Beat Phenomena in Metal Nanowires, and their Implications for Resonance-Based Elastic Property Measurements
Haifei Zhan, Yuantong Gu, Harold S. Park

TL;DR
This study reveals a beat phenomenon in Ag nanowires caused by lattice asymmetry, affecting resonance-based elastic property measurements and potentially leading to underestimation of Young's modulus.
Contribution
It introduces a novel beat phenomenon in nanowires due to lattice asymmetry and demonstrates its impact on resonance measurements of elastic properties.
Findings
Beat phenomenon arises from lattice asymmetry in nanowires.
Resonance experiments typically detect only one frequency component.
Young's modulus may be underestimated due to the beat phenomenon.
Abstract
The elastic properties of 1D nanostructures such as nanowires are often measured experimentally through actuation of the nanowire at its resonance frequency, and then relating the resonance frequency to the elastic stiffness using elementary beam theory. In the present work, we utilize large scale molecular dynamics simulations to report a novel beat phenomenon in [110] oriented Ag nanowires. The beat phenomenon is found to arise from the asymmetry of the lattice spacing in the orthogonal elementary directions of the [110] nanowire,i.e., [-110] and [001] directions, which results in two different principal moments of inertia. Because of this, actuations imposed along any other direction are found to decompose into two orthogonal vibrational components based on the actuation angle relative to these two elementary directions, with this phenomenon being generalizable to <110> FCC nanowires…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures
