Elastic, Electronic, and Optical Properties of Two-Dimensional

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Elastic, Electronic, and Optical Properties of Two-Dimensional Graphyne Sheet Jun Kang,† Jingbo Li,*,†,‡ Fengmin Wu,‡ Shu-Shen Li,† and Jian-Bai Xia† †

State Key Laboratory for Superlattices and Microstructures, Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 912, Beijing 100083, China ‡ Zhejiang Normal University, Jinhua 321004, Zhejiang Province, China ABSTRACT: The elastic, electronic, and optical properties of the 2D graphyne sheet, which consists of hexagonal carbon rings and acetylenic linkages, are investigated from first-principles calculations. Graphyne has a Poisson’s ratio of 0.417 and an in-plane stiffness of 10.36 eV/Å2. Compared with graphene, graphyne is much softer because of its relatively smaller number of bonds. The band structure of graphyne is calculated using both generalized gradient approximation and hybrid functional, and the band gap predicted by the latter is twice as much as that given by the former. It is also shown that the energy bands of graphyne can be divided into several regions according to bonding character. The optical property of graphyne is found to be strongly anisotropic. For electric field parallel to the graphyne plane, strong optical adsorption is observed in low-energy region, whereas for the electric field perpendicular to the graphyne plane, the adsorption in the low-energy region is very weak. What’s more, the response of the band gap of graphyne to uniform strain is also studied, and we show that the band gap can be continuously modified under the strain.

’ INTRODUCTION The allotrope of carbon has long been a topic of interest.1,2 There are two natural carbon allotropes, namely, diamond and graphite, which contain sp3 and sp2 hybridized carbon atoms, respectively. Since the 1980s, many new carbon allotropes, such as fullerenes,3 carbon nanotubes,4 and graphene5 have been successfully synthesized. Graphyne, predicted by Baughman et al.,6 is a new form of carbon that consists of planar carbon sheets containing sp and sp2 carbon atoms. In 2D graphyne sheet, hexagonal carbon rings are joined together by acetylenic linkages, forming so-called phenylacetylene (PA) structure,7 and it has the same symmetry as graphene. Because of high π-conjunction, PA structures have interesting properties, and there are many studies focused on PA-based systems. For instance, molecules consisting of PA units exhibit strong negative differential resistance8 and are good candidates for molecular memory devices.9 11 Tada et al. have explained the directional energy flow of the nanostar dendrimer through molecular orbital analysis.12 The band structures and frontier crystal orbitals of a series of PA-based chains and sheets have been investigated by Kondo et al.7 In graphyne, the presence of acetylenic linkage introduces nonzero band gap in graphyne sheet,7,13 which is absent in graphene. Although the synthesization of graphyne has not been reported, approaches to fabricate its substructures have been developed.14 16 More recently, Li et al. have successfully generated large area films of graphdiyne, which belongs to the same family as graphyne, on copper surface by a cross-coupling reaction using hexaethynylbenzene.17 Through an anodic aluminum oxide template catalyzed by Cu foil, r 2011 American Chemical Society

they have also prepared graphdiyne nanotube arrays.18 These exciting experimental progresses suggest that the synthesization of graphyne is hopeful and stimulate many theoretical researches on the properties, such as band gap,19,20 charge mobility,21 and lithium storage capacity,22 of graphyne and its related structures. Although much knowledge has been gained about graphyne, many questions are still worth discussing. For example, (i) The elastic property of graphyne has not been examined yet. Is it stiffer or softer than graphene? (ii) In previous first-principles studies, the band structure of graphyne is calculated using local density approximation (LDA) or generalized gradient approximation (GGA),13,19 which causes underestimation of band gap. To describe the band structure of graphyne better, methods going beyond LDA and GGA are needed, such as hybrid functionals. (iii) The optical property of graphyne is still unclear. Because of its 2D feature, graphyne sheet may possesses anisotropic optical property, which is similar as boron nitride sheet.23 (iv) Numerous investigations have demonstrated that the properties of low-dimensional material can be modified by strain.24 27 It would be interesting to see the effect of strain on the electronic property of graphyne. In this work, we investigate the elastic, electronic, and optical properties of 2D graphyne sheet from first-principles calculations. We calculate the elastic parameters of graphyne and compare Received: July 15, 2011 Revised: September 10, 2011 Published: September 13, 2011 20466

dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp206751m | J. Phys. Chem. C 2011, 115, 20466–20470

The Journal of Physical Chemistry C

ARTICLE

Figure 1. (a) Geometry structure of graphyne. The rectangular supercell used to calculate the elastic properties is indicated by shadow. aa and az are the lattice constants along armchair and zigzag directions, respectively. Strain is applied by varying az and aa. (b) Mesh grid used for total energy calculations. az and aa are given in angstroms. (c) 3D plot of energy surface of graphyne. The dark grid is the calculated result, and the colored surface is the fitted value.

its stiffness with that of graphene. Band structure of graphyne is discussed, and we present both GGA and hybrid functional calculated results. The optical property of graphyne is also studied, and strong anisotropy is observed. Furthermore, we show that the band gap of graphyne can be tuned continuously under uniform strain.

’ COMPUTATIONAL METHODS The calculations are performed using the frozen-core projector-augmented wave method28,29 as implemented in the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP).30,31 The generalized gradient approximation of Perdew Burke Ernzerhof (GGA-PBE)32 is adopted for exchange-correlation functional. Because GGA underestimated the band gap, the Heyd Scuseria Ernzerhof (HSE06)33,34 hybrid functional is also used for band structure calculation. Energy cutoff for plane-wave expansion is set to 400 eV. Brillouin zone sampling is performed with MonkhorstPack (MP) special k-point meshes35 including Γ-point. For rectangle unit cell, a 7  11  1 k-grid is chosen, whereas for hexagonal unit cell, a 11  11  1 k-grid is used. To obtain smooth optical spectra, the k-grid is increased to 31  31  1 in optical property calculation. A vacuum layer of 11 Å is added along the z direction to avoid interaction between adjacent graphyne layers. Structure relaxation is stopped when the Hellmann Feynman force on each atom is