English

Anisotropic effects in two-dimensional materials

Materials Science 2024-08-30 v2

Abstract

Among a huge variety of known two-dimensional materials, some of them have anisotropic crystal structures; examples include so different systems as a few-layer black phoshphorus (phosphorene), beryllium nitride BeN4_4, van der Waals magnet CrSBr, rhenium dichalgogenides ReX2_2. As a consequence, their optical and electronic properties turn out to be highly anisotropic as well. In some cases, the anisotropy results not just in a smooth renormalization of observable properties in comparison with the isotropic case but in the appearance of dramatically new physics. The examples are hyperbolic plasmons and excitons, strongly anisotropic ordering of adatoms at the surface of two-dimensional or van der Waals materials, essential change of transport and superconducting properties. Here, we present a systematic review of electronic structure, transport and optical properties of several representative groups of anisotropic two-dimensional materials including semiconductors, anisotropic Dirac and semi-Dirac materials, as well as superconductors.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.05374,
  title  = {Anisotropic effects in two-dimensional materials},
  author = {Alexander N. Rudenko and Mikhail I. Katsnelson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.05374},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Review article, 30 pages, 10 figures. Final version

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:13:41.915Z