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A 2D Bismuth-Induced Honeycomb Surface Structure on GaAs(111)

Liu, Yi LU ; Benter, Sandra LU ; Ong, Chin Shen ; Maciel, Renan P. ; Björk, Linnéa ; Irish, Austin LU ; Eriksson, Olle ; Mikkelsen, Anders LU and Timm, Rainer LU orcid (2023) In ACS Nano 17(5). p.5047-5058
Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) topological insulators have fascinating physical properties which are promising for applications within spintronics. In order to realize spintronic devices working at room temperature, materials with a large nontrivial gap are needed. Bismuthene, a 2D layer of Bi atoms in a honeycomb structure, has recently attracted strong attention because of its record-large nontrivial gap, which is due to the strong spin-orbit coupling of Bi and the unusually strong interaction of the Bi atoms with the surface atoms of the substrate underneath. It would be a significant step forward to be able to form 2D materials with properties such as bismuthene on semiconductors such as GaAs, which has a band gap size relevant for... (More)

Two-dimensional (2D) topological insulators have fascinating physical properties which are promising for applications within spintronics. In order to realize spintronic devices working at room temperature, materials with a large nontrivial gap are needed. Bismuthene, a 2D layer of Bi atoms in a honeycomb structure, has recently attracted strong attention because of its record-large nontrivial gap, which is due to the strong spin-orbit coupling of Bi and the unusually strong interaction of the Bi atoms with the surface atoms of the substrate underneath. It would be a significant step forward to be able to form 2D materials with properties such as bismuthene on semiconductors such as GaAs, which has a band gap size relevant for electronics and a direct band gap for optical applications. Here, we present the successful formation of a 2D Bi honeycomb structure on GaAs, which fulfills these conditions. Bi atoms have been incorporated into a clean GaAs(111) surface, with As termination, based on Bi deposition under optimized growth conditions. Low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (LT-STM/S) demonstrates a well-ordered large-scale honeycomb structure, consisting of Bi atoms in a √3 × √3 30° reconstruction on GaAs(111). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the Bi atoms of the honeycomb structure only bond to the underlying As atoms. This is supported by calculations based on density functional theory that confirm the honeycomb structure with a large Bi-As binding energy and predict Bi-induced electronic bands within the GaAs band gap that open up a gap of nontrivial topological nature. STS results support the existence of Bi-induced states within the GaAs band gap. The GaAs:Bi honeycomb layer found here has a similar structure as previously published bismuthene on SiC or on Ag, though with a significantly larger lattice constant and only weak Bi-Bi bonding. It can therefore be considered as an extreme case of bismuthene, which is fundamentally interesting. Furthermore, it has the same exciting electronic properties, opening a large nontrivial gap, which is the requirement for room-temperature spintronic applications, and it is directly integrated in GaAs, a direct band gap semiconductor with a large range of (opto)electronic devices.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
2D layer, bismuth, bismuthene, DFT, GaAs, honeycomb structure, STM
in
ACS Nano
volume
17
issue
5
pages
5047 - 5058
publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
external identifiers
  • pmid:36821844
  • scopus:85149052685
ISSN
1936-0851
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.2c12863
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
23b8d9e8-f921-4e51-b8b7-f00222ee2dbf
date added to LUP
2023-03-15 12:18:06
date last changed
2024-07-10 09:57:39
@article{23b8d9e8-f921-4e51-b8b7-f00222ee2dbf,
  abstract     = {{<p>Two-dimensional (2D) topological insulators have fascinating physical properties which are promising for applications within spintronics. In order to realize spintronic devices working at room temperature, materials with a large nontrivial gap are needed. Bismuthene, a 2D layer of Bi atoms in a honeycomb structure, has recently attracted strong attention because of its record-large nontrivial gap, which is due to the strong spin-orbit coupling of Bi and the unusually strong interaction of the Bi atoms with the surface atoms of the substrate underneath. It would be a significant step forward to be able to form 2D materials with properties such as bismuthene on semiconductors such as GaAs, which has a band gap size relevant for electronics and a direct band gap for optical applications. Here, we present the successful formation of a 2D Bi honeycomb structure on GaAs, which fulfills these conditions. Bi atoms have been incorporated into a clean GaAs(111) surface, with As termination, based on Bi deposition under optimized growth conditions. Low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (LT-STM/S) demonstrates a well-ordered large-scale honeycomb structure, consisting of Bi atoms in a √3 × √3 30° reconstruction on GaAs(111). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the Bi atoms of the honeycomb structure only bond to the underlying As atoms. This is supported by calculations based on density functional theory that confirm the honeycomb structure with a large Bi-As binding energy and predict Bi-induced electronic bands within the GaAs band gap that open up a gap of nontrivial topological nature. STS results support the existence of Bi-induced states within the GaAs band gap. The GaAs:Bi honeycomb layer found here has a similar structure as previously published bismuthene on SiC or on Ag, though with a significantly larger lattice constant and only weak Bi-Bi bonding. It can therefore be considered as an extreme case of bismuthene, which is fundamentally interesting. Furthermore, it has the same exciting electronic properties, opening a large nontrivial gap, which is the requirement for room-temperature spintronic applications, and it is directly integrated in GaAs, a direct band gap semiconductor with a large range of (opto)electronic devices.</p>}},
  author       = {{Liu, Yi and Benter, Sandra and Ong, Chin Shen and Maciel, Renan P. and Björk, Linnéa and Irish, Austin and Eriksson, Olle and Mikkelsen, Anders and Timm, Rainer}},
  issn         = {{1936-0851}},
  keywords     = {{2D layer; bismuth; bismuthene; DFT; GaAs; honeycomb structure; STM}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{5047--5058}},
  publisher    = {{The American Chemical Society (ACS)}},
  series       = {{ACS Nano}},
  title        = {{A 2D Bismuth-Induced Honeycomb Surface Structure on GaAs(111)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c12863}},
  doi          = {{10.1021/acsnano.2c12863}},
  volume       = {{17}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}