The emergence of graphene has opened up a new research field to explore 2D materials due to its unique structure and electronic performance. A variety of 2D materials appeared immediately, such as transitionmetal dichalcogenides (MoS 2 , MoSe 2 , WS 2 , WSe 2 , etc.), [1][2][3][4][5][6] silicene, [7] germanene, [8] stanene, [9] black phosphorous, and blue phosphorous, [10][11][12] all of which have different superior electronic structure and optoelectronic properties. These materials are expected to have potential applications in field-effect transistors (FET), photocatalysis, solar cells, and electrode material for various electrochemical energy storage devices. In addition, turning 2D materials into 1D nanomaterials will open up another new field of research because they also have novel and unique structures and electronic properties. For example, after rolling 2D graphene into carbon nanotubes, it can have metallic and semiconductor properties depending on its tube diameter, chirality, and wall thickness. [13,14] The bandgap of MoS 2 nanotubes can be reduced or expanded by tensile or compressive axial strain, and MoS 2 nanotubes have potential applications as optical resonators, FETs, photocatalytic activity, gas storage, and lubricants. [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22] With the accelerated development of miniaturization of electronic equipment, it is becoming more and more urgent to develop new available low-dimensional materials. In recent years, 2D black phosphorus with a washboard-like buckling structure and 2D blue phosphorus with a chair-like buckling structure have attracted more and more attention due to their distinctive properties, especially potential applications in ion batteries as anode materials. [23][24][25][26][27] Then, the transformation of 2D black phosphorus and blue phosphorus into 1D nanotube structures is worthy of exploration theoretically and experimentally. The electronic structure, optical properties, thermal properties, and stability of black phosphorous nanotubes and blue phosphorous nanotubes have been investigated recently. [28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40] Cao et al. studied the lithium-ion storage performance of single-walled black phosphorene nanotubes (SWBPNTs), and demonstrated that black phosphorous nanotubes can be used as a potential anode material for LIB. [30] Additionally, we have studied the characteristics of lithium atoms on zigzag SWBPNTs and found that lithium atoms are easier to adsorb and diffuse inside blue phosphorous nanotubes. [38] It is known that doping can effectively change the electronic structure and properties of materials, [41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48] so whether doping