Issue 36, 2023

Structural, mechanical, electronic and optical properties of biphenylene hydrogenation: a first-principles study

Abstract

Biphenylene networks typically exhibit a metallic electronic nature, while hydrogenation can open the band gap changing it to a semiconductor. This property makes hydrogenated biphenylene a promising candidate for use in semiconductor optoelectronic materials and devices. In this work, three representative configurations of hydrogenated biphenylene, denoted by α, β and γ, were investigated. The structural, mechanical, electronic, and optical properties of these hydrogenated biphenylene configurations were calculated by first-principles calculations. Band gaps with HSE correction were 4.69, 4.42 and 4.39 eV for α, β, and γ configurations, respectively. Among these three configurations, β presents the best electronic performance and special elastic properties (negative Poisson's ratio), while γ exhibits the best elastic properties. In addition, we comprehensively analyze the mechanical properties of these configurations and provide evidence that hydrogenated biphenylene possibly exhibits a negative-Poisson's-ratio along the zigzag and armchair directions when hydrogen atoms are added to biphenylene in certain ways. Furthermore, although the electronic properties of γ are weaker than those of β, they are also excellent. In addition, the binding energies of β and γ are relatively lower, which indicates that β and γ are more stable. Our findings demonstrate that the hydrogenated biphenylene is a promising material with significant application potential in optoelectronic devices.

Graphical abstract: Structural, mechanical, electronic and optical properties of biphenylene hydrogenation: a first-principles study

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Jun 2023
Accepted
30 Aug 2023
First published
31 Aug 2023

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 24797-24808

Structural, mechanical, electronic and optical properties of biphenylene hydrogenation: a first-principles study

K. Chen, J. Zhou, W. Zhao, R. Yang, C. Qiao, W. Su, Y. Zheng, R. Zhang, L. Chen and S. Wang, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 24797 DOI: 10.1039/D3CP03052K

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