| Literature DB >> 28279014 |
Zhengrong Guo1, Tienchong Chang2,3, Xingming Guo2, Huajian Gao4.
Abstract
The adhesion of two-dimensional (2D) materials onto other surfaces is usually considered a solid-solid mechanical contact. Here, we conduct both atomistic simulations and theoretical modeling to show that there in fact exists an energy conversion between heat and mechanical work in the attachment/detachment of two-dimensional materials on/off solid surfaces, indicating two-dimensional materials adhesion is a gas-like adsorption rather than a pure solid-solid mechanical adhesion. We reveal that the underlying mechanism of this intriguing gas-like adhesion is the configurational entropy difference between the freestanding and adhered states of the two-dimensional materials. Both the theoretical modeling and atomistic simulations predict that the adhesion induced entropy difference increases with increasing adhesion energy and decreasing equilibrium binding distance. Our findings provide a fundamental understanding of the adhesion of two-dimensional materials, which is important for designing two-dimensional materials based devices and may have general implications for nanoscale efficient actuators.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28279014 PMCID: PMC5427824 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-00184-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Temperature change of a graphene ribbon during the adiabatic processes of zero-degree stamping (a), zero-degree peeling (b) and ninety-degree peeling (c) of the graphene ribbon on/off the (111) surface of a Pt substrate. The edges (in red) of the graphene ribbon are set to be rigid where a constant velocity of 10 nm/ns is imposed to move the graphene ribbon to attach onto or detach off the substrate. The temperature at time t is calculated by averaging through a small period of 1 ps around t.
Figure 2Isothermal simulations (100–600 K) of a graphene ribbon peeled from a rigid Pt substrate at zero-degree. (a) Thermal energy exchange between the graphene ribbon and the thermostat (300 K). (b) Shear adhesion force (per nanometer in width) on the graphene ribbon (300 K). (c) Distribution of the heat exchanges (300 K) during the detachment (from 0.9 ns to 3.6 ns). Red dash line is the Gauss fitting of the MD results. (d) Distribution of the shear adhesion force (300 K) during the detachment. (e) Isothermal heat absorptions of the graphene ribbon at different temperatures. (f) The shear adhesion force versus system temperature.
Figure 3(a) Adhesion induced configurational entropy change of graphene on various substrates, including a rigid graphene layer as substrate. The results labelled as “Artificial potentials” are performed on a Pt substrate with artificial potentials to describe the interaction between atoms of the graphene layer and Pt atoms (see Supplemental Materials for details). Equation (3) is fitted to MD results using η as the fitting parameter. (b) Adhesion induced entropy change of h-BN on various substrates.