Strain engineering and thermal conductivity of a <i>penta</i> -BCN monolayer: a computational study
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Journal of Physics D Applied Physics
Abstract
Abstract Two-dimensional (2D) pentagonal nanostructures have been caught research attention down to their electronic, optical, mechanical and thermal transport properties. Among them, the newly proposed ternary penta -BCN monolayer shows a great potential for piezoelectric materials according to intrinsic piezoelectricity and spontaneous polarization. Nevertheless, the effect of strain toward these properties of the penta -BCN has not been elucidated. In this study, using density-functional theory with the Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE) functional, we have investigated the impact of a uniform biaxial strain on the electronic structure and the thermal conductivity of the semiconducting penta -BCN single sheet. The strain-free penta -BCN monolayer is mechanically and dynamically stable with an indirect band gap of 1.70 eV. The sheet is rather soft as judged from the low in-plane Young’s moduli. The pentagonal structure is preserved up to the yielding point of 18.4%, beyond this point the irreversible transition into the dynamically unstable, honeycomb-like system is observed. In contrast, the penta -BCN has dynamically instability under the compressive strain as small as −4%. The PBE band gap of the penta -BCN monolayer could be tuned within a range of 1.36–1.70 eV, falling into the infrared spectrum. The calculated lattice thermal conductivity of penta -BCN is around 97 W m −1 K −1 at temperature of 300 K, and decreases with increasing temperature.