In-plane Negative Poisson’s Ratios in 1T-Type Crystalline Two-Dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

ORAL

Abstract

Materials with a negative Poisson’s ratio, also known as auxetics, exhibit counterintuitive mechanical behavior -- becoming fatter when stretched and thinner when compressed. Such materials have enormous potential in many applications such as biomedicine and sensors but are exceedingly rare in nature. Despite that a variety of man-made auxetic materials have been discovered and fabricated, almost all of them are bulk materials with specially engineered porous structure with low density and stiffness. In this work, using first-principles calculations, we discover twelve single-layer two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides, MX$_2$ (M = Mo, W, Tc, Re; X = S, Se, Te), exhibiting intrinsic in-plane negative Poisson’s ratios in their 1T-type crystalline structure. The in-plane stiffness is predicted to be in the order of 10$^2$ GPa, at least three orders higher than most man-made auxetic materials. We attribute the occurrence of such auxetic behavior to the strong coupling between the chalcogen p orbitals and the intermetal t$_{2g}$-bonding orbitals within the basic triangular pyramid structure unit.

Authors

  • Liping Yu

    Temple University

  • Qimin Yan

    Temple University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Temple University, Department of Physics, UC Berkeley; Molecular Foundry, LBNL; Department of Physics, Temple University

  • Adrienn Ruzsinszky

    Temple University