Cargando…

Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules

The adsorption of CO, NO, and O(2) molecules onto Cu, Ag, and Au atoms placed in the S vacancies of a WS(2) monolayer was elucidated within dispersion-corrected density functional theory. The binding energies computed for embedded defects into S vacancies were 2.99 (Au(S)), 2.44 (Ag(S)), 3.32 eV (Cu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo, Garcia-Islas, José Pablo, Gutierrez-Rodriguez, Josue, Montes de Oca, Saul, Garcia-Gonzalez, José Andres, Nieto-Jalil, José Manuel, Miralrio, Alan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37894757
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015079
_version_ 1785127243712823296
author Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo
Garcia-Islas, José Pablo
Gutierrez-Rodriguez, Josue
Montes de Oca, Saul
Garcia-Gonzalez, José Andres
Nieto-Jalil, José Manuel
Miralrio, Alan
author_facet Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo
Garcia-Islas, José Pablo
Gutierrez-Rodriguez, Josue
Montes de Oca, Saul
Garcia-Gonzalez, José Andres
Nieto-Jalil, José Manuel
Miralrio, Alan
author_sort Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo
collection PubMed
description The adsorption of CO, NO, and O(2) molecules onto Cu, Ag, and Au atoms placed in the S vacancies of a WS(2) monolayer was elucidated within dispersion-corrected density functional theory. The binding energies computed for embedded defects into S vacancies were 2.99 (Au(S)), 2.44 (Ag(S)), 3.32 eV (Cu(S)), 3.23 (Au(2S2)), 2.55 (Ag(2S2)), and 3.48 eV/atom (Cu(2S2)), respectively. The calculated diffusion energy barriers from an S vacancy to a nearby site for Cu, Ag, and Au were 2.29, 2.18, and 2.16 eV, respectively. Thus, the substitutional atoms remained firmly fixed at temperatures above 700 K. Similarly, the adsorption energies showed that nitric oxide and carbon oxide molecules exhibited stronger chemisorption than O(2) molecules on any of the metal atoms (Au, Cu, or Ag) placed in the S vacancies of the WS(2) monolayer. Therefore, the adsorption of O(2) did not compete with NO or CO adsorption and did not displace them. The density of states showed that a WS(2) monolayer modified with a Cu, Au, or Ag atom could be used to design sensing devices, based on electronic or magnetic properties, for atmospheric pollutants. More interestingly, the adsorption of CO changed only the electronic properties of the MoS(2)-Au(S) monolayer, which could be used for sensing applications. In contrast, the O(2) molecule was chemisorbed more strongly than CO or NO on Au(2S2), Cu(2S2), or Ag(2S2) placed into di-S vacancies. Thus, if the experimental system is exposed to air, the low quantities of O(2) molecules present should result in the oxidation of the metallic atoms. Furthermore, the O(2) molecules adsorbed on WS(2)-Au(2S2) and WS(2)-Cu(S) introduced a half-metallic behavior, making the system suitable for applications in spintronics.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10606136
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106061362023-10-28 Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo Garcia-Islas, José Pablo Gutierrez-Rodriguez, Josue Montes de Oca, Saul Garcia-Gonzalez, José Andres Nieto-Jalil, José Manuel Miralrio, Alan Int J Mol Sci Article The adsorption of CO, NO, and O(2) molecules onto Cu, Ag, and Au atoms placed in the S vacancies of a WS(2) monolayer was elucidated within dispersion-corrected density functional theory. The binding energies computed for embedded defects into S vacancies were 2.99 (Au(S)), 2.44 (Ag(S)), 3.32 eV (Cu(S)), 3.23 (Au(2S2)), 2.55 (Ag(2S2)), and 3.48 eV/atom (Cu(2S2)), respectively. The calculated diffusion energy barriers from an S vacancy to a nearby site for Cu, Ag, and Au were 2.29, 2.18, and 2.16 eV, respectively. Thus, the substitutional atoms remained firmly fixed at temperatures above 700 K. Similarly, the adsorption energies showed that nitric oxide and carbon oxide molecules exhibited stronger chemisorption than O(2) molecules on any of the metal atoms (Au, Cu, or Ag) placed in the S vacancies of the WS(2) monolayer. Therefore, the adsorption of O(2) did not compete with NO or CO adsorption and did not displace them. The density of states showed that a WS(2) monolayer modified with a Cu, Au, or Ag atom could be used to design sensing devices, based on electronic or magnetic properties, for atmospheric pollutants. More interestingly, the adsorption of CO changed only the electronic properties of the MoS(2)-Au(S) monolayer, which could be used for sensing applications. In contrast, the O(2) molecule was chemisorbed more strongly than CO or NO on Au(2S2), Cu(2S2), or Ag(2S2) placed into di-S vacancies. Thus, if the experimental system is exposed to air, the low quantities of O(2) molecules present should result in the oxidation of the metallic atoms. Furthermore, the O(2) molecules adsorbed on WS(2)-Au(2S2) and WS(2)-Cu(S) introduced a half-metallic behavior, making the system suitable for applications in spintronics. MDPI 2023-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10606136/ /pubmed/37894757 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015079 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rangel-Cortes, Eduardo
Garcia-Islas, José Pablo
Gutierrez-Rodriguez, Josue
Montes de Oca, Saul
Garcia-Gonzalez, José Andres
Nieto-Jalil, José Manuel
Miralrio, Alan
Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title_full Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title_fullStr Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title_full_unstemmed Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title_short Gas Sensing and Half-Metallic Materials Design Using Metal Embedded into S Vacancies in WS(2) Monolayers: Adsorption of NO, CO, and O(2) Molecules
title_sort gas sensing and half-metallic materials design using metal embedded into s vacancies in ws(2) monolayers: adsorption of no, co, and o(2) molecules
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37894757
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015079
work_keys_str_mv AT rangelcorteseduardo gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT garciaislasjosepablo gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT gutierrezrodriguezjosue gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT montesdeocasaul gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT garciagonzalezjoseandres gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT nietojaliljosemanuel gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules
AT miralrioalan gassensingandhalfmetallicmaterialsdesignusingmetalembeddedintosvacanciesinws2monolayersadsorptionofnocoando2molecules