Thermomechanical properties of graphene: valence force field model approach
A. Lajevardipour, M. Neek-Amal, F. M. Peeters

TL;DR
This study uses a valence force field model and Monte Carlo simulations to analyze the thermomechanical properties of graphene under strain, providing insights into energy contributions, elastic moduli, heat capacity, and temperature effects.
Contribution
It applies the Perebeinos and Tersoff valence force field model to study graphene's energy modes and mechanical properties under strain, with results consistent with experiments and ab-initio calculations.
Findings
Young's modulus at room temperature is 350±3.15 N/m.
Molar heat capacity is approximately 24.64 J/mol·K.
Gruneisen parameter estimated at 0.64.
Abstract
Using the valence force field model of Perebeinos and Tersoff [Phys. Rev. B {\bf79}, 241409(R) (2009)], different energy modes of suspended graphene subjected to tensile or compressive strain are studied. By carrying out Monte Carlo simulations it is found that: i) only for small strains () the total energy is symmetrical in the strain, while it behaves completely different beyond this threshold; ii) the important energy contributions in stretching experiments are stretching, angle bending, out-of-plane term and a term that provides repulsion against misalignment; iii) in compressing experiments the two latter terms increase rapidly and beyond the buckling transition stretching and bending energies are found to be constant; iv) from stretching-compressing simulations we calculated the Young modulus at room temperature 350\,N/m, which is…
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