials reported to date mainly show in-plane electric polarization, which severely limits their prospects in piezotronic devices. In this present work, the piezoelectricity shown by the Janus monolayers of group IV TMTCs and their bilayers is significantly higher than the ones generally utilized in the form of three-dimensional bulk piezoelectric solids, for example, α-quartz (d 11 = 2.3 pm/V), wurtzite-GaN (d 33 = 3.1 pm/V), and wurtzite-AlN (d 33 = 5.6 pm/V). It is exceedingly higher than that in Janus multilayer/bulk structures of Mo- and W-based transition-metal dichalcogenides, for example, MoSTe (d 33 ∼ 10 pm/V). The 2D Janus TMTC monolayers and their bilayers reported herewith straddle giant Rashba spin-splitting and ultrahigh piezoelectricity, thereby making them immensely promising candidates in the next-generation electronics, piezotronics, spintronics, flexible electronics, and piezoelectric devices.
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c05134