Vacancy-controlled friction on 2D materials: Roughness, flexibility, and chemical reactions
J Liu and YZ Qi and QY Li and TY Duan and W Yue and A Vadakkepatt and C Ye and YL Dong, CARBON, 142, 363-372 (2019).
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2018.10.048
It was recently reported that the presence of vacancy could dramatically increase nanoscale friction of graphene, while its underlying mechanism remains unknown 1. In this study, molecular dynamics simulation is carried out to examine the possible mechanisms that could contribute to friction enhancement on chemically modified and/or vacancy-contained graphene. It is found that the change in out-of-plane flexibility due to vacancies has only a limited influence on friction. In contrast, the Schwoebel barrier, the chemical reactivity of dangling bonds at the atomic step edges, as well as the roughening induced by functional groups can contribute more to nanoscale friction of graphene. This study provides a friction-mechanism map that correlates frictional behavior to various atomic scale mechanisms, which is useful for understanding the nanoscale friction of defected graphene. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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