Strain induced effects on the electronic and phononic properties of 2H and 1T$^{\prime}$ monolayer MoS$_{2}$
Saumen Chaudhuri, A. K. Das, G. P. Das, B. N. Dev

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to explore how strain affects the electronic and phononic properties of 2H and 1T' monolayer MoS2, revealing tunable electronic transitions and phonon instabilities.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of strain effects on 2H and 1T' phases of MoS2, highlighting their stability limits and potential for strain engineering.
Findings
2H phase exhibits direct to indirect band gap transition under strain
1T' phase loses semimetallic nature due to strain-induced overlapping of states
2H phase is more resistant to strain-induced instability than 1T' phase
Abstract
First-principles calculations, within the framework of density functional theory, have been performed on the well-studied 2H and the less explored 1T phase of single-layer MoS. We have addressed the strain-induced tunability of the electronic and phononic properties of both phases, and compared their stability against the applied strain. By considering a large number of strain profiles for both tensile and compressive stress, we have found that the electronic properties of both 2H and 1T phases are sensitive to the direction of the applied strain and can be tuned in a controlled way. For the 2H phase, in most cases, a direct to indirect band gap transition at lower strain and a semiconductor to metal transition at higher strain is observed. The applied strain destroys the semimetallic nature of the 1T phase via the overlapping of the bulk states…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Boron and Carbon Nanomaterials Research · Heusler alloys: electronic and magnetic properties
