Geometry and electronic structure of monolayer, bilayer, and multilayer Janus WSSe
Abstract
Newly synthesized Janus transition-metal dichalcogenides MXY (M =Mo , W; X ≠Y =S , Se, Te) possess intrinsic Rashba spin splitting and out-of-plane dipole moment due to the breaking of mirror symmetry. Taking WSSe as an example, we present a first-principles investigation of the structural stability and electronic properties of mono-, bi-, and multilayer MXY. Results show that S atoms contribute more than Se atoms in the valence-band maximum at the Γ point, which can be greatly affected by interlayer interactions. The high-symmetry AA' stacking is still the most stable pattern, but there are various orders of chalcogen atomic layers in each stacking. The most preferred order of two adjacent layers is S-Se-Se-S, followed by Se-S-Se-S. The Se-S-Se-S-ordered WSSe bilayer is found to have significant layer splitting due to the net dipole moment, which has great potential for solar cells. Layer-dependent Rashba splittings exist in asymmetry-ordered WSSe bilayers, that can be tuned by changing the interlayer distance, originating from the regulation of interlayer electrostatic interaction. However, there is not layer splitting in a symmetrically stacked WSSe bilayer and opposite Rashba splitting appears in the two layers at a sufficiently large interlayer distance. The electronic structures and spin splittings can be easily modulated by controlling the chalcogen atomic-layer order, so that we can obtain the desired properties from mono-, bi-, and multilayer MXY.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review B
- Pub Date:
- February 2019
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevB.99.075160
- Bibcode:
- 2019PhRvB..99g5160Z