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Formation And Stability Of Point Defects In Monolayer Rhenium Disulfide

Authors :
Joonki Suh
Hasan Sahin
Ching-Hwa Ho
Sefaattin Tongay
Seyda Horzum
François M. Peeters
Junqiao Wu
Deniz Çakır
Ying-Sheng Huang
Source :
Physical review : B : condensed matter and materials physics
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Aperta, 2014.

Abstract

Recently, rhenium disulfide (${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$) monolayers were experimentally extracted by conventional mechanical exfoliation technique from as-grown ${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$ crystals. Unlike the well-known members of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), ${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$ crystallizes in a stable distorted-$1T$ structure and lacks an indirect to direct gap crossover. Here we present an experimental and theoretical study of the formation, energetics, and stability of the most prominent lattice defects in monolayer ${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$. Experimentally, irradiation with 3-MeV He${}^{+2}$ ions was used to break the strong covalent bonds in ${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$ flakes. Photoluminescence measurements showed that the luminescence from monolayers is mostly unchanged after highly energetic $\ensuremath{\alpha}$ particle irradiation. In order to understand the energetics of possible vacancies in ${\mathrm{ReS}}_{2}$ we performed systematic first-principles calculations. Our calculations revealed that the formation of a single sulfur vacancy has the lowest formation energy in both Re and S rich conditions and a random distribution of such defects are energetically more preferable. Sulfur point defects do not result in any spin polarization whereas the creation of Re-containing point defects induce magnetization with a net magnetic moment of 1--3${\ensuremath{\mu}}_{\mathrm{B}}$. Experimentally observed easy formation of sulfur vacancies is in good agreement with first-principles calculations.

Details

ISSN :
10980121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical review : B : condensed matter and materials physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ddea35db81ef6d7f3d392bcb15c91f53