4.6 Article

Phase Stability and Raman/IR Signatures of Ni-Doped MoS2 from Density Functional Theory Studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 125, Issue 24, Pages 13401-13412

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c02974

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UC Merced start-up funds
  2. Merced nAnomaterials Center for Energy and Sensing (MACES), a NASA [NNX15AQ01]
  3. National Science Foundation [ACI-1429783]
  4. National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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Research on Ni-doped MoS2 focuses on structure, properties, and formation energy; stable t-intercalation does not increase the c-parameter; Ni doping alters electronic density of states in MoS2 and creates new peaks in infrared and Raman spectra.
Ni-doped MoS2 has useful tribological, optoelectronic, and catalytic properties. Experiment and theory on doped MoS2 have focused on monolayers or finite particles: theoretical studies of bulk Ni-doped MoS2 are lacking and the mechanisms by which Ni alters bulk properties are largely unsettled. We use density functional theory calculations to determine the structure, mechanical properties, electronic properties, and formation energies of bulk Ni-doped 2H-MoS2 as a function of doping concentration. We find four metastable structures: Mo or S substitution and tetrahedral (t-) or octahedral (o-) intercalation. We compute phase diagrams as a function of chemical potential to guide experimental synthesis. Convex hull analysis shows that tintercalation (favored over t-intercalation, with doping formation energy similar to 10 meV per Ni) is stable against phase segregation and other compounds containing Ni, Mo, and S. Intercalation forms strong interlayer covalent bonds and does not increase the c-parameter. Ni-doping creates new states in the electronic density of states in MoS2 and shifts the Fermi level. We calculate infrared and Raman spectra and find new peaks and shifts in existing peaks that are unique to each dopant site, and therefore may be used to identify the site experimentally, which has thus far been challenging.

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