Fracture behaviors of brittle and ductile 2D carbon structures under uniaxial tensile stress
SW Wang and ZC Fan and Y Cui and SR Zhang and BC Yang and HY Chen, CARBON, 111, 486-492 (2017).
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2016.10.021
Many novel two-dimensional (2D) allotropes of carbon have been predicted to be (meta)stable at 0 K, however, their thermal stability and mechanical properties at finite temperatures remain unclear. In this study, the mechanical properties and fracture behaviors of five newly predicted monatomic thick carbon sheets (C-31, C-33, delta-graphyne (GY), gamma-GY, C-63, and graphene) are investigated using molecular simulations. The gamma-GY, gamma-GY, and graphene show brittle fractures in uniaxial tension testing at temperatures from 1 to 1200 K. The first signs of fracture in these brittle carbon sheets indicate that the C-C bonds linking the benzene rings and linear acetylenic carbons break with strong directional preference, whereby the direction of the breaking C-C bonds is parallel to the direction of tensile stress. A brittle-to- ductile transition is identified in the C-31, C-33, and C-63 sheets at high temperatures, which corresponds to the breakages of the C-C bonds in the triangular carbon rings. Global and local order-order structural transitions as well as order-disorder transitions are obtained in different ductile carbon sheets, and are found in the same carbon sheet under tensile stress along different directions. These results suggest a strong correlation between the structure and the failure mechanism in 2D carbon sheets, which is of great importance in the future design, synthesis and application of novel 2D materials. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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