Energy bands of atomic monolayers of various materials: Possibility of energy gap engineering
Tatsuo Suzuki, Yushi Yokomizo

TL;DR
This study explores the electronic properties of various atomic monolayers using density functional theory, demonstrating that atomic substitution can tune energy gaps, which is promising for developing novel electronic devices.
Contribution
It introduces a computational approach to analyze and control energy gaps in atomic monolayers of various materials through atomic substitution.
Findings
Energy gaps vary across different atomic monolayers.
Substituting atoms can effectively tune the energy gaps.
Atomic monolayers have potential for novel device applications.
Abstract
The mobility of graphene is very high because the quantum Hall effects can be observed even at room temperature. Graphene has the potential of the material for novel devices because of this high mobility. But the energy gap of graphene is zero, so graphene can not be applied to semiconductor devices such as transistors, LEDs, etc. In order to control the energy gaps, we propose atomic monolayers which consist of various materials besides carbon atoms. To examine the energy dispersions of atomic monolayers of various materials, we calculated the electronic states of these atomic monolayers using density functional theory with structural optimizations. The quantum chemical calculation software "Gaussian 03" was used under periodic boundary conditions. The calculation method is LSDA/6-311G(d,p), B3LYP/6-31G(d), or B3LYP/6-311G(d,p). The calculated materials are C (graphene), Si (silicene),…
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