Calculations of point defects in the layered MX2 (M=Mo, W; X=S, Te): Substitution by the groups III, V and VII elements
Dan Guo, Kaike Yang, Tao Shen, Jin Xiao, Li-Ming Tang, Zhongming Wei,, Guanghui Zhou, and Hui-Xiong Deng

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to systematically analyze the doping properties of layered MX2 (M=Mo, W; X=S, Te) with groups III, V, and VII elements, identifying promising dopants for electronic applications.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive first-principles analysis of dopant formation energies and transition levels in MX2, highlighting new potential dopants for p- and n-type doping.
Findings
Al is an effective p-type dopant in MoS2, WS2, and MoTe2.
SbTe and AsTe can form shallow acceptors in MoTe2 and WTe2.
F on Te sites can serve as a potential n-type dopant in WTe2.
Abstract
Dopability in semiconductors plays a crucial role in device performance. Using the first-principles density-functional theory calculations, we investigate systematically the doping properties of layered MX2 (M= Mo, W; X=S, Te) by replacing M or X with the groups III, V and VII elements. It is found that the defect BM is hard to form in MX2 due to the large formation energy originating from the crystal distortion, while AlM is easy to realize compared to the former. In MoS2, WS2 and MoTe2, Al is the most desirable p-type dopant under anion-rich conditions among the group III components, since AlM has relatively low transition and formation energies. With respect to the doping of the group V elements, it is found that the substitutions on the cation sites have deeper defect levels than those on the anion sites due to the strong electronegativity. AsTe and SbTe in MoTe2 and WTe2 are trend…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · MXene and MAX Phase Materials · Inorganic Chemistry and Materials
