| Literature DB >> 29474080 |
Yingjie Zhang, Mohammad Heiranian, Blanka Janicek, Zoe Budrikis1, Stefano Zapperi1,2,3,4, Pinshane Y Huang, Harley T Johnson, Narayana R Aluru, Joseph W Lyding, Nadya Mason.
Abstract
Spatially nonuniform strain is important for engineering the pseudomagnetic field and band structure of graphene. Despite the wide interest in strain engineering, there is still a lack of control on device-compatible strain patterns due to the limited understanding of the structure-strain relationship. Here, we study the effect of substrate corrugation and curvature on the strain profiles of graphene via combined experimental and theoretical studies of a model system: graphene on closely packed SiO2 nanospheres with different diameters (20-200 nm). Experimentally, via quantitative Raman analysis, we observe partial adhesion and wrinkle features and find that smaller nanospheres induce larger tensile strain in graphene; theoretically, molecular dynamics simulations confirm the same microscopic structure and size dependence of strain and reveal that a larger strain is caused by a stronger, inhomogeneous interaction force between smaller nanospheres and graphene. This molecular-level understanding of the strain mechanism is important for strain engineering of graphene and other two-dimensional materials.Entities:
Keywords: 2D material; deformation; graphene; nanoparticles; pseudomagnetic field; strain
Year: 2018 PMID: 29474080 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b00273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189