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Journal of Synthetic Crystals ›› 2025, Vol. 54 ›› Issue (12): 2173-2180.DOI: 10.16553/j.cnki.issn1000-985x.2025.0163

• Research Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Density Functional Theory Investigation of N2O and HCN Adsorption Behavior on SnSe Monolayers

WU Jiayin1(), WEI Jingting1(), LI Bin1, LI Zongbao2, MO Qiuyan3   

  1. 1. Department of Engineering Technology,Guangdong Open University & Guangdong Polytechnic Institute,Guangzhou 510091,China
    2. School of Materials Science and Engineering,Wuhan Textile University,Wuhan 430220,China
    3. Engineering Research Center of Micro-Nano and Intelligent Manufacturing,Ministry of Education,Kaili University,Kaili 556011,China
  • Received:2025-07-27 Online:2025-12-20 Published:2026-01-04

Abstract: The adsorption behavior, electronic characteristics, and gas sensing performance of β-SnSe monolayers toward N2O and HCN molecules were systematically investigated using density functional theory. Optimized adsorption configurations reveal that both gases are physisorbed onto the SnSe surface, with HCN exhibiting stronger interactions. Adsorption energy calculations demonstrate the exothermic nature of these processes, indicating their thermodynamic feasibility for spontaneous gas capture under ambient conditions. The adsorption of HCN significantly increase the density of states near the Fermi level, thereby enhancing the electrical conductivity of the SnSe monolayer. Furthermore, rapid recovery behaviors for both gas species are observed at room temperature, confirming the excellent reversibility of the sensing system. Under a bias voltage of 1.2 V, the response sensitivity to HCN reaches 61.7%, markedly surpassing that of N2O and outperforming existing two-dimensional sensing materials. Further highlighting the excellent performance of SnSe in HCN detection. These results not only reveal the sensing mechanism of SnSe toward HCN, but also provide theoretical support for the design of low-cost, highly sensitive, and reusable gas sensors suitable for real-time environmental monitoring applications.

Key words: two-dimensional material; gas sensing; first-principles; density functional theory; non-equilibrium Green’s function; β-SnSe

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