Spectrum Analysis of Thermally Driven Curvature Inversion in Strained Graphene Ripples for Energy Conversion Applications via Molecular Dynamics
ORAL
Abstract
The extraordinary mechanical flexibility, high electrical conductivity, and nanoscale instability of freestanding graphene make it an excellent candidate for vibration energy harvesting. When freestanding graphene is stretched taut and subject to external forces, it will vibrate like a drum head. Alternatively, when freestanding graphene is compressed, it will arch slightly out of the plane or buckle under the load. Remaining flat under compression would be energetically too costly compared to simple bond rotations. Buckling up or down, also known as ripple formation, naturally creates a bistable situation. When the compressed system vibrates between its two low-energy states, it must pass through the high-energy middle. The greater the compression, the higher the energy barrier. The system can still oscillate but the frequency will drop far below the fundamental drum-head frequency. The low frequencies combined with the large-scale movement and the large number of atoms coherently moving are key factors addressed in this study. Ten ripples with increasing compressive strain were built, and each was studied at five different temperatures. Analysis of the average time between curvature inversion events allowed us to quantify the energy barrier height. When the low-frequency bistable data were time-averaged, the authors found that the velocity distribution shifts from the expected Gaussian to a heavy-tailed Cauchy distribution, which is important for energy harvesting applications.
*This work was financially supported, in part, by an award from the WoodNext Foundation (award number AWD-106363), which is administered by the Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund.
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Presenters
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James M Mangum
- University of Arkansas