Abstract
By performing first-principles electronic structure calculations in frames of density functional theory we study the dependence of the valence band shape on the thickness of few-layer III-VI crystals (GaS, GaSe, and InSe). We estimate the critical thickness of transition from the bulklike parabolic to the ring-shaped valence band. Direct supercell calculations show that the ring-shaped extremum of the valence band appears in $\ensuremath{\beta}$-GaS and $\ensuremath{\beta}$-GaSe at a thickness below 6 tetralayers $(\ensuremath{\sim}4.6nm)$ and 8 tetralayers $(\ensuremath{\sim}6.4nm)$, respectively. Zone-folding calculations estimate the $\ensuremath{\beta}$-InSe critical thickness to be equal to 28 tetralayers $(\ensuremath{\sim}24.0nm)$. The origin of the ring-shaped valence band maximum can be understood in terms of $\text{k}\ifmmode\cdot\else\textperiodcentered\fi{}\text{p}$ theory, which provides a link between the curvature of the energy bands and the distance between them. We explain the dependence of the band shape on the thickness, as well as the transition between two types of extremes, by the $k$-dependent orbital composition of the topmost valence band. We show that in the vicinity of critical thickness the effective mass of holes in III-VI compounds depends strongly on the number of tetralayers.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Self-interaction correction to density-functional approximations for many-electron systems
The exact density functional for the ground-state energy is strictly self-interaction-free (i.e., orbitals demonstrably do not self-interact), but many approximations to it, inc...
Exchange and correlation in atoms, molecules, and solids by the spin-density-functional formalism
The aim of this paper is to advocate the usefulness of the spin-density-functional (SDF) formalism. The generalization of the Hohenberg-Kohn-Sham scheme to and SDF formalism is ...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2014
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 90
- Issue
- 23
- Citations
- 140
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1103/physrevb.90.235302