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Optoelectronic properties of single-layer, double-layer, and bulk tin sulfide: A theoretical study

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2013

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AIP Publishing
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Tritsaris, Georgios A., Brad D. Malone, and Efthimios Kaxiras. 2013. “Optoelectronic Properties of Single-Layer, Double-Layer, and Bulk Tin Sulfide: A Theoretical Study.” Journal of Applied Physics 113 (23) (June 21): 233507. doi:10.1063/1.4811455.

Abstract

SnS is a metal monochalcogenide suitable for use as absorber material in thin film photovoltaic cells. Its structure is an orthorhombic crystal of weakly coupled layers, each layer consisting of strongly bonded Sn-S units. We use first-principles calculations to study model single-layer, double-layer, and bulk structures of SnS in order to elucidate its electronic structure. We find that the optoelectronic properties of the material can vary significantly with respect to the number of layers and the separation between them: the calculated band gap is wider for fewer layers (2.72 eV, 1.57 eV, and 1.07 eV for single-layer, double-layer, and bulk SnS, respectively) and increases with tensile strain along the layer stacking direction (by ∼55 meV/1% strain).

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