Tuning the electronic properties of hydrogen passivated C3N nanoribbons through van der Waals stacking
Jia Liu, Xian Liao, Jiayu Liang, Mingchao Wang, Qinghong Yuan

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how stacking and edge structure modifications in hydrogen passivated C3N nanoribbons can effectively tune their electronic bandgaps, enabling potential applications in nano-electronics and optoelectronics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive first-principles analysis of bandgap modulation in bilayer C3N nanoribbons with various edge structures and stacking configurations.
Findings
Bilayer C3N nanoribbons exhibit significant bandgap tunability.
Edge structures determine whether nanoribbons are direct or indirect bandgap semiconductors.
Stacking order can induce transitions between direct and indirect bandgap types.
Abstract
The two-dimensional (2D) C3N has emerged as a material with promising applications in high performance device owing to its intrinsic bandgap and tunable electronic properties. Although there are several reports about the bandgap tuning of C3N via stacking or forming nanoribbon, bandgap modulation of bilayer C3N nanoribbons (C3NNRs) with various edge structures is still far from well understood. Here, based on extensive first-principles calculations, we demonstrated the effective bandgap engineering of C3N by cutting it into hydrogen passivated C3NNRs and stacking them into bilayer heterostructures. It was found that armchair (AC) C3NNRs with three types of edge structures are all semiconductors, while only zigzag (ZZ) C3NNRs with edges composed of both C and N atoms (ZZ-CN/CN) are semiconductors. The bandgaps of all semiconducting C3NNRs are larger than that of C3N nanosheet. More…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · 2D Materials and Applications · MXene and MAX Phase Materials
