Momentum matching and band-alignment type in van der Waals heterostructures: Interfacial effects and materials screening
Yue-Jiao Zhang, Yin-Ti Ren, Xiao-Huan Lv, Xiao-Lin Zhao, Rui Yang,, Nie-Wei Wang, Chen-Dong Jin, Hu Zhang, Ru-Qian Lian, Peng-Lai Gong, Rui-Ning, Wang, Jiang-Long Wang, and Xing-Qiang Shi

TL;DR
This study investigates how interfacial effects influence band alignment and momentum matching in van der Waals heterostructures, proposing a practical screening method for designing robust momentum-matched type II heterostructures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of interfacial effects on band edges using density-functional theory and introduces a new screening approach for heterostructure design.
Findings
Interfacial effects significantly alter band alignment and momentum matching.
A practical screening method for designing momentum-matched heterostructures is proposed.
The study enhances understanding of interfacial influences on 2D heterostructure properties.
Abstract
Momentum-matched type II van der Waals heterostructures (vdWHs) have been designed by assembling layered two-dimensional semiconductors (2DSs) with special band-structure combinations - that is, the valence band edge at the Gamma point (the Brillouin-zone center) for one 2DS and the conduction band edge at the Gamma point for the other [Ubrig et al., Nat. Mater. 19, 299 (2020)]. However, the band offset sizes, band-alignment types, and whether momentum matched or not, all are affected by the interfacial effects between the component 2DSs, such as the quasichemical-bonding (QB) interaction between layers and the electrical dipole moment formed around the vdW interface. Here, based on density-functional theory calculations, first we probe the interfacial effects (including different QBs for valence and conduction bands, interface dipole, and, the synergistic effects of these two aspects)…
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.
