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Exploring Native Atomic Defects in NiTe2

Materials Science 2026-03-30 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

Nickel ditelluride (NiTe2), a new discovered type-II Dirac semimetal whose Dirac node lies close to its Fermi level, is expected to exhibit exotic phenomena including Lifshitz transition and superconductivity. As we know, defects are inevitable for transition metal dichalcogenides and have significant impacts on the optical and electronic properties. However, the systematic study of defects in NiTe2 is still lack. Here, by using high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy combined with first-principles calculations, the point defects including the vacancy, intercalation and antisite defects in NiTe2 are systematically investigated. We identified five main types native defects and revealed that the growth condition could affect the type of native defects. By controlling the ratio of ingredient during synthesis, the types of point defects are expected to be manipulated, especially antisite defects. Additionally, we find native defects could slightly dope the topological surface states. Our results provide a facile way to manipulate defects for future optimizing the electronic properties of NiTe2 and other related materials.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2201.00294,
  title  = {Exploring Native Atomic Defects in NiTe2},
  author = {Wen-Xiao Wang and Kaihui Li and Xiaoshan Dong and Hao Xie and Jinglan Qiu and Chunqiang Xu and Kai Liu and Juntao Song and Yi-Wen Wei and Ke-Ke Bai and Xiaofeng Xu and Ying Liu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2201.00294},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

17 pages, 4 figures, 1 table

R2 v1 2026-06-24T08:37:48.402Z