Highly stable electronic properties of rippled antimonene under compressive deformation
Yujia Tian, Devesh R. Kripalani, Ming Xue, Shaofan Li, Kun Zhou

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that rippled antimonene maintains stable electronic properties under strain, unlike flat forms, offering promising insights for device design and applications in sensors and nanogenerators.
Contribution
It provides a detailed DFT analysis showing rippling stabilizes electronic properties of antimonene under strain, which is a novel insight for 2D material engineering.
Findings
Rippled antimonene's work function and band gap are stable under strain.
Flat antimonene shows significant electronic property changes with strain.
Optimal ripple amplitudes can restore pristine electronic properties.
Abstract
Antimonene has attracted much attention for its high carrier mobility and suitable band gap for electronic, optoelectronic, and even spintronic devices. To tailor its properties for such applications, strain engineering may be adopted. However, such 2D crystals may prefer to exist in the rippled form due to the instability of long-range orders, and rippling has been shown to have a contrasting, significant impact on the electronic properties of various 2D materials, which complicates the tuning process. Hence, the effects of rippling on the electronic properties of antimonene under strain are herein investigated by comparing antimonene in its rippled and flat forms. DFT calculations are performed to compute the structural and electronic parameters, where uniaxial compression of up to 7.5% is applied along the armchair and zigzag directions to study the anisotropic behavior of the…
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