scholarly journals Self-Driven Graphene Tearing and Peeling: A Fully Atomistic Molecular Dynamics Investigation

MRS Advances ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (8-9) ◽  
pp. 463-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre F. Fonseca ◽  
Douglas S. Galvão

ABSTRACTIn spite of years of intense research, graphene continues to produce surprising results. Recently, it was experimentally observed that under certain conditions graphene can self-drive its tearing and peeling from substrates. This process can generate long, micrometer sized, folded nanoribbons without the action of any external forces. Also, during this cracking-like propagation process, the width of the graphene folded ribbon continuously decreases and the process only stops when the width reaches about few hundreds nanometers in size. It is believed that interplay between the strain energy of folded regions, breaking of carbon-carbon covalent bonds, and adhesion of graphene-graphene and graphene-substrate are the most fundamental features of this process, although the detailed mechanisms at atomic scale remain unclear. In order to gain further insights on these processes we carried out fully atomistic reactive molecular dynamics simulations using the AIREBO potential as available in the LAMMPS computational package. Although the reported tearing/peeling experimental observations were only to micrometer sized structures, our results showed that they could also occur at nanometer scale. Our preliminary results suggest that the graphene tearing/peeling process originates from thermal energy fluctuations that results in broken bonds, followed by strain release that creates a local elastic wave that can either reinforce the process, similar to a whip cracking propagation, or undermine it by producing carbon dangling bonds that evolve to the formation of bonds between the two layers of graphene. As the process continues in time and the folded graphene decreases in width, the carbon-carbon bonds at the ribbon edge and interlayer bonds get less stressed, thermal fluctuations become unable to break them and the process stops.

1995 ◽  
Vol 418 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T Whitea ◽  
J. J. C. Barretta ◽  
J. W. Mintmirea ◽  
M. L. Elert ◽  
D. H. Robertson

AbstractBecause of its importance in designing safer, more reliable explosives the shock to detonation transition in condensed phase energetic materials has long been a subject of experimental and theoretical study. This transition is thought to involve local hot-spots which represent regions in the material which couple efficiently to the shock wave leading to a locally higher temperature and ultimately initiation. However, how at the atomic scale energy is transferred from the shock front into these local “hot spots” remains a key question to be answered in studies of the predetonation process. In this paper we report results of molecular dynamics simulations that suggest that even nanometer scale defects can play an important role in the shock to detonation transition.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro A. S. Autreto ◽  
Marcelo Z. Flores ◽  
Sergio B. Legoas ◽  
Ricardo P. B. Santos ◽  
Douglas S. Galvao

ABSTRACTRecently, Elias et al. (Science 323, 610 (2009).) reported the experimental realization of the formation of graphane from hydrogenation of graphene membranes under cold plasma exposure. In graphane, the carbon-carbon bonds are in sp3 configuration, as opposed to the sp2 hybridization of graphene, and the C–H bonds exhibit an alternating pattern (up and down with relation to the plane defined by the carbon atoms). In this work we have investigated, using reactive molecular dynamics simulations, the role of H frustration (breaking the H atoms up and down alternating pattern) in graphane-like structures. Our results show that a significant percentage of uncorrelated H frustrated domains are formed in the early stages of the hydrogenation process, leading to membrane shrinkage and extensive membrane corrugations. This might explain the significant broad distribution of values of lattice parameter experimentally observed. For comparison purposes we have also analyzed fluorinated graphane-like structures. Our results show that similarly to H, F atoms also create significant uncorrelated frustrated domains on graphene membranes.


RSC Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 5507-5515
Author(s):  
Liang Song ◽  
Feng-Qi Zhao ◽  
Si-Yu Xu ◽  
Xue-Hai Ju

The bimolecular and fused ring compounds are found in the high-temperature pyrolysis of NONA using ReaxFF molecular dynamics simulations.


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