# Ultra-High Mechanical Flexibility of 2D Silicon Telluride

**Authors:** Romakanta Bhattarai, Xiao Shen

arXiv: 1906.11601 · 2020-01-29

## TL;DR

This study reveals that 2D silicon telluride exhibits exceptional mechanical flexibility, capable of withstanding up to 38% tensile strain, and demonstrates strain-tunable electronic properties, including significant band gap modulation and dimer alignment control.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the first-principles analysis of Si2Te3 monolayer's mechanical limits and electronic tunability, highlighting its unprecedented flexibility among 2D materials.

## Key findings

- Si2Te3 can sustain up to 38% uniaxial tensile strain.
- Strain reduces the band gap by 1.4 eV and causes multiple indirect-direct band gap transitions.
- Uniaxial strain effectively controls Si-Si dimer orientation.

## Abstract

Silicon telluride (Si2Te3) is a two-dimensional material with a unique variable structure where the silicon atoms form Si-Si dimers to fill the "metal" sites between the Te layers. The Si-Si dimers have four possible orientations: three in-plane and one out-of-the plane directions. The structural variability of Si2Te3 allows unusual properties especially the mechanical properties. Using results from first-principles calculations, we show that the Si2Te3 monolayer can sustain a uniaxial tensile strain up to 38%, highest among all two-dimensional materials reported. The high mechanical flexibility allows applying mechanical strain to reduce the band gap by 1.4 eV. With increasing strain, the band gap undergoes an unusual indirect-direct-indirect-direct transition. We also show that the uniaxial strain can effectively control the Si-Si dimer alignment, which is beneficial for practical applications.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.11601