Distinct Reconstruction Patterns and Spin-Resolved Electronic States along the Zigzag Edges of Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Abstract

Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides represent an emerging class of materials exhibiting various intriguing properties, and integration of such materials for potential device applications will necessarily encounter creation of different boundaries. Using first-principles approaches, here we investigate the structural, electronic, and magnetic properties along two inequivalent zigzag M and X edges of MX2 (M=Mo, W; X=S, Se). Along the M edges, we reveal a previously unrecognized but energetically strongly preferred (2x1) reconstruction pattern, which is universally operative for all the MX2, characterized by a self-passivation mechanism through place exchanges of the outmost X and M edge atoms. In contrast, the X edges undergo a more moderate (2x1) or (3x1) reconstruction for MoX2 or WX2, respectively. We further use the prototypical zigzag MoX2 nanoribbons to demonstrate that the M and X edges possess distinctly different electronic and magnetic properties, which are discussed for spintronic and catalytic applications.

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