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A theoretical study of (9, 0) Singlewalled Carbon Nanotubes using quantum mechanical techniques
Author(s) -
D. R. Sharma,
Neena Jaggi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
characterization and application of nanomaterials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2578-1995
DOI - 10.24294/can.v4i1.996
Subject(s) - castep , density functional theory , band gap , nanotube , carbon nanotube , electronic structure , graphene , zigzag , tight binding , statistical physics , materials science , electronic band structure , computational chemistry , quantum mechanics , chemistry , physics , nanotechnology , mathematics , geometry
First principles simulation studies using the density functional theory have been performed on (9, 0) Zigzag Singlewalled Carbon Nanotube (SWCNT) to investigate its electronic, optical and thermodynamic properties using CASTEP (Cambridge Sequential Total Energy Package) and DFTB (Density Functional based Tight Binding) modules of the Material Studio Software version 7.0. Various functionals and sub-functionals available in the CASTEP Module (using Pulay Density Mixing treatment of electrons) and various eigen-solvers and smearing schemes available in the DFTB module (using smart algorithm) have been tried out to chalk out the electronic structure. The analytically deduced values of the band gap obtained were compared with the experimentally determined value reported in the literature. By comparison, combination of Anderson smearing scheme and standard diaogonalizer produced best results in DFTB module while in the CASTEP module, GGA (General Gradient approximation) functional with RPBE (Revised-perdew-Burke-Ernzerh) as Sub-functional was found to be the most consistent. These optimized parameters were then used to determine various electronic, optical and thermodynamic properties of (9, 0) Singlewalled Nanotube. (9, 0) Singlewalled Nanotube, which is extensively being used for sensing NH3, CH4 & NO2, has been picked up in particular as it is reported to exhibit a finite energy band gap in contrast to its expected metallic nature. The study is of utmost significance as it not only probes and validates the simulation route for predicting suitable properties of nanomaterials but also throws light on the comparative efficacy of the different approximation and rationalization quantum mechanical techniques used in simulation studies.

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