Funneling and spin-orbit coupling in transition-metal dichalcogenide nanotubes and wrinkles
Mohammadreza Daqiqshirazi, Thomas Brumme

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to explore how inhomogeneous strain in nanotubes and wrinkles of WSe2 affects their electronic properties, revealing potential for spintronic applications and exciton funneling.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the electronic effects of symmetry breaking and inhomogeneous strain in transition-metal dichalcogenide wrinkles and nanotubes, highlighting their tunable properties.
Findings
Symmetry breaking causes Rashba-like band splitting at the Γ point.
Inhomogeneous strain reduces the band gap and localizes band edges.
Wrinkles can be modeled as nanotubes with similar curvature, with limitations.
Abstract
Strain engineering provides a powerful means to tune the properties of two-dimensional materials. Accordingly, numerous studies have investigated the effect of bi- and uniaxial strain. Yet, the strain fields in many systems such as nanotubes and nanoscale wrinkles are intrinsically inhomogeneous and the consequences of this symmetry breaking are much less studied. Understanding how this affects the electronic properties is crucial especially since wrinkling is a powerful method to apply strain to two-dimensional materials in a controlled manner. In this paper, we employ density functional theory to understand the correlation between the atomic and the electronic structure in nanoscale wrinkles and nanotubes of the prototypical transition metal dichalcogenide . Our research shows that the symmetry breaking in these structures leads to strong Rashba-like splitting of the…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
