posted on 2025-04-23, 13:42authored byHonglin Ma, Chen Yang, Bilian Ni, Yi Li, Shuping Huang, Wei Lin, Yongfan Zhang
Stacking order critically influences the optoelectronic
properties
of 2D van der Waals materials. Here, first-principles calculations
were performed to study the geometries, band structures, and second-harmonic
generation (SHG) of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) bilayers constructed
by the relative shifts and rotations between h-BN layers. Our results
indicate that the stability, interlayer coupling, and band structures
of h-BN bilayers are sensitive to the stacking orders. For interlayer
sliding, the direction and size of lateral displacement obviously
affect the band gap and components at the band edge. By contrast,
the band structure of twisted h-BN bilayers is highly angle-dependent,
and when the sum of twist angles in two moiré superlattices
is 60°, they have similar band structures due to identical band
folding. As for the second-order susceptibility, interlayer sliding
tends to enhance the SHG intensity compared to that of the original
AA stacking. When the incident angle of the pump light deviates from
the normal direction of the h-BN bilayer, the change in lattice symmetry
induced by interlayer sliding results in distinct variations in SHG
patterns, thereby facilitating identification of the corresponding
structures through polarization-resolved SHG spectroscopy. For twisted
configurations, as the rotation angle increases from 0 to 60°,
the evolution of SHG intensity departs significantly from the coherent
superposition model due to the strong exciton effects in h-BN bilayers.
Although the interlayer rotation preserves the SHG polarization image,
the experimental measurement of relative SHG intensity enables the
determination of the rotation angle, which allows for distinguishing
structures of twisted h-BN bilayers.