|
|
Effect of Thickness on the Surface and Electronic Properties of Bi Film |
Caihong DONG1, Yongli LIU2, Yang QI2( ) |
1 College of Science, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, China 2 School of Materials Science and Engineering, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, China |
|
Cite this article:
Caihong DONG, Yongli LIU, Yang QI. Effect of Thickness on the Surface and Electronic Properties of Bi Film. Acta Metall Sin, 2018, 54(6): 935-942.
|
Abstract Bismuth and its alloys exhibit a number of peculiarities and mysterious features due to its three-dimensional (3D) hexagonal crystal, and have attracted the interest of many researchers for many years. Currently, the trivial-to-topological and semimetal-semiconductor transitions have been focused, as the result of its semi-metallic and large spin-orbit coupling. The binary compounds of Bi2M3 and binary alloys BixM1-x (M=Se, Sb and Te) are found to be 3D topological insulators, as the result of small band gap and large spin-orbit coupling in Bi crystals and Bi compounds, which make these crystals topologically important. In the case of Bi films, strong spin-orbit (SO) coupling interaction is also a fundamental mechanism to induce the Z2 topology. Recently, ultrathin Bi films have also been theoretically predicted to be an elemental two-dimensional topological insulator. And, all the ultrathin Bi(111) films are characterized by a nontrivial Z2 number independent of the film thickness. In the past few years, ultrathin films of Bi with a thickness down to several BLs (bilayers) on Si substrate have been prepared in experiments, finding that thicknesses have an effect on the properties of Bi films. However, the effect of thickness on films had not be studied for microscopic mechanism experimentally in detail. In this work, the effects of thickness on the surface and electronic properties of (00Ɩ) and (012) oriented films of Bi using the first-principles method were studied. With the increase of thickness, (00Ɩ) oriented Bi films became more stable, and the film of the even-numbered layers was more stable than that of the odd-numbered layer. However, the (012) oriented Bi films presented totally different behavior comparing with the (00Ɩ) oriented Bi film. The stabilities of (012) oriented film became less stable as the thickness increased, and possessed the approximated surface energy of even-numbered layers (00Ɩ) oriented Bi films when their layer numbers were closed to four. Further analysis of the cohesive energy, geometry structure and electronic band structures showed that, all the thin films presented the transition from semi-conductors to semi-metal or metal as the thickness increases.
|
Received: 10 October 2017
|
|
[1] | Özçelik V O, Aktürk O Ü, Durgun E, et al.Prediction of a two-dimensional crystalline structure of nitrogen atoms[J]. Phys. Rev., 2015, 92B: 125420 | [2] | Li L K, Yu Y J, Ye G J, et al.Black phosphorus field-effect transistors[J]. Nat. Nanotechnol., 2014, 9: 372 | [3] | Zhu Z, Tománek D.Semiconducting layered blue phosphorus: A computational study[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2014, 112: 176802 | [4] | Kamal C, Ezawa M.Arsenene: Two-dimensional buckled and puckered honeycomb arsenic systems[J]. Phys. Rev., 2015, 91B: 085423 | [5] | Aktürk O Ü, Özçelik V O, Ciraci S.Single-layer crystalline phases of antimony: Antimonenes[J]. Phys. Rev., 2015, 91B: 235446 | [6] | Zhang S L, Yan Z, Li Y F, et al.Atomically thin arsenene and antimonene: Semimetal-semiconductor and indirect-direct band-gap transitions[J]. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2015, 54: 3112 | [7] | Ast C R, Höchst H.Electronic structure of a bismuth bilayer[J]. Phys. Rev., 2003, 67B: 113102 | [8] | Hofmann P, Gayone J E, Bihlmayer G, et al.Electronic structure and Fermi surface of Bi(100)[J]. Phys. Rev., 2005, 71B: 195413 | [9] | Hirahara T, Nagao T, Matsuda I, et al.Role of spin-orbit coupling and hybridization effects in the electronic structure of ultrathin Bi films[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2006, 97: 146803 | [10] | Jnawali G, Klein C, Wagner T, et al.Manipulation of electronic transport in the Bi(111) surface state[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2012, 108: 266804 | [11] | Yang J, Huang G Q, Zhu X F.Thickness evolution of phonon properties in ultrathin Bi(111) films[J]. Phys. Status Solidi, 2013, 250B: 1937 | [12] | Koroteev Y M, Bihlmayer G, Gayone J E, et al.Strong spin-orbit splitting on Bi surfaces[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2004, 93: 046403 | [13] | Tichovolsky E J, Mavroides J G.Magnetoreflection studies on the band structure of bismuth-antimony alloys[J]. Solid State Commun., 1969, 7: 927 | [14] | Ohtsubo Y, Perfetti L, Goerbig M O, et al.Non-trivial surface-band dispersion on Bi(111)[J]. New J. Phys., 2013, 15: 033041 | [15] | Liu Z, Liu C X, Wu Y S, et al.Stable nontrivial Z2 topology in ultrathin Bi(111) films: A first-principles study[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2011, 107: 136805 | [16] | Murakami S.Quantum spin hall effect and enhanced magnetic response by spin-orbit coupling[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2006, 97: 236805 | [17] | Wada M, Murakami S, Freimuth F, et al.Localized edge states in two-dimensional topological insulators: Ultrathin Bi films[J]. Phys. Rev., 2011, 83B: 121310 | [18] | Sun J, Mikkelsen A, Jensen M F, et al.Structural determination of the Bi(110) semimetal surface by LEED analysis and ab initio calculations[J]. Phys. Rev., 2006, 74B: 245406 | [19] | Koroteev Y M, Bihlmayer G, Chulkov E V, et al.First-principles investigation of structural and electronic properties of ultrathin Bi films[J]. Phys. Rev., 2008, 77B: 045428 | [20] | Nagao T, Sadowski J T, Saito M, et al.Nanofilm allotrope and phase transformation of ultrathin Bi film on Si(111)-7×7[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 2004, 93: 105501 | [21] | Krenzer B, Hanisch-Blicharski A, Schneider P, et al.Phonon confinement effects in ultrathin epitaxial bismuth films on silicon studied by time-resolved electron diffraction[J]. Phys. Rev., 2009, 80B: 024307 | [22] | Kresse G, Furthmüller J.Efficient iterative schemes for ab initio total-energy calculations using a plane-wave basis set[J]. Phys. Rev., 1996, 54B: 11169 | [23] | Aguilera I, Friedrich C, Blügel S.Electronic phase transitions of bismuth under strain from relativistic self-consistent GW calculations[J]. Phys. Rev., 2015, 91B: 125129 | [24] | Blöchl P E.Projector augmented-wave method[J]. Phys. Rev., 1994, 50B: 17953 | [25] | Perdew J P, Burke K, Ernzerhof M.Generalized gradient approximation made simple[J]. Phys. Rev. Lett., 1996, 77: 3865 | [26] | Qi J S, Shi D N, Zhao J J, et al.Stable structures and electronic properties of the oriented Bi nanowires and nanotubes from first-principle calculations[J]. J. Phys. Chem., 2008, 112C: 10746 | [27] | Aktürk E, Aktürk O Ü, Ciraci S.Single and bilayer bismuthene: Stability at high temperature and mechanical and electronic properties[J]. Phys. Rev., 2016, 94B: 014115 | [28] | Mönig H, Sun J, Koroteev Y M, et al.Structure of the (111) surface of bismuth: LEED analysis and first-principles calculations[J]. Phys. Rev., 2005, 72B: 085410 | [29] | Hirahara T, Nagao T, Matsuda I, et al.Quantum well states in ultrathin Bi films: angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and first-principles calculations study[J]. Phys. Rev., 2007, 75B: 035422 |
|
No Suggested Reading articles found! |
|
|
Viewed |
|
|
|
Full text
|
|
|
|
|
Abstract
|
|
|
|
|
Cited |
|
|
|
|
|
Shared |
|
|
|
|
|
Discussed |
|
|
|
|