Zhixin Hu
Renmin University of China
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Featured researches published by Zhixin Hu.
Nature Communications | 2014
Jingsi Qiao; Xianghua Kong; Zhixin Hu; Feng Yang; Wei Ji
Two-dimensional crystals are emerging materials for nanoelectronics. Development of the field requires candidate systems with both a high carrier mobility and, in contrast to graphene, a sufficiently large electronic bandgap. Here we present a detailed theoretical investigation of the atomic and electronic structure of few-layer black phosphorus (BP) to predict its electrical and optical properties. This system has a direct bandgap, tunable from 1.51 eV for a monolayer to 0.59 eV for a five-layer sample. We predict that the mobilities are hole-dominated, rather high and highly anisotropic. The monolayer is exceptional in having an extremely high hole mobility (of order 10,000 cm2 V−1 s−1) and anomalous elastic properties which reverse the anisotropy. Light absorption spectra indicate linear dichroism between perpendicular in-plane directions, which allows optical determination of the crystalline orientation and optical activation of the anisotropic transport properties. These results make few-layer BP a promising candidate for future electronics.
Nature Communications | 2015
Jinhua Hong; Zhixin Hu; Matt Probert; Kun Li; Danhui Lv; Xinan Yang; Lin Gu; Nannan Mao; Qingliang Feng; Liming Xie; Jin Zhang; Dianzhong Wu; Zhiyong Zhang; Chuanhong Jin; Wei Ji; Xixiang Zhang; Jun Yuan; Ze Zhang
Defects usually play an important role in tailoring various properties of two-dimensional materials. Defects in two-dimensional monolayer molybdenum disulphide may be responsible for large variation of electric and optical properties. Here we present a comprehensive joint experiment–theory investigation of point defects in monolayer molybdenum disulphide prepared by mechanical exfoliation, physical and chemical vapour deposition. Defect species are systematically identified and their concentrations determined by aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy, and also studied by ab-initio calculation. Defect density up to 3.5 × 1013 cm−2 is found and the dominant category of defects changes from sulphur vacancy in mechanical exfoliation and chemical vapour deposition samples to molybdenum antisite in physical vapour deposition samples. Influence of defects on electronic structure and charge-carrier mobility are predicted by calculation and observed by electric transport measurement. In light of these results, the growth of ultra-high-quality monolayer molybdenum disulphide appears a primary task for the community pursuing high-performance electronic devices.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Yuda Zhao; Jingsi Qiao; Peng Yu; Zhixin Hu; Ziyuan Lin; S. P. Lau; Zheng Liu; Wei Ji; Yang Chai
Platinum disulfide (PtS2 ), a new member of the group-10 transition-metal dichalcogenides, is studied experimentally and theoretically. The indirect bandgap of PtS2 can be drastically tuned from 1.6 eV (monolayer) to 0.25 eV (bulk counterpart), and the interlayer mechanical coupling is almost isotropic. It can be explained by strongly interlayer interaction from the pz orbital hybridization of S atoms.
ACS Nano | 2015
Jiang-Bin Wu; Zhixin Hu; Xin Zhang; Wenpeng Han; Yan Lu; Wei Shi; Xiao-Fen Qiao; Mari Ijiäs; Silvia Milana; Wei Ji; A. C. Ferrari; Ping-Heng Tan
Raman spectroscopy is the prime nondestructive characterization tool for graphene and related layered materials. The shear (C) and layer breathing modes (LBMs) are due to relative motions of the planes, either perpendicular or parallel to their normal. This allows one to directly probe the interlayer interactions in multilayer samples. Graphene and other two-dimensional (2d) crystals can be combined to form various hybrids and heterostructures, creating materials on demand with properties determined by the interlayer interaction. This is the case even for a single material, where multilayer stacks with different relative orientations have different optical and electronic properties. In twisted multilayer graphene there is a significant enhancement of the C modes due to resonance with new optically allowed electronic transitions, determined by the relative orientation of the layers. Here we show that this applies also to the LBMs, which can be now directly measured at room temperature. We find that twisting has a small effect on LBMs, quite different from the case of the C modes. This implies that the periodicity mismatch between two twisted layers mostly affects shear interactions. Our work shows that ultralow-frequency Raman spectroscopy is an ideal tool to uncover the interface coupling of 2d hybrids and heterostructures.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Zhixin Hu; Haiping Lan; Wei Ji
We present density functional theory calculations of the geometry, adsorption energy and electronic structure of thiophene adsorbed on Cu(111), Cu(110) and Cu(100) surfaces. Our calculations employ dispersion corrections and self-consistent van der Waals density functionals (vdW-DFs). In terms of speed and accuracy, we find that the dispersion-energy-corrected Revised Perdue-Burke-Enzerhof (RPBE) functional is the “best balanced” method for predicting structural and energetic properties, while vdW-DF is also highly accurate if a proper exchange functional is used. Discrepancies between theory and experiment in molecular geometry can be solved by considering x-ray generated core-holes. However, the discrepancy concerning the adsorption site for thiophene/Cu(100) remains unresolved and requires both further experiments and deeper theoretical analysis. For all the interfaces, the PBE functional reveals a covalent bonding picture which the inclusion of dispersive contributions does not change to a vdW one. Our results provide a comprehensive understanding of the role of dispersive forces in modelling molecule-metal interfaces.
Nanoscale | 2016
Zhixin Hu; Xianghua Kong; Jingsi Qiao; B. Normand; Wei Ji
Stacking two-dimensional (2D) materials into multi-layers or heterostructures, known as van der Waals (vdW) epitaxy, is an essential degree of freedom for tuning their properties on demand. Few-layer black phosphorus (FLBP), a material with high potential for nano- and optoelectronics applications, appears to have interlayer couplings much stronger than graphene and other 2D systems. Indeed, these couplings call into question whether the stacking of FLBP can be governed only by vdW interactions, which is of crucial importance for epitaxy and property refinement. Here, we perform a theoretical investigation of the vibrational properties of FLBP, which reflect directly its interlayer coupling, by discussing six Raman-observable phonons, including three optical, one breathing and two shear modes. With increasing sample thickness, we find anomalous redshifts of the frequencies for each optical mode but a blueshift for the armchair shear mode. Our calculations also show splitting of the phonon branches, due to anomalous surface phenomena, and strong phonon-phonon coupling. By computing uniaxial stress effects, inter-atomic force constants and electron densities, we provide a compelling demonstration that these properties are the consequence of strong and highly directional interlayer interactions arising from the electronic hybridization of the lone electron-pairs of FLBP, rather than from vdW interactions. This exceptional interlayer coupling mechanism controls the stacking stability of BP layers and thus opens a new avenue beyond vdW epitaxy for understanding the design of 2D heterostructures.
Nano Letters | 2017
Jinhua Hong; Yuhao Pan; Zhixin Hu; Danhui Lv; Chuanhong Jin; Wei Ji; Jun Yuan; Ze Zhang
Direct observation of atomic migration both on and below surfaces is a long-standing but important challenge in materials science as diffusion is one of the most elementary processes essential to many vital material behaviors. Probing the kinetic pathways, including metastable or even transition states involved down to atomic scale, holds the key to the underlying physical mechanisms. Here, we applied aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to demonstrate direct atomic-scale imaging and quasi-real-time tracking of diffusion of Mo adatoms and vacancies in monolayer MoS2, an important two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) system. Preferred kinetic pathways and the migration potential-energy landscape are determined experimentally and confirmed theoretically. The resulting three-dimensional knowledge of the atomic configuration evolution reveals the different microscopic mechanisms responsible for the contrasting intrinsic diffusion rates for Mo adatoms and vacancies. The new insight will benefit our understanding of material processes such as phase transformation and heterogeneous catalysis.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2018
Harry Mönig; Saeed Amirjalayer; Alexander Timmer; Zhixin Hu; Lacheng Liu; Oscar Díaz Arado; Marvin Cnudde; Cristian A. Strassert; Wei Ji; Michael Rohlfing; Harald Fuchs
Atomic force microscopy is an impressive tool with which to directly resolve the bonding structure of organic compounds1–5. The methodology usually involves chemical passivation of the probe-tip termination by attaching single molecules or atoms such as CO or Xe (refs 1,6–9). However, these probe particles are only weakly connected to the metallic apex, which results in considerable dynamic deflection. This probe particle deflection leads to pronounced image distortions, systematic overestimation of bond lengths, and in some cases even spurious bond-like contrast features, thus inhibiting reliable data interpretation8–12. Recently, an alternative approach to tip passivation has been used in which slightly indenting a tip into oxidized copper substrates and subsequent contrast analysis allows for the verification of an oxygen-terminated Cu tip13–15. Here we show that, due to the covalently bound configuration of the terminal oxygen atom, this copper oxide tip (CuOx tip) has a high structural stability, allowing not only a quantitative determination of individual bond lengths and access to bond order effects, but also reliable intermolecular bond characterization. In particular, by removing the previous limitations of flexible probe particles, we are able to provide conclusive experimental evidence for an unusual intermolecular N–Au–N three-centre bond. Furthermore, we demonstrate that CuOx tips allow the characterization of the strength and configuration of individual hydrogen bonds within a molecular assembly.Using a rigid tip removes artefacts associated with imaging the strongly varying tip–sample potential of intermolecular sites by atomic force microscopy.
Advances in Condensed Matter Physics | 2018
Shenghuang Lin; Gongxun Bai; Zhike Liu; Zai-Quan Xu; Zhixin Hu
1Department of Applied Physics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong 2College of Materials Science and Engineering, China Jiliang University, Hangzhou, China 3School of Materials Science and Engineering, Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an, China 4Materials and Nanoscale Physics, University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW, Australia 5Department of Chemistry and Institute of Optical Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Advanced Functional Materials | 2017
Yanyong Li; Zhixin Hu; Shenghuang Lin; Sin Ki Lai; Wei Ji; S. P. Lau