| Literature DB >> 26925354 |
Rasmus Bjerregaard Christensen1, Jing-Tao Lü2, Per Hedegård3, Mads Brandbyge1.
Abstract
We employ a semi-classical Langevin approach to study current-induced atomic dynamics in a partially dehydrogenated armchair graphene nanoribbon. All parameters are obtained from density functional theory. The dehydrogenated carbon dimers behave as effective impurities, whose motion decouples from the rest of carbon atoms. The electrical current can couple the dimer motion in a coherent fashion. The coupling, which is mediated by nonconservative and pseudo-magnetic current-induced forces, change the atomic dynamics, and thereby show their signature in this simple system. We study the atomic dynamics and current-induced vibrational instabilities using a simplified eigen-mode analysis. Our study illustrates how armchair nanoribbons can serve as a possible testbed for probing the current-induced forces.Entities:
Keywords: current-induced forces; density functional theory (NEGF-DFT); graphene; molecular electronics
Year: 2016 PMID: 26925354 PMCID: PMC4734434 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.7.8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1(a) Structure of the transport setup defining device and symmetric electrode(left shown) regions. The motion of atoms is considered in the dynamical region. (b) Electron transmission in a perfect, infinite ribbon (dotted), and with broadened states in the electrodes to mimic metallic contacts with/without dehydrogenation (dashed/full). (Red and green vertical dashed lines indicate the shifts in Fermi energy used below in Figure 2). (c) Solid line is phonon transmission for the structure in (a), dotted line is phonon transmission for a pristine hydrogenated ribbon.
Figure 2(a) The black solid line shows the phonon density of states excluding the self-energy due to the electronic degrees of freedom. The green dotted and the red dashed lines show the phonon DOS including the current-induced forces for an applied bias of 0.5 V, shifting the Fermi energy to EF = −1.4 eV and EF = 1.4 eV, respectively, corresponding to the vertical lines in Figure 1b; (b) the run-away mode giving rise to the dip in (a) indicted by arrow 1 (Q ≈ 10−3); (c,d) the most important normal modes taking part in (b); (e) the run-away mode giving rise to the dip in (a) indicted by arrow 2 (Q ≈ 0.5·10−3); (f–h) the normal modes taking part in (b).