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Understanding Anisotropy of photoconductance in In<sub>4</sub>Se<sub>3</sub>: insights from DFT

ORAL

Abstract

Although In4Se3 has a layered structure with the ionic character of the interlayer interactions.1 In the crystal structure of In4Se3, [(In3)5+(Se2-)3]- clusters are interconnected along both c and b axes forming a quasi-2D layer intermitted with chains of ionized In+.  Cleaving along bc plane results in a surface with 1D chain of Se and In atoms thus the electronic structure and photoconductance of the surface are expected to be anisotropic. Density functional theory calculations for the bc surface of In4Se3 show that the frontier orbitals are dominated by s, pz and py character, not px, suggesting that s to pz transitions are allowed with the light vector potential aligned along the surface normal, s to py transitions are allowed with the light vector potential aligned in-plane but orthogonal to the chains, but there is little opportunity for px to d and s to px transitions. Experimental investigations of the optical photoconductance anisotropy performed on devices based on In4Se3 flakes with signatures of quasi-1D chains confirm the above findings.1 These open new pathways for application of In4Se3 in efficient integration of logic and sensing.

[1]       N. S. Vorobeva et al., Adv. Funct. Mater., 2106459 (2021).

Publication: N.S. Vorobeva, A. Lipatov, A. Torres, J. Dai, J. Abourahma, D. Le, A. Dhingra, S.J. Gilbert, P.V. Galiy, T.M. Nenchuk, D.S. Muratov, T.S. Rahman, X.C. Zeng, P.A. Dowben, and A. Sinitskii, Anisotropic Properties of Quasi-1D In4Se3: Mechanical Exfoliation, Electronic Transport, and Polarization-Dependent Photoresponse. Advanced Functional Materials, 2021: p. 2106459. http://dx.doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202106459

Presenters

  • Duy Le

    Department of Physics, University of Central Florida, University of Central Florida

Authors

  • Duy Le

    Department of Physics, University of Central Florida, University of Central Florida

  • Xiao C Zeng

    Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

  • Peter A Dowben

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Department of Physics and Astronomy; University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Jorgensen Hall, University of Nebraska, NE 68588, USA, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

  • Alexey Lipatov

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln

  • Archit Dhingra

    Department of Physics and Astronomy; University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

  • Nataliia Vorobeva

    Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln

  • Alexander Sinitskii

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Department of Chemistry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  • Talat S Rahman

    Department of Physics, University of Central Florida