Temperature-dependent mechanical properties and the microscopic deformation mechanism of bilayer γ-graphdiyne under tension
B Song and BL Yang and C Zhang and C Wang and SH Chen, NANOTECHNOLOGY, 34, 015712 (2023).
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ac952e
gamma-graphdiyne (gamma-GDY) is a new two-dimensional carbon allotrope that has received increasing attention in scientific and engineering fields. The mechanical properties of gamma-GDY should be thoroughly understood for realizing their practical applications. Although gamma- GDY is synthesized and employed mainly in their bilayer or multilayer forms, previous theoretical studies mainly focused on the single-layer form. To evaluate the characteristics of the multilayer form, the mechanical properties of the bilayer gamma-GDY (gamma-BGDY) were tested under uniaxial tension using the molecular dynamics simulations. The stress-strain relation of gamma-BGDY is highly temperature-dependent and exhibits a brittle-to-ductile transition with increasing temperature. When the temperature is below the critical brittle-to-ductile transition temperature, gamma-BGDY cracks in a brittle manner and the fracture strain decreases with increasing temperature. Otherwise, it exhibits ductile characteristics and the fracture strain increases with temperature. Such a temperature-dependent brittle-to-ductile transition is attributed to the interlayer cooperative deformation mechanism, in which the co-rearrangement of neighboring layers is dominated by thermal vibrations of carbon atoms in diacetylenic chains. Furthermore, the brittle-to-ductile transition behavior of gamma-BGDY is independent of loading direction and loading rate. The ultimate stress and Young's modulus decrease at higher temperatures. These results are beneficial for the design of advanced gamma-GDY-based devices.
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