Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Brahmanandam Javvaji
  • Bohayra Mortazavi
  • Timon Rabczuk
  • Xiaoying Zhuang

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
  • Tongji University
  • Ton Duc Thang University
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3394-3403
Number of pages10
JournalNanoscale Advances
Volume2
Issue number8
Early online date28 May 2020
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2020

Abstract

Recent experimental advances [Liu et al., npj 2D Mater. Appl., 2019, 3, 23] propose the design of graphene nanoribbon springs (GNRSs) to substantially enhance the stretchability of pristine graphene. A GNRS is a periodic undulating graphene nanoribbon, where undulations are of sinus or half-circle or horseshoe shapes. Besides this, the GNRS geometry depends on design parameters, like the pitch's length and amplitude, thickness and joining angle. Because of the fact that parametric influence on the resulting physical properties is expensive and complicated to examine experimentally, we explore the mechanical, thermal and electromechanical properties of GNRSs using molecular dynamics simulations. Our results demonstrate that the horseshoe shape design GNRS (GNRH) can distinctly outperform the graphene kirigami design concerning the stretchability. The thermal conductivity of GNRSs was also examined by developing a multiscale modeling, which suggests that the thermal transport along these nanostructures can be effectively tuned. We found that however, the tensile stretching of the GNRS and GNRH does not yield any piezoelectric polarization. The bending induced hybridization change results in a flexoelectric polarization, where the corresponding flexoelectric coefficient is 25% higher than that of graphene. Our results provide a comprehensive vision of the critical physical properties of GNRSs and may help to employ the outstanding physics of graphene to design novel stretchable nanodevices.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs. / Javvaji, Brahmanandam; Mortazavi, Bohayra; Rabczuk, Timon et al.
In: Nanoscale Advances, Vol. 2, No. 8, 08.2020, p. 3394-3403.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Javvaji, B, Mortazavi, B, Rabczuk, T & Zhuang, X 2020, 'Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs', Nanoscale Advances, vol. 2, no. 8, pp. 3394-3403. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0na00217h
Javvaji, B., Mortazavi, B., Rabczuk, T., & Zhuang, X. (2020). Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs. Nanoscale Advances, 2(8), 3394-3403. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0na00217h
Javvaji B, Mortazavi B, Rabczuk T, Zhuang X. Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs. Nanoscale Advances. 2020 Aug;2(8):3394-3403. Epub 2020 May 28. doi: 10.1039/d0na00217h
Javvaji, Brahmanandam ; Mortazavi, Bohayra ; Rabczuk, Timon et al. / Exploration of mechanical, thermal conductivity and electromechanical properties of graphene nanoribbon springs. In: Nanoscale Advances. 2020 ; Vol. 2, No. 8. pp. 3394-3403.
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