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Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications

I–VII semiconductors, well-known for their strong luminescence in the visible region of the spectrum, have become promising for solid-state optoelectronics because inefficient light emission may be engineered/tailored by manipulating electronic bandgaps. Herein, we conclusively reveal electric-field...

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Autor principal: Arif, Suneela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9989743/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36895767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra00157a
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author Arif, Suneela
author_facet Arif, Suneela
author_sort Arif, Suneela
collection PubMed
description I–VII semiconductors, well-known for their strong luminescence in the visible region of the spectrum, have become promising for solid-state optoelectronics because inefficient light emission may be engineered/tailored by manipulating electronic bandgaps. Herein, we conclusively reveal electric-field-induced controlled engineering/modulation of structural, electronic and optical properties of CuBr via plane-wave basis set and pseudopotentials (pp) using generalized gradient approximation (GGA). We observed that the electric field (E) on CuBr causes enhancement (0.58 at 0.0 V Å(−1), 1.58 at 0.05 V Å(−1), 1.27 at −0.05 V Å(−1), to 1.63 at 0.1 V Å(−1) and −0.1 V Å(−1), 280% increase) and triggers modulation (0.78 at 0.5 V Å(−1)) in the electronic bandgap, leading to a shift in behavior from semiconduction to conduction. Partial density of states (PDOS), charge density and electron localization function (ELF) reveal that electric field (E) causes a major shift and leads to Cu-1d, Br-2p, Cu-2s, Cu-3p, and Br-1s orbital contributions in valence and Cu-3p, Cu-2s and Br-2p, Cu-1d and Br-1s conduction bands. We observe the control/shift in chemical reactivity and electronic stability by tuning/tailoring the energy gap between the HOMO and LUMO states, such as an increase in the electric field from 0.0 V Å(−1) → 0.05 V Å(−1) → 0.1 V Å(−1) causes an increase in energy gap (0.78 eV, 0.93 and 0.96 eV), leading to electronic stability and less chemical reactivity and vice versa for further increase in the electric field. Optical reflectivity, refractive index, extinction coefficient, and real and imaginary parts of dielectric and dielectric constants under the applied electric field confirm the controlled optoelectronic modulation. This study offers valuable insights into the fascinating photophysical properties of CuBr via an applied electric field and provides prospects for broad-ranging applications.
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spelling pubmed-99897432023-03-08 Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications Arif, Suneela RSC Adv Chemistry I–VII semiconductors, well-known for their strong luminescence in the visible region of the spectrum, have become promising for solid-state optoelectronics because inefficient light emission may be engineered/tailored by manipulating electronic bandgaps. Herein, we conclusively reveal electric-field-induced controlled engineering/modulation of structural, electronic and optical properties of CuBr via plane-wave basis set and pseudopotentials (pp) using generalized gradient approximation (GGA). We observed that the electric field (E) on CuBr causes enhancement (0.58 at 0.0 V Å(−1), 1.58 at 0.05 V Å(−1), 1.27 at −0.05 V Å(−1), to 1.63 at 0.1 V Å(−1) and −0.1 V Å(−1), 280% increase) and triggers modulation (0.78 at 0.5 V Å(−1)) in the electronic bandgap, leading to a shift in behavior from semiconduction to conduction. Partial density of states (PDOS), charge density and electron localization function (ELF) reveal that electric field (E) causes a major shift and leads to Cu-1d, Br-2p, Cu-2s, Cu-3p, and Br-1s orbital contributions in valence and Cu-3p, Cu-2s and Br-2p, Cu-1d and Br-1s conduction bands. We observe the control/shift in chemical reactivity and electronic stability by tuning/tailoring the energy gap between the HOMO and LUMO states, such as an increase in the electric field from 0.0 V Å(−1) → 0.05 V Å(−1) → 0.1 V Å(−1) causes an increase in energy gap (0.78 eV, 0.93 and 0.96 eV), leading to electronic stability and less chemical reactivity and vice versa for further increase in the electric field. Optical reflectivity, refractive index, extinction coefficient, and real and imaginary parts of dielectric and dielectric constants under the applied electric field confirm the controlled optoelectronic modulation. This study offers valuable insights into the fascinating photophysical properties of CuBr via an applied electric field and provides prospects for broad-ranging applications. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9989743/ /pubmed/36895767 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra00157a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Arif, Suneela
Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title_full Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title_fullStr Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title_full_unstemmed Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title_short Electric field engineering and modulation of CuBr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
title_sort electric field engineering and modulation of cubr: a potential material for optoelectronic device applications
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9989743/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36895767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra00157a
work_keys_str_mv AT arifsuneela electricfieldengineeringandmodulationofcubrapotentialmaterialforoptoelectronicdeviceapplications