Issue 16, 2015

Electronic structure of graphene nanoribbons doped with nitrogen atoms: a theoretical insight

Abstract

The electronic structure of graphene nanoribbons doped with a graphitic type of nitrogen atoms has been studied using B3LYP, B2PLYP and CAS methods. In all but one case the restricted B3LYP solutions were unstable and the CAS calculations provided evidence for the multiconfigurational nature of the ground state with contributions from two dominant configurations. The relative stability of the doped nanoribbons depends mostly on the mutual position of the dopant atoms and notably less on the position of nitrogen atoms within the nanoribbon. N-graphitic doping affects cationic states much more than anionic ones due the participation of the nitrogen atoms in the stabilization of the positive charge, resulting in a drop in ionization energies (IPs) for N-graphitic doped systems. Nitrogen atoms do not participate in the negative charge stabilization of anionic species and, therefore, the doping does not affect the electron affinities (EAs). The unrestricted B3LYP method is the method of choice for the calculation of IPs and EAs. Restricted B3LYP and B2PLYP produces unreliable results for both IPs and EAs while CAS strongly underestimates the electron affinities. This is also true for the reorganization energies where restricted B3LYP produces qualitatively incorrect results. Doping changes the reorganization energy of the nanoribbons; the hole reorganization energy is generally higher than the corresponding electron reorganization energy due to the participation of nitrogen atoms in the stabilization of the positive charge.

Graphical abstract: Electronic structure of graphene nanoribbons doped with nitrogen atoms: a theoretical insight

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Jan 2015
Accepted
11 Mar 2015
First published
16 Mar 2015

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2015,17, 10608-10614

Author version available

Electronic structure of graphene nanoribbons doped with nitrogen atoms: a theoretical insight

A. E. Torres and S. Fomine, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2015, 17, 10608 DOI: 10.1039/C5CP00227C

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